By Israel
Teitelbaum In response the demands of citizens from across the
country for school choice, the National Education Association has launched a
multi-million dollar campaign to fight parental choice. If this campaign follows
the pattern of earlier campaigns, it will be replete with scare tactics,
half-truths and false prophecies. Their battle cry is, “school
vouchers will destroy the public schools”. Yet, there is no data to
support this prediction. In fact, wherever school choice has been tried, the
public schools have quickly responded by improving the quality of their
educational programs. Most revealing is Florida’s A-Plus Plan, which
assigned a letter grade to each public school, based on how their students
performed on the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test. Students attending
schools assessed an F grade for two out of four years, become eligible for
publicly funded vouchers to attend a private or religious school. Students
attending as many as 78 schools were expected to be eligible for vouchers by the
end of the 1999-2000 school year. But the state department of education reported
that all of those schools had significantly improved their student test scores,
thus avoiding the F grade that would have triggered vouchers. The claim
that school vouchers will drain much needed revenues from public schools, begs
the question: Why do public schools now receive the funds that should be
directed to the children who are not in the public school system? By far
the most convoluted argument is that school choice violates the separation of
church and state. The claim that leveling the playing field and providing equal
educational opportunity for all children violates the Constitution is equivalent
to saying that the abolition of slavery violates the rights of slave owners. It
was never the intent of the First Amendment to punish those who chose a
religious way of life by denying them the benefits available to
others. Following the strategy of those who find themselves in a losing
argument, opponents of school choice resort to unleashing a barrage of claims,
in the hope that at least one will stick. Thus, they suddenly become concerned
for the integrity of religious schools and put forth the argument that school
vouchers will invite government interference. They conveniently ignore the
religious interference that government now practices by collecting school taxes
from all families, but providing funds only to those who agree to have their
children indoctrinated in government run schools where parents have little or no
say in what their children are taught. The one reason they do not give for
their opposition to school choice is that they want to retain their monopolistic
control over the multi-billion dollar educational system. This monopoly affords
them the opportunity to gain maximum benefits for minimum performance.
Competition will force greater productivity and more accountability, just as it
does in all areas of enterprise. |