When legislators talk about “school choice” and diverting public dollars to private schools, they often package it as empowering parents, but after years of underfunding and unfair criticism, Mississippi’s public education is seeing measurable success. The latest Kids Count Data Book reports that Mississippi was ranked 16th in the nation for K-12 education. Our fourth graders have led the nation in reading and math gains on the National Assessment of Educational Progress rankings and graduation rates have reached historic highs. 

So many wonderful things are happening in Mississippi public education. Now is not the time to pull away from a shared system that is working. Vouchers and unaccountable “choice” schemes threaten the progress of the many in favor of a few.

The adage “it takes a village to raise a child” has never been truer. Educators are not seeking to replace parents but to partner with them. Schools consistently plead for parents to be active participants in the educational process. Public schools are our community’s schools, run by local boards, funded by taxpayers and accountable to the public. Suggesting that only private or home options are legitimate undermines our collective investment that ensures every child, regardless of income or zip code, has access to quality education.

Mississippi’s recent gains were not driven by privatization. The state directs a very small percentage of K-12 funding to private programs. Our progress stems from intentional public investments in early literacy, pre-K expansion, teacher support, accountability and local district innovations.

Yet Mississippi has chronically underfunded its schools. Since the Mississippi Adequate Education Program was created in 1997, legislators have only fully funded it twice leaving a cumulative shortfall exceeding $3.3 billion. Even in 2023, despite revenue surpluses, education was shorted by $161 million. The 2024 Mississippi Student Funding Formula provided roughly $50 million less than full MAEP funding would have delivered. 

We cannot afford to carve public money away from schools already asked to do more with less. Each diverted dollar reduces resources for classrooms, support staff, fine arts programs, counselors, nurses and special education

A classroom of young students sitting on the ground, some raising their hand for the teacher
Louise Smith writes that Mississippi’s public school system cannot afford to lose funding. She argues vouchers and school choice programs disproportionately favor affluent families already able to afford private-school tuition. Photo by CDC on Unsplash

Who truly benefits—and who loses—when vouchers enter the system? These programs primarily serve affluent families already able to afford private-school tuition. They cluster benefits in urban areas, where private schools are more abundant, leaving rural Mississippians with fewer options and underfunded local schools. When voucher programs win, public-school students and their teachers lose—facing larger class sizes, fewer resources and diminished support in the classrooms where most Mississippi children learn.

Public schools are accountable through testing, audits and transparency. Voucher funded schools, however, are rarely held to the same standards. Many select their students, exclude those with disabilities or cloak financials in privacy. Public dollars deserve public oversight. If a school takes tax money, it should be held to the same accountability expectations as every Mississippi public classroom. 

Other states offer clear warnings. In Tennessee, voucher students underperformed compared to their public-school peers. In Arkansas, costs ballooned, and private schools hiked tuition, excluding low-income families. Louisiana’s choice expansion deepened budget gaps. Mississippi should learn from these examples. When states funnel public money into private schooling, inequality grows while outcomes stagnate.

Rather than dividing limited resources, Mississippi should double down on what works. Fully fund the Mississippi Student Funding Formula so that districts can operate reliably. Expand early literacy and math intervention programs. Support teacher recruitment, retention and development, particularly in rural areas. Strengthen supports for special education, fine arts education, counseling and technology. Encourage innovation through magnet programs, dual enrollments and career-tech centers within public systems.

Proponents of vouchers call “choice” freedom, but real freedom is not abandoning public responsibility. It is building a society where every child, regardless of income or geography, can attend a great public school. Mississippi’s progress proves what collective investment can achieve. We should not dismantle progress with policies that favor the few. Public dollars belong in public schools. 

The real choice before us is simple: a future where all children succeed or one where some succeed at the expense of others. That’s a choice we must not accept and do our due diligence to fight against. 

This MFP Voices opinion essay reflects the personal opinion of its author(s). The column does not necessarily represent the views of the Mississippi Free Press, its staff or board members. To submit an opinion for the MFP Voices section, send up to 1,200 words and sources fact-checking the included information to voices@mississippifreepress.org. We welcome a wide variety of viewpoints.

Louise Smith is a band director along the Mississippi Gulf Coast. She was named 2023 Mississippi Teacher of the Year and was the 2024 NEA Foundation Horace Mann Award Winner. She has been featured on the cover of NEA Today where she talked about teacher trauma and stress and US News and World Report named her as one of the "Twenty Professionals Who Made a Difference During the Pandemic." In her spare time, she enjoys playing her flute in the Coastal Winds Wind Ensemble and traveling the world with her husband.