Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
‘Education Reimagined’: West Virginia’s quest for school choice
‘Education Reimagined’: West Virginia’s quest for school choice
Jan 18, 2026 2:19 AM

West Virginia’s schools have historically ranked among the lowest in the nation, even as spending per student continues to rate well above the national average. Unfortunately, instead of pushing for reform, teachers unions and state legislators have fought vigorously to protect the status quo.

In 2018, teachers went on strike for nine days, demanding higher pay and better benefits. In 2019, they stayed home again, protesting the state’s decision to legalize charter schools and offer various alternatives. This past January, the threats continued as the state promoted a return to in-person learning. Meanwhile, in a season defined by virtual learning, student suffering has e even more pronounced, given that between 30% and 50% of West Virginia’s K-12 students are without internet access.

Thankfully, educational freedom appears to be rising. Having recently won supermajorities in both state chambers, Republican legislators are pushing for a number of reforms. In addition to reinforcing a state law that makes teachers’ strikes illegal, the West Virginia House of Delegates is pushing to expand the state’s number of allowed charter schools from three to 10. The House also recently passed a largely unrestricted voucher program, which would “provide a currently estimated $4,600 per-student per-year to every family for every child they remove from public schools to home- or private-school them.” Each proposal awaits further action from the Senate, but the prospects look promising.

Such e after years of hard work and investmentamong parents, churches, activists, entrepreneurs, and various institutions.

In Education Reimagined: The Journey of West Virginia, a new nine-minute documentary from Dignity Unbound, we hear the stories of some of the people behind the policies.

“If you wanted to turn West Virginia into an economic backwater, you would try to implement the education results that we’ve seen,” says Garrett Ballengee, executive director of the Cardinal Institute for West Virginia Policy, a state think tank that has been actively pushing for greater family choice. “We’re trying to reform the system, not for some abstraction. We’re trying to reform it for families.”

Through the decades-long work of Rev. Matthew J. Watts, a local minister in Charleston, we learn that the fight is about far more than simply boosting test scores or shuffling kids off to college. It’s about treating our children with dignity and munities to freely respond to their needs.

As one example, Watts explains how the state’s lack of educational choice is keeping certain families trapped in schools that are disproportionately punitive to African American students, leading to disenfranchisement that is fueling a rise in juvenile crime across munity. Watts explains:

We found that there has been a huge discrepancy in discipline and suspension, particularly of African American children vs. everyone else. What was most alarming and disturbing is that it’s just simply been ignored, by the leaders at the state level and the county level.

So ,what happens? Suspension. It drives absences for a lot of students, and that means they’re missing academic instruction. Well, suspension also drives truancy, because those suspended days are unexcused absences. Truancy is the number one factor that brings children in West Virginia into the juvenile justice system. We think that this may be the valve. If you put your hand on this suspension, and we keep kids in school and connected, then we’ve got a chance that maybe they will have a better educational e.

When these issues manifest in a local public school, where are the parents supposed to turn? For West Virginians, the primary options have thus far been found through private schools.

“I think it’s important to try to innovate and to reimagine, re-engineer, and redesign the current system,” Watts explains. “I believe that we need a menu of options munities and that parents can select from. I believe that if we have a model that allows flexibility at the local level, a model that empowers a local governing body, a model to give that principal the authority that he or she needs that engages parents and engages the munity, I think the current system can be changed.”

Although voucher programs and additional charter schools appear to ing in the near future, Charleston is currently a school desert of sorts, breeding institutional conformity that sets the system against students who don’t fit a particular mold.

Through the story of Jennifer White, a mother of three from Barboursville, we learn how such conformity also harms children with unique learning styles. When her son was diagnosed with moderate dyslexia, White received little support from local public resources, prompting her to start her own tutoring service – offering a new option for those like her son who were underserved by the system. “We truly need an army of tutors to address this,” explains Jennifer. “Every kid is different. Every kid learns in a different way, and they deserve to have their needs met.”

Many public schools offer such support, but what happens when they don’t? For many families across the country, these specialized services are either unavailable or unaffordable, leaving students alone as local governments and unions work to stiff-arm any form of petition.

If families were able to allocate these funds for themselves, how many more Jennifers would spring up across the country, tailoring their services toward individual students and families rather than the arbitrary objectives of politicians, unions, and mittees?

“Innovation is fundamentally about discovering what works,” says Ballengee. “To the extent that you put a lid on innovation, and as it relates to education, you’re putting a lid on potential. We have to have an above-all solution. We have to let a million flowers bloom.”

While critics of school choice claim that these movements are driven by corporate interests, the film clearly demonstrates the fight for educational freedom is driven primarily by boots on the ground – individuals who have seen real pain and suffering, and recognize that the systems in place won’t adjust without a significant disruption.

