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INDIANA'S SCHOOLING
DESERTS:
edchoice.org/INSchoolingDeserts
BREAKING DOWN
Identifying Hoosier Communities Lacking
Highly Rated Schools, Multi-Sector Options
Indiana has arguably the most robust K–12
educational choice environment in the U.S.
Vouchers Tax-Credit
Scholarships
Charter Schools
Magnet Schools Inter- & Intra-
District Transfers
In theory, that array of options is available to every
Hoosier student, and our research found that most
students live within 30 minutes of a charter, magnet
or voucher-participating private school.
That does not mean all parts of the
state have equitable access to options,
creating “schooling deserts.”
Using Geographic Information System (GIS)
software, we calculated drive times from
highly rated schools of any type as well as
all charter, magnet and voucher-participating
schools to determine the location of
schooling deserts across the state.
For the most part, the schooling deserts we identified
are in rural areas of the state, and they reflect one
or more of these characteristics:
• An A-rated desert, where families lack access to
	 A-rated schools;
• A choice desert, where families lack access to charter,
	 magnet and voucher-participating private schools
• An educational opportunity zone, where students
	 have reasonable access only to a D- or F-rated
	 school of any type
An “educational opportunity zone” describes
an area of the state that desperately needs to
improve existing options and/or invest in new,
highly rated schooling options.
Where do the school ratings
in this report come from?
Each year, the Indiana State Board of Education
gives all of these types of schools A–F ratings,
which are largely based on students’ state
standardized test scores.
A B D
FC
Unlike some states, Indiana can compare schools’
ratings fairly uniformly because most private schools
had been administering the state test prior to the
implementation of the voucher program in 2011.
Poor ratings have
consequences in Indiana.
Private schools may not accept new voucher
students when rated “D” or “F” for two
or more consecutive years.
F
Rating
F
Rating
Public schools risk closure or state
takeover for persistently low grades.
For this report, we use these school ratings to
determine whether a school is “highly rated” or
not, but it is important to understand that their
reliance on test scores, subjective weighting and
lack of qualitative measures may not accurately
reflect schools’ range of educational outcomes.
We know from
research on public
and private school
parents in Indiana that
families have different
preferences when it
comes to choosing and
assessing their child’s
school.
WHY INDIANA
PARENTS CHOOSE
A Cross-Sector Survey of Parents’ Views in a
Robust School Choice Environment
Andrew D. Catt
Evan Rhinesmith, Ph.D.
edchoice.org/WhyINParentsChoose
That is why this report identifies not just
communities that lack access to highly
rated schools, but also parts of the state
that are devoid of educational options.
What did we find?
90% of Hoosier families are a 15-minute
drive or less from an A-rated K–8 school
of any type (traditional public, magnet,
charter or voucher-participating private)
90% of Hoosier families are a
21-minute drive from an A-rated
high school of any type
100% of Indiana students are
within 45 minutes of an A-rated
school of any grade and any type
15 minute drive
21 minute drive
45 minute drive
That’s the good news,
but thousands of Hoosier students
fall into schooling deserts.
K–8 SCHOOLING
DESERTS:
The A-rated K–8 school
deserts are found in the
warm areas with the red
boundaries. An estimated
3,699 K–8 students
live within those A-rated
deserts.
A-Rated Deserts (K–8)
An estimated 3,699 primary students live without reasonable access to A-rated grade schools
SCHOOLS SERVING AT LEAST ONE GRADE K–8 “A” RATED IN 2016–17
K–8 Voucher (n=121)K–8 Traditional Public (n=352) K–8 Magnet (n=6)K–8 Charter (n=9)
0 50 100
MILES
0
4
8
12
16
20
24
30
32
36
40
44
DRIVETIME(MINUTES)
K–8 SCHOOLING DESERTS:
Traditional public and voucher-participating private schools tend to
provide more drivable options to K–8 families, especially in rural areas.
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 95 100 105 110 115 120 125 130 135 140 145 150 155 160
100%
90%
80%
70%
60%
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
0
All Schools Traditional Public Schools Voucher-Participating Privates Charters
MINUTES FROM AN “A” SCHOOL SERVING AT LEAST ONE GRADE K–8 (2016–17)
PERCENTOFINDIANA’SK–8POPULATION(AGES5TO14)
A-Rated Drive Times by Sector (K–8)
Nine out of 10 students live within 15 minutes of an A-rated grade school
K–8 SCHOOLING
DESERTS:
But when it comes to
options of any kind, about
24,810 K–8 students live
in a K–8 choice desert,
meaning they are 30
minutes or more away
from any charter, magnet
or voucher-participating
private school that might
serve them.
