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Impact of School Voucher Research

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2003

William G. Howell
Affiliation:
Harvard University
Paul E. Peterson
Affiliation:
Harvard University

Abstract

In an article otherwise lamenting political scientists' inability to influence public policy (“Politics, Political Science, and Specialization,” June 2002, pp. 187–190), Robert Jervis takes issue with recent research on school vouchers, to which we have contributed (2002). Jervis argues that voucher experiments “are largely irrelevant, or at best a first step.” Comparisons of students in private and public schools are of little value as long as most students remain in public school. Jervis therefore directs analysts to look for “large-scale improvements [that] can only come through the impact of the possibilities of choice on the bulk of the public school system.”

Type
FORUM
Copyright
© 2002 by the American Political Science Association

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