Policy Analysis no. 383
 More Than Grades: How Choice
 Boosts Parental Involvement and Benefits Children
 by Philip Vassallo
 Philip Vassallo is an educational consultant and writer. His work has been
 published in the American School Board Journal, Principal, Young Children, and Day
 Care and Elementary Education. Vassallo holds a doctorate in educational theory
 from Rutgers University.
 Published on October 26, 2000
 Research shows that parental involvement in a child's education is a strong
 predictor of student achievement: typically, the more involved the parent, the better
 off the child. Yet the current structure of the kindergarten through 12th-grade
 education system tends to marginalize parents. In most areas, government assigns
 children to particular schools, and school boards and bureaucrats control
 textbooks, curriculum, and other central aspects of a child's education.
 Studies from school choice experiments suggest that school choice can be a
 powerful engine for parental involvement--choice by its nature engenders a higher
 level of parental participation than does the current system. Although a universal,
 customer-driven system has not been tried, sufficient research exists to prove that
 modified forms of choice--such as charter schools, vouchers, and private
 scholarship programs--increase parental involvement.
 Although most studies of school choice experiments have focused on academic
 gains to children in choice programs, this study examines the many other benefits
 that choice programs bring to students. For example, parents of children in school
 choice programs (1) are more involved with their children's academic programs; (2)
 participate more in school activities; (3) believe that their chosen school offers a
 greater measure of safety, discipline, and instructional quality than did their
 previous school; (4) are more satisfied with their children's education in a choice
 program; and (5) are likely to re-enroll their children in the choice program.
 The ultimate key to school reform is the parent. Once parents assume the
 responsibility of advocating for and supporting their children's education, they will
 become partners with educators to create the schools their children need. State
 legislators should seek policies that return control of education to parents through
 mechanisms like tax cuts and universal tuition tax credits. The adoption of such
 measures promises to increase parental involvement and bring other important
 benefits to children.