Choice Deserts (K–8)
An estimated 24,810 primary students live without reasonable access to a K–8 school of choice
0
4
8
12
16
20
24
30
32
36
40
44
48
52
55
DRIVETIME(MINUTES)
0 10050
MILES
K–8 SCHOOLING
DESERTS:
Look at the purple shaded
boundaries with the
grad caps. These are the
attendance zones for
D- and F-rated traditional
K–8 public schools that
happen to overlap with
choice deserts, where
families’ options are also
D- and F-rated.
0
4
8
12
16
20
24
30
32
36
40
44
48
52
55
DRIVETIME(MINUTES)
Educational Opportunity Zones (K–8)
An estimated 35,860 primary students live without reasonable access from a non-D or F-rated charter, magnet, or
voucher-participating high school, and some of these students live within failing district attendance zones
0 10050
MILES
SCHOOLS “D” OR “F” RATED IN 2016–17
TRADITIONAL PUBLIC SCHOOL ATTENDANCE BOUNDARIES 2013–14
K–8 with Attendance Boundary in “Non-Failing” Choice Desert (n=14)
Boundaries for Above Schools Opportunity Zone
K–8 SCHOOLING
DESERTS:
What we call educational
opportunity zones are
shaded bright pink,
meaning K–8 students in
those areas have access
only to their zoned D- or
F-rated traditional public
school and poorly rated
alternatives (if any) within
a 30-mile radius.
0
4
8
12
16
20
24
30
32
36
40
44
48
52
55
DRIVETIME(MINUTES)
Educational Opportunity Zones (K–8)
An estimated 35,860 primary students live without reasonable access from a non-D or F-rated charter, magnet, or
voucher-participating high school, and some of these students live within failing district attendance zones
0 10050
MILES
SCHOOLS “D” OR “F” RATED IN 2016–17
TRADITIONAL PUBLIC SCHOOL ATTENDANCE BOUNDARIES 2013–14
K–8 with Attendance Boundary in “Non-Failing” Choice Desert (n=14)
Boundaries for Above Schools Opportunity Zone
K–8 SCHOOLING
DESERTS:
And we know K–8
students live in these
opportunity zones.
Disbursement of K–8 Students
Overlap of various deserts exists within medium- and low-density areas
INDIANA BLOCK GROUPS 2018 DOT-DENSITY THEME
= 10 K–8 Students (Age 5 to 14)
0 50 100
MILES
Distribution of K–8 Students
Though we can’t say exactly how many
students live within these opportunity
zones because of data limitations, we
do know that about 7,000 K–8 students
attend the D- or F-rated schools
marked on our map.
HIGH SCHOOL DESERTS:
The A-rated high school
deserts are found in the
warm areas with the red
boundaries. An estimated
6,668 high school
students live within
those deserts.
A-Rated Deserts (9–12)
An estimated 6,668 secondary students live without access to A-rated high schools
SCHOOLS SERVING AT LEAST ONE HIGH SCHOOL GRADE 9–12 “A” RATED IN 2016–17
9–12 Voucher (n=32)9–12 Traditional Public (n=119) 9–12 Charter (n=7)
0
4
8
12
16
20
24
30
32
36
40
44
48
52
55
DRIVETIME(MINUTES)
0 10050
MILES
HIGH SCHOOL DESERTS:
Traditional public and voucher-participating private high schools
tend to provide more drivable options to high school families,
especially in rural areas.
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 95 100 105 110 115 120 125 130 135 140
100%
90%
80%
70%
60%
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
0
All Schools Traditional Public Schools Voucher-Participating Privates Charters
MINUTES FROM AN “A” SCHOOL SERVING AT LEAST ONE GRADE 9–12 (2016–17)
PERCENTOFINDIANA’S9–12POPULATION(AGES15TO19)
A-Rated Drive Times by Sector (9–12)
Nine out of 10 students live within 21 minutes of an A-rated high school
HIGH SCHOOL DESERTS:
But when it comes to
options of any kind, about
45,072 high school
students live in a high
school choice desert.
That’s nearly one in 10
students.
Choice Deserts (9–12)
An estimated 45,072 secondary students live without reasonable access to a high school of choice
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
55
60
65
70
75
79
DRIVETIME(MINUTES)
0 10050
MILES
HIGH SCHOOL DESERTS:
Look at the purple shaded
boundaries with the
grad caps. These are the
attendance zones for
D- and F-rated traditional
public high schools that
happen to overlap with
choice deserts, where
families’ options are also
D- and F-rated.