This is a fight that focuses beyond test scores, budget battles, or political squabbles. Ultimately, this is a fight centered on respecting families and empowering children, each of whom is born with dignity and tremendous creative capacity.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
As Notre Dame burns, France called to re-set world ablaze
May all Christian believers, particularly in France, be reminded that they must put out the angry fires festering against their faith’s many aggressors in order to ignite healthy joyful spiritual flames – so as “to be as God fully wants us to be”, in St. Catherine of Siena’s words, “to set the world ablaze” where Christianity is nowadays smoldering. Read More… Like most big stories, the world discovered last night’s fire devouring Paris’s Notre Dame Cathedral at breakneck speed on...
Does Central America need a ‘Marshall Plan’?
Julián Castro is running for the Democratic nomination for president. Castro was Secretary of Housing and Urban Development under president Barack Obama, and before that he was mayor of San Antonio, TX. He is currently polling at a little over 1%, and he reported raising $1.1 million in campaign funds in the first quarter of the year. As a Mexican-American, Castro is currently the only Latino candidate. As such, it is not surprising that he has put immigration at the...
5 Facts about Tax Day and income taxes
Today is Tax Day, the day when individual e tax returns are due to the federal government. Here are five facts you should know about e taxes and Tax Day: 1. The first national e tax in the United States was in 1861 soon after the outbreak of the Civil War. Congress approved a national e tax, signed into law by President Lincoln on August 5, 1861, which provided for a flat tax of three percent on annual e above...
Learning to love institutions in an age of individualism
In the wake of rapid globalization and widespread consolidation, many have grown weary of human institutions, whether in business, religion, politics, or beyond. Threatened by their structure and slowness, we have tended to detach ourselves, opting instead for more “organic” approaches to human interaction. These “bottom-up” countermeasures surely have their value and necessity, but our modern resistance has also created a certain societal vacuum. Indeed, as our culture continues to fragment—increasingly defined by social isolationandpublic distrust—it is the places with...
Study: Socialism turns people into liars
Socialism’s appeal is largely moral, not economic – not just because it doesn’t work economically, but because few people find pelling. Among their exaggerated claims, socialists argue that redistribution of wealth will create more moralpeople, not merely better living conditions. “We must develop among Soviet people Communist morality,” said Nikita Khrushchevin 1959, “at the foundation of which lie … the voluntary observation of the fundamental rules of munal radely mutual help, honesty, and truthfulness.” But does socialism make people more...
Does capitalism always become crony?
Mark Zuckerberg has finally admitted he needs help. From the government. After years of shady dealing, data collection, and intentionally designing addictive technologies, Zuckerberg has asked the government to regulate tech. And who do you think will help write all the regulation that “regulates” all these tech firms? Bureaucrats in Washington won’t have enough knowledge, of course, so they’ll have to get it from experts in the tech industry. Lucky tech industry. Now that Facebook and Google, et al., have...
The search for transcendence
Yesterday a short video, originally posted by Forbes a few months ago, popped up in my browser. Called “Finding Meaning Through Travel,” it discusses several people who have supposedly found their calling in a life of travel and exotic pursuits. I love traveling too, and having lived abroad for three years I am convinced of the value of contact with other cultures, but I have to say that the narrators’ quasi-mystical view of travel struck me as misguided. Ben Saunders,...
Call for papers: the legacy of Abraham Kuyper — 100 years later
The year 2020 marks the 100th anniversary of the death of Dutch theologian, statesman, educator, churchman, editorialist, and social theorist Abraham Kuyper. memorate his life and legacy, the Journal of Markets & Morality is accepting submissions on the theme of Abraham Kuyper for the Fall 2020 issue, guest edited by Reformed scholars Robert Joustra and Jessica Joustra of Redeemer University College in Canada. While any submission related to the life and thought of Abraham Kuyper will be considered, the editors...
How the Fed worked before the Great Recession
Note: This is post #119 in a weekly video series on basic economics. The U.S. Federal Reserve controls the supply of money—which gives it a huge influence on the world economy. But as economist Tyler Cowen notes, how the Fed does this has changed since the Great Recession. In this video by Marginal Revolution University, Cowen explains how the Fed can change the federal funds rate—the overnight interest rate for when banks lend money to each other—and how that influences...
The ‘Halloween Brexit’ nightmare or a return to liberty?
Prime Minister Theresa May has extended the date the UK will leave the European Union yet again, this time to October 31. The eight-and-a-half month delay inspired some cheeky Brits to give the interminable process anthropomorphic qualities: the “Halloween Brexit” monster. The endless stalling is “slowly destroying the opportunity of liberty which leaving the EU offers,” writes Rev. Richard Turnbull in a new essay for Acton’s Religion & Liberty Transatlantic. Rev. Turnbull, who is the director of the Centre for...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved