Amazon.com Review
Witte's final stance has surprised the antichoice movement, which used his earlier research results to argue against vouchers. Still, his endorsement is far from ringing--he found no proof that vouchers improve students' test scores or offer them a better education in the private sector. He also recommends that vouchers be issued to low-income students only, thus opening up another cause for debate. His writing is cautious and a bit defeated, reflecting a frustration with the attacks leveled at him from both sides of this raging dispute. He shouldn't despair: this book is a valuable resource that, if heard above the shouting, could elevate the debate and lead to a more rational conclusion. --Jodi Mailander Farrell
Review
Less polemic than a tool to foster closer consideration of an idea whose time may or may not have come. -- Kirkus Reviews
Amid the welter of claims and counterclaims, it is heartening to hear the careful study of the voucher movement by John Witte. -- Howard Gardner, New York Review of Books
Of [particular] interest . . . is Witte's description of the historical context of the program, the competing agendas of advocates on both sides, and the political process involved in creating, operating and attempting to evaluate a voucher program in light of these diverse constituencies. -- James G. Mulligan, Economics of Education Review
Anyone interested in school choice should read this book. Though it is grounded in a detailed case study, the book's message resonates far beyond. . . . [It] transcends the predictable polemics that can overwhelm the choice debate. -- Scott Davies, Contemporary Sociology