Educational Opportunity Zones (9–12)
An estimated 52,661 secondary students live without reasonable access from a non-D or F-rated charter, magnet,
or voucher-participating high school, and some of these students live within failing district attendance zones
0 10050
MILES
SCHOOLS “D” OR “F” RATED IN 2016–17
TRADITIONAL PUBLIC SCHOOL ATTENDANCE BOUNDARIES 2013–14
9–12 with Attendance Boundary in “Non-Failing” Choice Desert (n=4)
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
55
60
65
70
75
79
DRIVETIME(MINUTES)
Boundaries for Above Schools Opportunity Zone
HIGH SCHOOL DESERTS:
What we call educational
opportunity zones are
shaded bright pink,
meaning high school
students in those areas
have access only to their
zoned D- or F-rated
traditional public
school and poorly rated
alternatives (if any) within
a 30-mile radius.
Educational Opportunity Zones (9–12)
An estimated 52,661 secondary students live without reasonable access from a non-D or F-rated charter, magnet,
or voucher-participating high school, and some of these students live within failing district attendance zones
0 10050
MILES
SCHOOLS “D” OR “F” RATED IN 2016–17
TRADITIONAL PUBLIC SCHOOL ATTENDANCE BOUNDARIES 2013–14
9–12 with Attendance Boundary in “Non-Failing” Choice Desert (n=4)
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
55
60
65
70
75
79
DRIVETIME(MINUTES)
Boundaries for Above Schools Opportunity Zone
HIGH SCHOOL DESERTS:
And we know high school
students live in these
opportunity zones.
Disbursement of High Schoolers
INDIANA BLOCK GROUPS 2018 DOT-DENSITY THEME
= 10 High Schoolers (Age 15 to 19)
0 10050
MILES
Overlap of various deserts exists within medium- and low-density areas
Distribution of High Schoolers
Though we can’t say exactly how many
students live within these opportunity zones
because of data limitations, we do know that
about 400 high school students attend the
D- or F-rated schools marked on our map.
Why are these data important?
These deserts provide opportunities for policymakers,
educators and entrepreneurs to invest in high-quality
educational options. The improvement of educational
options and performance in these communities
represent a straightforward way to come closer to
equitable educational opportunities across Indiana.
For more details, please download
the full report by visiting
EDCHOICE.ORG/INSchoolingDeserts
Have questions? Contact our research
team at research@edchoice.org.

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Breaking Down Indiana's Schooling Deserts

  • 1. INDIANA'S SCHOOLING DESERTS: edchoice.org/INSchoolingDeserts BREAKING DOWN Identifying Hoosier Communities Lacking Highly Rated Schools, Multi-Sector Options
  • 2. Indiana has arguably the most robust K–12 educational choice environment in the U.S. Vouchers Tax-Credit Scholarships Charter Schools Magnet Schools Inter- & Intra- District Transfers
  • 3. In theory, that array of options is available to every Hoosier student, and our research found that most students live within 30 minutes of a charter, magnet or voucher-participating private school.
  • 4. That does not mean all parts of the state have equitable access to options, creating “schooling deserts.”
  • 5. Using Geographic Information System (GIS) software, we calculated drive times from highly rated schools of any type as well as all charter, magnet and voucher-participating schools to determine the location of schooling deserts across the state.
  • 6. For the most part, the schooling deserts we identified are in rural areas of the state, and they reflect one or more of these characteristics: • An A-rated desert, where families lack access to A-rated schools; • A choice desert, where families lack access to charter, magnet and voucher-participating private schools • An educational opportunity zone, where students have reasonable access only to a D- or F-rated school of any type
  • 7. An “educational opportunity zone” describes an area of the state that desperately needs to improve existing options and/or invest in new, highly rated schooling options.
  • 8. Where do the school ratings in this report come from?
  • 9. Each year, the Indiana State Board of Education gives all of these types of schools A–F ratings, which are largely based on students’ state standardized test scores. A B D FC
  • 10. Unlike some states, Indiana can compare schools’ ratings fairly uniformly because most private schools had been administering the state test prior to the implementation of the voucher program in 2011.
  • 12. Private schools may not accept new voucher students when rated “D” or “F” for two or more consecutive years. F Rating F Rating
  • 13. Public schools risk closure or state takeover for persistently low grades.
  • 14. For this report, we use these school ratings to determine whether a school is “highly rated” or not, but it is important to understand that their reliance on test scores, subjective weighting and lack of qualitative measures may not accurately reflect schools’ range of educational outcomes.
