From The Hechinger Report <[email protected]>
Subject The new reality with universal school vouchers
Date November 11, 2025 7:17 PM
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Plus, double-majoring soars at some universitiesView in browser [link removed]

**Weekly Update**

**A newsletter from The Hechinger Report**

Needed education reporting — thanks to readers like you. Donate today. [link removed]

**In this week's edition:** Universal vouchers have Florida public schools worried about competing for market share [link removed]. College students hedge their bets in a chaotic labor market by double-majoring [link removed]. Plus, a new $100,000 fee on H-1B visas could effectively slam the door on future international teacher hires [link removed].

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Like many public districts in Florida, the Leon County School District in Tallahassee is losing students to private and religious schools. Credit: Laura Pappano for the Hechinger Report

**The new reality with universal school vouchers: Homeschoolers, marketing, pupil churn**

It’s no secret that many public schools are in a battle for students. As school started in Florida this August, large districts, including Hillsborough, Miami-Dade and Orange, reported thousands fewer students, representing drops of more than 3 percent year over year. In Leon County, enrollment was down 8 percent from the end of last year.

Part of the issue is the decline in the number of school-age children, both here and across the country. But there’s also the growing popularity of school choice in Florida and elsewhere — and what that means for school budgets. Leon County’s leaders anticipate cutting about $6 million next year unless the state increases its budget, which could mean reduced services for students and even school closures. 

Other Florida school districts are also trimming budgets, and some have closed schools. As districts scramble for students, some are hiring consulting firms to help recruit, and also trying to sell seats in existing classes to homeschoolers. There is also the instability of students frequently switching schools — and of new charter or voucher schools that open and then shut down, or never open at all as promised. 

Two years after the Florida Legislature expanded eligibility for school vouchers to all students, regardless of family income, nearly 500,000 kids in the state now receive vouchers worth about $8,000 each to spend on private or home education, according to Step Up For Students, the nonprofit that administers the bulk of the scholarships. And Florida’s Tax Credit Scholarship, created in 2001 to allow corporations to make contributions to private school tuition, is the model for the new federal school voucher program, passed this summer as part of Republicans’ “one big, beautiful bill.” The program, which will go into effect in 2027, lets individuals in participating states contribute up to $1,700 per year to help qualifying families pay for private school in exchange for a 1:1 tax credit.

“We are in that next phase of public education,” said Keith Jacobs of Step Up For Students, who recruits public school districts to offer up their services and classes on its educational marketplace. “Gone are the days when a government institution or your zoned neighborhood school had the authority to assign a child to that school.”

Read more [link removed]

****Students worried about getting jobs are adding extra majors****

After he graduates from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Drew Wesson hopes to begin a career in strategic communication, a field with higher-than-average job growth and earnings.

One year into his time at the university, Wesson became more strategic about this goal. Like nearly 1 in 3 of his classmates, he declared a second major to better stand out in an unpredictable labor market.

It’s part of a trend that’s spreading nationwide, according to a Hechinger Report analysis of federal data, as students fret about getting jobs in an economy that some fear is shifting faster than a traditional college education can keep up.

“There’s kind of a fear of graduating and going out into the job market,” said Wesson, a sophomore from Minneapolis who is double-majoring in international security and journalism. “And having more skills and more knowledge and more majors gives you a competitive edge.”

The number of students at UW-Madison who double-major has grown by 25 percent over the last decade, the data show. But double-majoring is also on the rise at private, nonprofit colleges across the country, and at other public institutions, including the University of California, San Diego, and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 

Read the story [link removed]

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**Federal policies risk worsening an already dire rural teacher shortage**

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In Halifax County, North Carolina, 101 of 156 teachers are international. A new $100,000 fee on H-1B visas could effectively slam the door on future hires.

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"We’re not only talking about a recruitment and retention problem. We’re talking about the collapse of the rural teacher workforce." [link removed]

****Reading list****

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Climate change ‘is the new liberal arts’: Colleges build environmental lessons into degrees [link removed]

University of California, San Diego, requires all students to learn about climate change, while other schools have added environmental sustainability requirements

Advocates warn of risks to higher ed data if Education Department is shuttered [link removed]

[link removed] But new hires and fresh research grants hint at a quiet rebuilding effort

Tracking Trump: His actions on education [link removed]

The president is working to eliminate the Education Department and fighting ‘woke’ ideology in schools. A week-by-week look at what he’s done

Trump administration cuts canceled this college student’s career start in politics [link removed]
Ohio State University student Christopher Cade lost a summer internship and a campus job after the Trump administration pushed federal budget cuts and targeted ‘DEI’ in schools

OPINION: Too many college graduates are stranded before their careers can even begin. We can’t let that happe [link removed]

Higher education must include valuable workforce experience and training that helps students secure meaningful jobs

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