The U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights is investigating the Florida “Brighter Choice” scholarship program, whose criteria were changed in a way that has a disparate impact on black and Hispanic students.
The Miami Herald reports:
“Since the program’s inception, an outsized share of more than $4 billion in scholarships has gone to white or affluent families, at least some of whom were wealthy enough to afford college without any help. In recent years, state lawmakers — concerned about rising costs of the program — changed the standards to make the scholarships even harder to get, raising the minimum SAT and ACT test scores to levels critics charge will only further exclude poor and minority students….
“Similar allegations resurfaced in a public way last spring after a University of South Florida analysis predicted that the new Bright Futures standards would benefit far fewer students — the total number of college freshmen getting scholarships at state universities would drop by about half, from 30,954 to 15,711. The analysis predicted Hispanic students would see a 60 percent drop in scholarships, and black scholarship recipients would plummet by more than 75 percent.
“Of all large counties, Miami-Dade takes the biggest hit from the new criteria. Yet the Legislature’s Florida Hispanic Legislative Caucus, dominated by Republicans from Miami-Dade, has generally supported the revisions.
“At Florida International University, where about three-quarters of students are black or Hispanic, the percentage of incoming freshman qualifying for Bright Futures was once as high as 81 percent. This coming fall, under the new minimum SAT score of 1170, FIU expects only about 14 percent of freshmen to qualify.
“Luisa Havens, FIU’s vice president for enrollment, called it “silly and counterproductive” for the state to place financial obstacles in front of students who want to go to college. The Bright Futures cutbacks are happening at the same time Florida leaders publicly say they want to boost the number of residents with college degrees and make college more affordable.
“Miami-Dade Schools Superintendent Alberto Carvalho said the harm being inflicted on minority students is “shameful.”…..
“The most significant impact is the poor and minority high school students who, just a couple of years ago, would have had a far greater opportunity of entering college,” he said. “Now, it’s undermined.”
“Bright Futures is funded by the Florida Lottery, which while immensely profitable couldn’t keep up with the growth of the program during the last decade. In 1997, Bright Futures’ first year, the lottery funded $75 million in the scholarships. By 2008, that amount had exploded to $435 million.
“When the costs became too great, the state slashed the value of the scholarships and then cut funding and reduced the number of awards by hiking standards. This year, the Florida Department of Education budget calls for $271 million in Bright Futures funds, reflecting cuts of $38 million and 18,000 scholarships from last year.
“Critics point out an irony in the cuts and changes: Although the lottery is most heavily played by minorities and the poor, they are less likely to benefit from the scholarship program.
“Some who want the program reformed argue a better way to screen applicants is with a “sliding scale” that combines GPA and test scores. In that system, a student with test scores slightly below the cutoff would still qualify if their GPA was very strong.
“Both college administrators and the College Board acknowledge that it is high school performance, and not standardized test scores, that is the best predictor of college success.
“But instead of changing Bright Futures’ minimum 3.0 GPA, Florida lawmakers chose to significantly raise qualifying test marks — from a minimum of 970 three years ago to 1170 now on the SAT. The average Florida combined SAT score was about 982 last year.
“Legislative leaders also have dismissed including a means test that could reduce or restrict scholarships to students from the wealthiest families….
“But in Florida education circles, testing has become the preferred method of evaluating public schools, teachers, and — in the case of Bright Futures — scholarship applicants. Schaeffer said Miami-Dade’s Hispanic Republican lawmakers are wedded to the test philosophy, even in an instance when their constituents suffer the most.
“They are Jeb Bush Republicans,” Schaeffer said. “Jeb Bush is one of the strongest believers nationally in the role of test scores in defining education quality. To come out otherwise would be an insult to their mentor.”
Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/03/22/4010170/feds-investigate-floridas-bright.html#storylink=cpy

“They are Jeb Bush Republicans,” Schaeffer said. “Jeb Bush is one of the strongest believers nationally in the role of test scores in defining education quality. To come out otherwise would be an insult to their mentor.”
Wow.
So glad to read of the federal investigation. I hope it is a genuine investigation.
Just did some writing about Jeb and “other people’s children” today:
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Reblogged this on Mothers Love Always and commented:
We must consider the well-being of all people.
