I spent the past several days in Lynchburg, VA where my wife grew up. We saw a bunch of her old friends from (public) high school, and what struck me was that not one of them send their children to public school. These were middle and upper-middle class families who were all the products of public school. All of them spoke well of the education they received in Lynchburg public schools, and all of them spoke of the difficulty of the decision to send their children to private schools. We heard several reasons, and among them were:
- The school seemed more about discipline than it did about learning.
- All we heard about were scores on the SOLs, and we wanted our child’s education to be about more than that.
- With all the budget cuts, we were concerned that the education at the school would suffer too much.
- We wanted school to teach our kid, and all the teachers talked about teaching to the test.
These were not hippy, lefty, progressives. These were professionals in Lynchburg, VA. And they were all families who would have sent their kids to public schools in the past. And none of them were, mostly because of policy decisions our nation has made about public schools in the past decade. And what’s so scary is that perception has become reality. Despite the fact that every parent I spoke to had a positive experience in the very school system where they would send their child (often at the same school they were zoned for), they didn’t send their kids there. Perception had become reality. Because the US has created a narrative that says their schools weren’t good, families who have the financial ability to make other choices, chose not to send their kids to the public schools, despite their own positive experiences with public school.
And it struck me – how long does this last? If more and more families who can, choose to opt out of the public system, how long will be have one? With so many families making major financial decisions to send their children to private schools and so many more families sending their children to charter schools that do not typically think of themselves as "public school families," how long will we have a public school system that educates the majority of Americans?
It is why I think we will see more and more legislation for voucher programs in the coming years, and while they have mostly been focused at the state level, I think we will see federal legislation for vouchers within the next couple of years. And sadly, I cannot imagine a better way to move Americans toward wanting one than the current national dialogue about school.
We have undermined support for one of the longest standing public institutions we have, and I worry that we are on the verge of replacing it with a franchise model of education where Americans will take their tax credits and shop them to whomever will accept their child. Families of means will take their credit and happily subsidize their children’s private education. Families who cannot will take the monies – minus the necessary cut for oversight of this new system – and find the best schools they can. And the best of the democratic ideals that our public schools were built on will be further eroded in favor of "the market."
Caveat emptor.
– Posted using BlogPress from my iPad
Location:Shawnee,United States
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