In the most school choice rich state in America, 1 in 5 Black students now enrolled outside district schools

Horizon Learning microschool receive immersive science lessons at a la carte provider Saltwater Studies. Photo by Silver Media

Three decades ago, dozens of Black families in the Liberty City neighborhood of Miami enrolled their children in Florida’s first charter school. They didn’t know it, but they were kickstarting the most dramatic, statewide, educational shift for Black students in America.

Today, 140,000+ Black students in Florida are being educated outside district schools. They’re either in charter schools, in private schools using state choice scholarships, or outside full-time schools entirely using education savings accounts.

More details on this overlooked migration can be found in a nuevo informe co-authored by Las mentes negras importan founder Denisha Allen and myself. It’s a quick update to our 2021 report, “Controlling the Narrative: Parental Choice, Black Empowerment & Lessons from Florida.”

Over the past decade, the number of Black students in Florida enrolled in non-district options grew 86%, to 142,384. That’s more than one in five Black students in the state. For context, 31 states have fewer Black students in their public schools than Florida has in these options.

The numbers are a strong rebuttal to those who claim choice is aimed at helping wealthy, white families.

They’re also a good indicator of what’s next.

As choice programs continue to expand across America, look for even more Black families, educators and communities to embrace them.


Foto avatar

POR Ron Matus

Ron Matus es director de Investigación y Proyectos Especiales de Step Up for Students y antiguo editor de redefinED. Se incorporó a Step Up en febrero de 2012 tras 20 años en el periodismo, ocho de ellos como reportero de educación en el Tampa Bay Times (antiguo St. Petersburg Times).