School choice can’t be only for the rich


New York City parents are feeling the pinch as they open their latest private school tuition bills, revealing jaw-dropping figures. Some of the city’s most prestigious schools are now charging over $70,000 annually, a sum that surpasses the average household income in numerous New York neighborhoods. This development highlights a stark reality: in New York City, having the freedom to choose a school is largely a privilege reserved for those who can foot the hefty bill.

For families with the financial means, school selection involves touring campuses, evaluating educational philosophies, and ultimately choosing a school that aligns with their child’s needs. These parents can simply write a check to secure a spot. Conversely, working-class families often have no choice but to accept the school assigned to them, with fingers crossed for favorable outcomes.

This situation does not reflect genuine choice—it’s a system of rationed opportunities. In a city renowned for its commitment to fairness and progress, such disparities should concern us all.

Education is frequently touted as the great equalizer, yet when private school tuition parallels that of a college education, the chasm between those with educational options and those without becomes glaringly apparent. Families with high needs crave the same basic assurances as any parent: safe learning environments, robust academics, and a clear path to higher education or career success. The ambition is present; what is sorely lacking is access.

This is where public charter schools come into play. Serving as tuition-free public alternatives, charter schools offer families a choice without the burdens of legacy status or extortionate fees. Admission is determined by a lottery, providing an equitable chance at quality education. For parents balancing rent, childcare, and multiple jobs, choosing a charter school isn’t about ideology—it’s a practical necessity.

That’s where public charter schools come in. Charter schools are tuition-free public schools families actively choose. There’s no legacy status or $70,000 check — just a lottery and the chance at a school that works for their child. For parents juggling rent, child care and multiple jobs, that choice isn’t ideological. It’s practical.

Too often, we conflate “free” with “fair.”

While traditional public schools are free, families know that quality varies widely, and when a child is zoned to a struggling school, “free” doesn’t feel like opportunity. Meanwhile, families with resources opt out —moving to more expensive neighborhoods, hiring tutors, or paying private tuition that now rivals college costs.

Charter schools help level the playing field. They give working-class families access to high-quality public schools without requiring wealth, relocation, and the results speak for themselves. Across New York, charter schools serving predominantly high-needs Black and Latino students have shown that income doesn’t have to dictate achievement, with strong gains on state exams that rival the highest-performing schools.

That’s not about competition. It’s about possibility.

It shows what can happen when families have access to schools with clear expectations, strong leadership, and the flexibility to meet students where they are.

At its core, this is a question of equity and dignity.

For decades, civil rights leaders have understood that access to quality education is one of the most powerful tools for breaking cycles of poverty. When students attend strong schools, graduation rates rise. College attendance increases. Long-term earnings improve. Communities benefit.

That’s why so many parents in low-income neighborhoods actively seek out charter schools. They are not abandoning public education. They are demanding that it work for their children.

This doesn’t have to be a fight between charter schools and traditional public schools. The real divide isn’t between school models — it’s between families who have options and families who don’t.

At a time when private education is becoming increasingly exclusive, our public system should be expanding high-quality options, not limiting them. Charter schools are one important part of that solution — especially for families who have historically been locked out of choice altogether.

If we believe in fairness, then school choice cannot be a luxury good.

Martell is executive director of Education Reform Now New York.

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