Many conservatives, including Trump, say that "school choice" is the solution to failing schools, particularly those in inner cities.
Although I do agree many public schools are disasters, I for one believe this is a bad idea.
I have sent my daughter to a private school since she was in kindergarten, and I can tell you that there is nothing "magical" about private schools except for one thing---the parents are very engaged in their child's education. The facilities and many teachers may actually be better at many public schools.
When parents are highly engaged in their children's lives, the children are much less likely to be involved in crime or other destructive behaviour. The schools are more likely to teach within the guidelines that active parents insist.
Many of these private schools are not filled with children of rich people, but rather those that will sacrifice to find ways to send their kids to school. I have known dozens of parents that help serve lunch or volunteer in other ways to get educational discounts. I spent a year myself as a bus driver, and I still found the means to send my daughter to a private school.
If sending kids to a private school suddenly became free, easy, and sacrifice-less, the halls would be filled with the same problems public schools face. A week or two ago, another GAW anon, made a post about how he was one of two other parents attending a school board meeting.
Really, what positive contributions could these private schools hope to receive from these School Choice newcomers?
I totally hate how much they system keeps feeding these schools, but I believe the solution needs to start by parents involvement. We've started to see a little of that around the country, as countries have gone too woke.
Yup, if a school is doing real well with teaching the children more people would want to send their children to that school. This way, schools may actually want to start TEACHING children again for starters else, they wont get money because, no one will want to go there. One thing I find nice on this is the fact that even in the poorest of neighborhood's, if the money is following the students , those students may actually start getting a decent education since there will be an incentive for schools in that area to improve since, if they do, they will get more students and will have the money needed to improve and hire people will be proactive about teaching and so on and so forth...
Make the schools be the ones that need to pass a parent's test with high marks on a yearly report card. heh heh.