JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – The expansion of school choice options will get a major push of momentum this month when more than 10,000 events are held across the country to commemorate National School Choice Week.

“Individuals, schools and organizations across the country have planned an unprecedented 10,100 events for January 2015 to bring attention to the issue. The events are timed to coincide with National School Choice Week 2015, which runs from January 25 – 31,” organizers say in a news release.

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Events will range from roundtable discussions to movie screens and book clubs to rallies and special events at schools.

“More American families than ever before are actively choosing the best educational environments for their children, which has galvanized millions of additional parents – those without options ­– to demand greater choices for their own children,” Andrew Campanella, president of National School Choice Week, says.

“National School Choice Week will feature both of those themes, providing a platform for people to celebrate school choice where it exists and demand it where it does not.”

Campanella believes the growth in enthusiasm for school choice can be attributed to simple supply and demand.

That is, more parents are seeing others with options and they want them for their own children.

Several states have expanded school choice options for parents, including a statewide voucher programs in Wisconsin and Indiana – which will likely see further expansion in the upcoming legislative session.

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Oklahoma legislators failed to pass a bill in 2014 to create the second Education Savings Account program in the country.

Last January, a Friedman Foundation poll found 56 percent of Oklahomans favor ESAs, according to the Heartland Institute. Indications are that the bill will come up again in the next legislative session.

“National School Choice Week 2015 will be more than 60 times larger than the first celebration in 2011, because people see the Week as an opportunity to start thousands of individual conversations about educational choice in a positive, forward-looking, fun, nonpolitical and nonpartisan way,” Campanella says.

To find an event in your area, visit SchoolChoiceWeek.com.