As changes happen in the public education system, many families who belong to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints have become more concerned about the potential influence of conflicting ideologies expressed in their children's classrooms.
In the article, Edwards addresses her own concerns.
Principal Michelle Edwards, an early childhood specialist, has been in the education system for many years. The academy is a culmination of a dream of hers. "I recently had one student who was really struggling," says Michelle, "and I couldn't tell her about her divine abilities, that she's a child of God, or who her father in heaven is."
The article promises a Personal Learning Plan and notes that if tuition is an issue, the school will help parents apply for the Arizona ESA voucher to cover costs.
What the article doesn't mention is that Edwards just had the school, under another name and as a charter, shut down by the state. But then, nobody, not even the state itself, told anyone.
Edwards's new school went heavily with the religious pitch, with the website announcing "Christ-centered, constitutionally-based, education for all." One ARCHES board member pushed a familiar agenda. From a ProPublica article:
Jason Mow, an ARCHES board member who was helping with its transition to Title of Liberty, tried to recruit new students: “Get your kids out of the government run schools,” he posted, adding, somewhat paradoxically: “The state ESA program will pay for tuition!!!!”
At one point, a parent asked him whether — if state money was going to be funding the school — it would be required to take part in state testing.
“As a private school using ESA, we have a great deal of latitude and not mandated to,” Mow answered.
He also said, “This is how we save the Republic.”
Edwards herself seemed pretty surprised at how little oversight (aka "none") the state wanted to exert over her new attempt. One gets the impression that she might have appreciated a few more guardrails to keep the new place from going down the tubes, which it did in September of 2024.
I encourage you to read a thorough telling of the tale from Eli Hager at ProPublica.
Grand Canyon Institute has a striking graphic that shows just how much less accountability Arizona voucher vendors have compared to charter schools, a fine explanation for why The ARCHES to Title story will be repeated many times over, and why so many fly-by-night subprime operators will be in the voucher biz in Arizona.
Why doesn't Arizona have anything in place to help apparently well-meaning folks like Edwards get into the education biz? Why doesn't it exert even the dlightes bit of oversight of the vendors cashing in on taxpayer-funded vouchers? I suspect it hints at what programs like Arizona's voucher extravaganza are really about-- and it's not about a robust, choice-filled education environment. It's about defunding and dismantling public education (and the tax burdens that go with it). But you can't just tell folks, "We're going to end public education." So instead, hand them a pittance of a voucher and announce that you're giving them freedom! And after that, you've washed your hands of them. The wealthy can still afford a top-notch education for their kids, and if Those People end up wasting their kids time in sub-prime, fraudulent, or incompetent pop up schools, well, that's their problem.
If folks like the Arizona voucher crowd were serious about choice, they would provide transparency and oversight, rather than letting any shmoe rent a storefront and call it a school. But Arizona isn't serious about choice. It's serious about dismantling public education. It's serious about getting public tax dollars into private hands and funding religious groups. And people like the families at Title of Liberty and even Edwards herself will just keep paying the price.
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