  • 15. We know from research on public and private school parents in Indiana that families have different preferences when it comes to choosing and assessing their child’s school. WHY INDIANA PARENTS CHOOSE A Cross-Sector Survey of Parents’ Views in a Robust School Choice Environment Andrew D. Catt Evan Rhinesmith, Ph.D. edchoice.org/WhyINParentsChoose
  • 16. That is why this report identifies not just communities that lack access to highly rated schools, but also parts of the state that are devoid of educational options.
  • 17. What did we find?
  • 18. 90% of Hoosier families are a 15-minute drive or less from an A-rated K–8 school of any type (traditional public, magnet, charter or voucher-participating private) 90% of Hoosier families are a 21-minute drive from an A-rated high school of any type 100% of Indiana students are within 45 minutes of an A-rated school of any grade and any type 15 minute drive 21 minute drive 45 minute drive
  • 19. That’s the good news, but thousands of Hoosier students fall into schooling deserts.
  • 20. K–8 SCHOOLING DESERTS: The A-rated K–8 school deserts are found in the warm areas with the red boundaries. An estimated 3,699 K–8 students live within those A-rated deserts. A-Rated Deserts (K–8) An estimated 3,699 primary students live without reasonable access to A-rated grade schools SCHOOLS SERVING AT LEAST ONE GRADE K–8 “A” RATED IN 2016–17 K–8 Voucher (n=121)K–8 Traditional Public (n=352) K–8 Magnet (n=6)K–8 Charter (n=9) 0 50 100 MILES 0 4 8 12 16 20 24 30 32 36 40 44 DRIVETIME(MINUTES)
  • 21. K–8 SCHOOLING DESERTS: Traditional public and voucher-participating private schools tend to provide more drivable options to K–8 families, especially in rural areas. 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 95 100 105 110 115 120 125 130 135 140 145 150 155 160 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0 All Schools Traditional Public Schools Voucher-Participating Privates Charters MINUTES FROM AN “A” SCHOOL SERVING AT LEAST ONE GRADE K–8 (2016–17) PERCENTOFINDIANA’SK–8POPULATION(AGES5TO14) A-Rated Drive Times by Sector (K–8) Nine out of 10 students live within 15 minutes of an A-rated grade school
  • 22. K–8 SCHOOLING DESERTS: But when it comes to options of any kind, about 24,810 K–8 students live in a K–8 choice desert, meaning they are 30 minutes or more away from any charter, magnet or voucher-participating private school that might serve them. Choice Deserts (K–8) An estimated 24,810 primary students live without reasonable access to a K–8 school of choice 0 4 8 12 16 20 24 30 32 36 40 44 48 52 55 DRIVETIME(MINUTES) 0 10050 MILES
  • 23. K–8 SCHOOLING DESERTS: Look at the purple shaded boundaries with the grad caps. These are the attendance zones for D- and F-rated traditional K–8 public schools that happen to overlap with choice deserts, where families’ options are also D- and F-rated. 0 4 8 12 16 20 24 30 32 36 40 44 48 52 55 DRIVETIME(MINUTES) Educational Opportunity Zones (K–8) An estimated 35,860 primary students live without reasonable access from a non-D or F-rated charter, magnet, or voucher-participating high school, and some of these students live within failing district attendance zones 0 10050 MILES SCHOOLS “D” OR “F” RATED IN 2016–17 TRADITIONAL PUBLIC SCHOOL ATTENDANCE BOUNDARIES 2013–14 K–8 with Attendance Boundary in “Non-Failing” Choice Desert (n=14) Boundaries for Above Schools Opportunity Zone
  • 24. K–8 SCHOOLING DESERTS: What we call educational opportunity zones are shaded bright pink, meaning K–8 students in those areas have access only to their zoned D- or F-rated traditional public school and poorly rated alternatives (if any) within a 30-mile radius. 0 4 8 12 16 20 24 30 32 36 40 44 48 52 55 DRIVETIME(MINUTES) Educational Opportunity Zones (K–8) An estimated 35,860 primary students live without reasonable access from a non-D or F-rated charter, magnet, or voucher-participating high school, and some of these students live within failing district attendance zones 0 10050 MILES SCHOOLS “D” OR “F” RATED IN 2016–17 TRADITIONAL PUBLIC SCHOOL ATTENDANCE BOUNDARIES 2013–14 K–8 with Attendance Boundary in “Non-Failing” Choice Desert (n=14) Boundaries for Above Schools Opportunity Zone
  • 25. K–8 SCHOOLING DESERTS: And we know K–8 students live in these opportunity zones. Disbursement of K–8 Students Overlap of various deserts exists within medium- and low-density areas INDIANA BLOCK GROUPS 2018 DOT-DENSITY THEME = 10 K–8 Students (Age 5 to 14) 0 50 100 MILES Distribution of K–8 Students
  • 26. Though we can’t say exactly how many students live within these opportunity zones because of data limitations, we do know that about 7,000 K–8 students attend the D- or F-rated schools marked on our map.