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Every single part of Florida’s Bush Education Miracle That Isn’t is a scam. Mercedes captures perfectly his callous, cold-hearted, evil attitude about “winning”. He lied about increasing school funding with his lottery — he simply added the lottery money to the general fund then deducted an equal amount, a shell game. He lied about school grades not being used to demonize teachers. He lied about his voucher program by calling it a corporate scholarship program. He is a liar. He needs to be publicly humiliated and linked to his past by those who have access to national media. Instead I am sure he will be lauded as a sensible, strong white daddy Republican by the beltway press. It makes me gag.
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No prob. Education is for the children of the elites and for the few who prove themselves worthy to lick the boot heels of the elites. The prole children don’t need college degrees in order to learn how to say, “Will you be taking your latte on the verandah, Mr. Gates?”
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Is veranda on the Common Core Career & College Ready checklist?
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I prefer it with the h, M: verandah. Goes with the cultivated Southern accent with which I hear it in my head. 🙂
And there certainly are a lot of busy little consulting bees writing vocabulary lists as part of their “unpacking” for pay of the standards, aren’t there? I don’t know which of the many instant books on this topic to consult in order to answer your question.
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Hope DOE Office of Civil Rights are doing genuine investigation on the state scholarship policy, and it won’t get compromised by backhand communication channels set up by Arne Duncan and Jeb Bush.
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Jeb’s tentacles are already deeply into the Obama administration’s DOE and with his Harvard think tank I think it is safe to say that he is covered in political Teflon. Like the army general that just escaped with a slight slap for repeat sexual assault Bush and his minions are under a separate justice system from the rest of us. Few of the charter scammers here have faced any real jail time or steep fines because that’s how Bush designed the system.
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So let me get this right—the already advantaged used their advantages to disadvantage the already disadvantaged?
😕
And riffing off a previous posting on this blog, even when the already advantaged who “obviously” have tons of grit and determination—remember, their superior SES speaks to their inherent & acquired superiorities—they still took advantage of taking advantage of getting more monies? What for?
😡
So let me take advantage of this posting to go back to what Dr. Mercedes Schneider already pointed out—
“They are Jeb Bush Republicans,” Schaeffer said. “Jeb Bush is one of the strongest believers nationally in the role of test scores in defining education quality. To come out otherwise would be an insult to their mentor.”
Anyone who has blind faith in test scores that measure very little, are inherently imprecise and are often used for purposes for which they are totally unsuited—
is badly in need of an education.
And I don’t mean those PhDs in EduMinisculia that John Deasy and Steve Perry and the like sport.
Oh, that Jeb Brush would abandon, if only for a moment, his Marxist principles:
“The secret of life is honesty and fair dealing. If you can fake that, you’ve got it made.”
¿? There’s only one that counts—
Groucho.
😎
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Any kind of scholarship, award or prize in any kind of intellectually demanding area will go predominantly to whites (particularly Ashkenazi Jews) and East Asians as opposed to blacks or mestizos. You have the same problem with Nobel Prizes and Fields medals.
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Stop. Just stop. Your comments are disgusting.
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¡No me digas!
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This is supposed to be a reply to Jim(bo).
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Are the Feds going after Georgia’s HOPE scholarship program? Every criticism mentioned here can be made against HOPE, as well.
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Scholarships of this nature should be performance based. High Scholl GPA and student accomplishments should be the major criteria.
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Diane, first, it’s called Bright FUTURES, not Brighter Choice.
Second, this was a Libertarian program designed by the founder of the Modern Libertarians ( and Greens), a man called Michael Gilson who lives in Florida. IMHO the GOP is trying to destroy it, at least some of the extreme right-wingers are.
The Libertarians wanted some kind of lottery legalization with money going to all worthy students, a sort of non-tax model. Gilson recommended that a) Lottery money be segregated with part into a trust so it became it’s own endowment, and b) Grades and scores should be only slightly high so it was non-discriminatory, and c) It go to non-tuition living or ‘life start’ expenses and not through the college, so the colleges wouldn’t raise tuition to sop it up. The Libertarians also had an effort for tuition-free state and city colleges to match and remove legal blocks for homeschools, magnet/charters, parent advisory boards, etc. that which has made some progress.
Unfortunately, a) and c) were stopped or not fully implemented, and the legislature now has a b) self-created funding problem they’re trying to cure by reversing the intent of the program and is likely discriminatory. Legislators are going to be raising the score level even more, so probably any lottery $$$ left on the table will go to fund anything else they want, but not Bright Futures.
While better than nothing, if this continues the program will fall apart IMHO as the colleges and not the students benefit.
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Robert, I took the name from the newspaper article. I didn’t make it up.
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