Protecting and Promoting School Choice

Working Papers

Working Paper #5-2022

Using Parental Satisfaction to Evaluate Virtual Charter Schools

Dr. Jay P. Greene and James Paul discuss how the choices of parents for the education of their children tend to affect later life outcomes in addition to grades and test scores. They make a powerful argument using quantitative data that policymakers should be careful not to discount the effects of choice on students’ lives.

Working Paper #4-2022

Course Choice Among Online K-12 Students

Dr. Ian Kingsbury discusses the motivation of K-12 students and parents who choose to take one or more online courses. Very little research exists in this specific area, presenting an opportunity to study and learn more about why online coursework is attractive to students.

Working Paper #3-2022

The Relationship Between Regulation and Charter School Innovation

Dr. Ian Kingsbury, Dr. Jay Greene, and Dr. Corey DeAngelis discuss the relationship between the most common regulations placed on charter schools and innovation among those schools in their approaches to pedagogy, methodology, and other characteristics.

Working Paper #2-2022

Negative Selection into Online Schooling and Achievement Growth

Dr. Jay Greene and James D. Paul discuss the relationship between negative selection into online schooling and achievement growth.

Working Paper #1-2021

Do Cyber Charters Segregate or Integrate? Evidence From a Large EMO

Dr. Ian Kingsbury (Stride, Inc.) explores the implications of virtual school enrollment on demographics, some of which challenge critics’ assumptions.

Working Paper #10-2020

Does Compulsory Schooling Affect Innovation?

In this working paper, Dr. Corey A. DeAngelis (Reason Foundation, EFI Executive Director) and Dr. Angela K. Dills (Western Carolina University, EFI Advisory Board Member) ask whether compulsory schooling laws in America have affected the amount of innovation as measured by the number of patents.

Working Paper #9-2020

The Case Against The Case Against Homeschooling

Peter Gray, PhD, Research Professor of Psychology at Boston College and Founder of the Alliance for Self-directed Education, presented a lecture during a conference titled “The Disinformation Campaign Against Homeschooling.” This working paper is based on the lecture he delivered at the conference on May 1, 2020. The event was sponsored by “Ideological Diversity,” a student organization at Harvard University.

Working Paper #8-2020

Educational Freedom for Young People

Brian Conner, President of the National Youth Rights Association, presented this lecture during a conference titled “The Disinformation Campaign Against Homeschooling.” This working paper is the lecture he delivered at the conference on May 1, 2020. The event was sponsored by “Ideological Diversity,” a student organization at Harvard University.

Working Paper #7-2020

Advocating Freedom; Presuming Innocence

Michael P. Donnelly, JD, LLM, Senior Counsel and Director of Global Outreach at the Homeschool Legal Defense Association, presented this lecture during a conference titled “The Disinformation Campaign Against Homeschooling.” This working paper is the lecture he delivered at the conference on May 1, 2020. The event was sponsored by “Ideological Diversity,” a student organization at Harvard University.

Working Paper #6-2020

Fundamental Flaws of Attacks on Homeschooling by Nation's Elites

Corey A. DeAngelis, PhD, Executive Director of EFI, Director of School Choice at Reason Foundation, and Adjunct Scholar at the Cato Institute, presented this lecture during a conference titled “The Disinformation Campaign Against Homeschooling.” This working paper is the lecture he delivered at the conference on May 1, 2020. The event was sponsored by “Ideological Diversity,” a student organization at Harvard University.

Working Paper #5-2020

A Quick History of Homeschooling and the Rise of Self-Directed Education

Patrick Farenga, an unschooling and homeschooling author and advocate, presented this lecture during a conference titled “The Disinformation Campaign Against Homeschooling.” This working paper is the lecture he delivered at the conference on May 1, 2020. The event was sponsored by “Ideological Diversity,” a student organization at Harvard University.

Working Paper #4-2020

Preserving Family Freedom from Government Overreach

One of the foremost experts on homeschooling in the United States, Kerry McDonald, presented this lecture duringĀ a conference titled “The Disinformation Campaign Against Homeschooling.” This working paper is the lecture she delivered at the conference on May 1, 2020. The event was sponsored by “Ideological Diversity,” a student organization at Harvard University.

Working Paper #3-2020

Preserving Family Freedom from Government Overreach

In response to a planned event sponsored by Harvard Law School that called for a presumptive ban on homeschooling, Cevin Soling (a current Harvard Kennedy School student) organized a conference titled “The Disinformation Campaign Against Homeschooling.” This working paper is the lecture he delivered at the conference on May 1, 2020. The event was sponsored by “Ideological Diversity,” a student organization at Harvard University.

Working Paper #2-2020

Tentative Epiphanies Amid the Alleged "Risks of Homeschooling"

In this engaging working paper, author Rafe Hawkins outlines some of the challenges and benefits of homeschooling from the perspective of a home-educated individual who plans to homeschool his own children.

Working Paper #1-2020

Rethinking America's Internal Education Narrative: An Analysis of Historical Narratives and the Foundations of Public Schools

Dr. Kevin Currie-Knight of East Carolina University discusses how the narratives of the history of the American education system affect how the public views the system’s legitimacy.

Support Our Work