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Ohio’s voucher programs have several problems, but as Stephen Dyer lays out, the data shows that one of the problems is segregation.

The EdChoice Expansion program has grown steadily since its 2014 inception. Today, it includes 26,902 students. The regular EdChoice program has 36,992 students — just about 10,000 more than the expansion.

Where it really differs, though, is in the number of school districts in which it exists. There are 333 school districts that lose at least 10 students to the EdChoice Expansion program. The original EdChoice program? Less than 1/3 of that — 100 districts.

However, the disturbing racial segregation pattern we have seen for years in the original EdChoice program continues in its expansive cousin.

Overall, what the data show clearly is that even though EdChoice Expansion recipients come from much less diverse communities than the original program, they still take disproportionately more White students than even those communities.

Perhaps the most telling statistic is this one: The 345 districts that lose students to either EdChoice or EdChoice Expansion are, on average, 76.6 percent White. And the EdChoice students that leave for private school tuition subsidies? They’re 87 percent White.

Districts that lose no EdChoice students?

They’re 90.1 percent White.

Read the full post here.