  • 27. HIGH SCHOOL DESERTS: The A-rated high school deserts are found in the warm areas with the red boundaries. An estimated 6,668 high school students live within those deserts. A-Rated Deserts (9–12) An estimated 6,668 secondary students live without access to A-rated high schools SCHOOLS SERVING AT LEAST ONE HIGH SCHOOL GRADE 9–12 “A” RATED IN 2016–17 9–12 Voucher (n=32)9–12 Traditional Public (n=119) 9–12 Charter (n=7) 0 4 8 12 16 20 24 30 32 36 40 44 48 52 55 DRIVETIME(MINUTES) 0 10050 MILES
  • 28. HIGH SCHOOL DESERTS: Traditional public and voucher-participating private high schools tend to provide more drivable options to high school families, especially in rural areas. 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 95 100 105 110 115 120 125 130 135 140 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0 All Schools Traditional Public Schools Voucher-Participating Privates Charters MINUTES FROM AN “A” SCHOOL SERVING AT LEAST ONE GRADE 9–12 (2016–17) PERCENTOFINDIANA’S9–12POPULATION(AGES15TO19) A-Rated Drive Times by Sector (9–12) Nine out of 10 students live within 21 minutes of an A-rated high school
  • 29. HIGH SCHOOL DESERTS: But when it comes to options of any kind, about 45,072 high school students live in a high school choice desert. That’s nearly one in 10 students. Choice Deserts (9–12) An estimated 45,072 secondary students live without reasonable access to a high school of choice 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 79 DRIVETIME(MINUTES) 0 10050 MILES
  • 30. HIGH SCHOOL DESERTS: Look at the purple shaded boundaries with the grad caps. These are the attendance zones for D- and F-rated traditional public high schools that happen to overlap with choice deserts, where families’ options are also D- and F-rated. Educational Opportunity Zones (9–12) An estimated 52,661 secondary students live without reasonable access from a non-D or F-rated charter, magnet, or voucher-participating high school, and some of these students live within failing district attendance zones 0 10050 MILES SCHOOLS “D” OR “F” RATED IN 2016–17 TRADITIONAL PUBLIC SCHOOL ATTENDANCE BOUNDARIES 2013–14 9–12 with Attendance Boundary in “Non-Failing” Choice Desert (n=4) 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 79 DRIVETIME(MINUTES) Boundaries for Above Schools Opportunity Zone
  • 31. HIGH SCHOOL DESERTS: What we call educational opportunity zones are shaded bright pink, meaning high school students in those areas have access only to their zoned D- or F-rated traditional public school and poorly rated alternatives (if any) within a 30-mile radius. Educational Opportunity Zones (9–12) An estimated 52,661 secondary students live without reasonable access from a non-D or F-rated charter, magnet, or voucher-participating high school, and some of these students live within failing district attendance zones 0 10050 MILES SCHOOLS “D” OR “F” RATED IN 2016–17 TRADITIONAL PUBLIC SCHOOL ATTENDANCE BOUNDARIES 2013–14 9–12 with Attendance Boundary in “Non-Failing” Choice Desert (n=4) 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 79 DRIVETIME(MINUTES) Boundaries for Above Schools Opportunity Zone
  • 32. HIGH SCHOOL DESERTS: And we know high school students live in these opportunity zones. Disbursement of High Schoolers INDIANA BLOCK GROUPS 2018 DOT-DENSITY THEME = 10 High Schoolers (Age 15 to 19) 0 10050 MILES Overlap of various deserts exists within medium- and low-density areas Distribution of High Schoolers
  • 33. Though we can’t say exactly how many students live within these opportunity zones because of data limitations, we do know that about 400 high school students attend the D- or F-rated schools marked on our map.
  • 34. Why are these data important?
  • 35. These deserts provide opportunities for policymakers, educators and entrepreneurs to invest in high-quality educational options. The improvement of educational options and performance in these communities represent a straightforward way to come closer to equitable educational opportunities across Indiana.
  • 36. For more details, please download the full report by visiting EDCHOICE.ORG/INSchoolingDeserts Have questions? Contact our research team at research@edchoice.org.