School Choice, Let Me Be Me

Education |
By Brittany Wagner | Read Time 2 minutes

Where did you go to high school?

“The question” is as much a part of the Saint Louis identity as the Gateway Arch, Cardinals baseball, or Gooey Butter Cake. Last year, I decided that I’d take a stand against high school-based judgments by asking a question myself: What high school do you think I attended?

From there, it got interesting. “Ladue, Incarnate Word, Lafayette” are just a few school names that I heard. The variety and wide range of schools was interesting to hear, but no one came close to the school I actually attended. The truth is that I graduated from an often-underperforming, low-income public high school just below the Saint Louis City line. In 2013, only 20 percent of graduates had completed a four-year degree, according to the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education.

For many students who attend a high school within their zip code, their school often is not a reflection of who they are. They must fit in, instead of choosing a school that fits. With school choice, a high school becomes less of a description about where the student lives and how much money the student’s family has, and more about what makes the student unique.

Join us in Saint Louis or Kansas City to learn more about how educational options allow students to be themselves. If you plan on attending, use the hashtag, #letmebeme, for all event-related tweets.

 

About the Author

Brittany Wagner was an education policy research assistant at the Show-Me Institute. She focused on school choice, local control, and school personnel issues. She grew up in Saint Louis and graduated from Pepperdine University in 2010 with an undergraduate degree in political science. After earning a master of arts in teaching degree from Fontbonne University, she taught social studies and science in the Hancock and Rockwood school districts. Talk Topics:1. School Choice 1012. Missouri Teachers’ Unions and Collective Bargaining3. Private School Choice in the Show-Me State4. School Board Reform5. Alternate Charter Schools and Accountability Reform

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