Public School Choice: Limited Options Available for Many American Indian and Alaska Native Students
Fast Facts
American Indian and Alaska Native communities are looking for high-quality educational opportunities that also reflect their languages and cultures. Different types of public schools (e.g., charter, magnet, and career and technical education schools) may provide more choices.
We found that many Indian students have limited public school options. Most school districts with at least 25% Indian students only offered traditional public schools. Many of these districts are in rural areas, where there may not be enough total students to justify additional schools. Districts in large urban areas often had more choices.
School Districts with American Indian and Alaska Native Student Enrollment of at Least 25%, School Year 2015-16
Map of the U.S. showing that most school districts offered only traditional public schools.
Highlights
What GAO Found
Few areas provide American Indian and Alaska Native students (Indian students) school choice options other than traditional public schools. According to GAO's analysis of 2015-16 Department of Education (Education) data, most of the school districts with Indian student enrollment of at least 25 percent had only traditional public schools (378 of 451 districts, or 84 percent). The remaining 73 districts had at least one choice, such as a Bureau of Indian Education, charter, magnet, or career and technical education school (see figure). Most of these 451 districts were in rural areas near tribal lands. Rural districts may offer few school choice options because, for example, they do not have enough students to justify additional schools or they may face difficulties recruiting and retaining teachers, among other challenges.
School Districts with American Indian and Alaska Native Student Enrollment of at Least 25 Percent, School Year 2015-16
Note: School choice options include Bureau of Indian Education, charter, magnet, and career and technical education schools.
Some of the 100 school districts with the largest number of Indian students were located in large urban areas, such as New York City, and the majority (62) offered at least one option other than a traditional public school, according to GAO's analysis. The most common option was a charter school. However, because Indian students often account for a small percentage of all students in these districts, Indian education experts GAO interviewed said that the schools are less likely to have curricula that reflect Indian students' cultural identity or provide instruction on Native languages—things that tribes and experts consider crucial to strengthening, rebuilding, and sustaining Indian cultures and communities. Also, even when Indian students had more options, no consistent enrollment patterns were evident. Whether Indian students enrolled in different types of schools could be a function, in part, of differences in state school choice laws and the extent to which these schools offered curricula that reflect Indian languages, cultures, or histories, according to Indian education experts.
Why GAO Did This Study
Education refers to school choice as the opportunity for students and their families to create high-quality, personalized paths for learning that best meet the students' needs. For Indian students, school choice can be a means of accessing instructional programs that reflect and preserve their languages, cultures, and histories. For many years, studies have shown that Indian students have struggled academically and the nation's K-12 schools have not consistently provided Indian students with high-quality and culturally-relevant educational opportunities.
GAO was asked to review K-12 school choice options for Indian students. This report examines the public school options located in areas with large Indian student populations. GAO used Education's Common Core of Data for school year 2015-16 (most recent available) to analyze public school choice in (1) school districts in which Indian students accounted for 25 percent or more of all students (i.e., high percentages of Indian students) and (2) the 100 school districts with the largest number of Indian students. GAO also interviewed federal officials, relevant stakeholder groups, and tribal leaders to better understand school choice options for Indian students.
Recommendations
GAO is not making recommendations in this report.