Parent participation in school activities—such as parent meetings, volunteering, and fundraising—is greater in public schools of choice than in other types of schools, a paper suggests.
Using data from the National Household Education Survey, Jack Buckley, a researcher at the National Center for Education Statistics, compared the level of parent involvement in four types of schools: assigned public, chosen public, nonreligious private, and religious private. Parent participation was the lowest at private religious schools.
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“Choosing Schools, Building Communities? The Effect of Schools of Choice on Parental Involvement” is posted by the National Center for the Study of Privatization in Education.