I was listening to NPR tonight on my drive home and John Edwards was talking about how he thought Housing Vouchers were a good idea for providing poor citizens (particuarly those displaced by Katrina) housing assisstance. But, in the next breath, he said that he didn't think School Vouchers were a good idea. He didn't explain why. Could someone explain to me why vouchers are a good idea for housing but not schooling? Besides the fact that the Democrats have to appeal to the Teacher's Union?
9/30/2005 1:15:54 AM
I think you just answered your own question.
9/30/2005 1:56:48 AM
I kind of like the idea. But one argument i've heard against them is that white people would take their kids out of schools with mostly or many minorities, causing all their money to go to one particular school, that's mostly white.Schools, like anything else, have a fixed cost, and if there isn't enough money to meet this cost in a school where all the white people left, it would cause problems for that school.But, this scenario doesn't seem likely to happen in most places, and they could probably create a voucher law that can compensate for that kind of situation.
9/30/2005 2:08:15 AM
because they hate childrensee also: abortion
9/30/2005 2:11:05 AM
I can't say anything regarding the housing vouchers, but school vouchers are a crock. It's a way of advocating privatization of public education in an underhanded way. Private schools can set their own policies, specifically with respect to curriculum and religion. This isn't all bad, I mean parents should have a right to choose what school suits their children's needs.The reason for all the hate on the voucher idea is its link to No Child Left Behind. The problem the Teachers Union and other organizations have with No Child Left Behind (NCLB) is that it's being used to torpedo public schools' credibility. If you scare parents into believing pulic schools are doing a poor job educating their kids then they'll push for vouchers. The vouchers represent the portion of money the state would give to public schools to educate the parent's child. This money can then be spent on tuition for private schools.Here's the deal. NCLB sets high standards for schools to meet, all based on standardized test scores. Sounds good, for after all we want to set high standards for our kids and make sure they're getting quality education. This is all fine and dandy, until you realize NCLB sets the same standards for urban, rural, poor, affluent, diverse and non-diverse schools. Trying to give every school, as they stand today, equal standards to aspire to by 2010 is exceptionally stupid and short-sighted.Why you ask?A rural, poor school doesn't have the tax base to afford as many basic necessities, like acquiring/retaining good teachers, updating school technology, or even properly stocking basic school supplies. Test scores obviously will be lower for students attending these schools, because the bottom line is that students with better teachers and more resources WILL perform comparatively better. It would be like walking into a gym class and demanding every student be able to run the mile in 6 minutes by year's end, WITHOUT providing any additional training time or assistance in any way. Now, try as those kids might, some of them simply aren't going to be able to run a 4 minute mile even with a year of training. This is the same bullshit NCLB is pulling right now.Have a diverse student body with Korean, Mexican, and other kids that don't speak english as a second language? That takes more resources too for ESL teachers (English as a Second Language), not to mention that these ESL students take that language barrier disadvantage into the testing room.A large percentage of schools will "fail" by NCLB standards. Parents read in the paper that their kids are "being left behind" by the public chool systems and all of the sudden everyone likes the idea of vouchers. No one bothers to ask how or why schools failed, but they do know the school failed SOMETHING. Set too high of a standard at anything and you'll see failure. I didn't make a 4.0 in college, am I a failure of a college student?Wait, don't answer that...You get the point. Vouchers may seem like a nice idea, but this country needs public schooling. If the schools start going all private it'll just be the new form of segregation and you'll see real polarization of political issues. We don't need to divide our kids up according to who is black, white, Christian, Muslim, Hispanic, Jewish or whatever. If parents want to use private schools then fine, but don't go ruining the reputation of public schools to force our hands.[/end rant][Edited on September 30, 2005 at 2:16 AM. Reason : grf]
9/30/2005 2:12:23 AM
9/30/2005 2:20:10 AM
Because school vouchers take money out of the public schools, causing them to worsen. There is no equivalent comparison with public housing. The goal with housing vouchers is to get and keep the gov't out of the housing business, b/c they aren't any good at it. You may argue we should do the same with education, but that is another issue.Unless our goal is privatize education in this country, this is a bad idea. The school voucher program as is proposed is not a way to enable poor people to get a better education, but rather a way of making a private education cheaper for the upper and upper-middle class.[Edited on September 30, 2005 at 8:34 AM. Reason : ?]
9/30/2005 8:30:09 AM
^ The goal is to have a good education system. The privatization would merely be a means to an end. In the short term you are right, this is going to divert money from public schools. Of course, that is only in the short term, in the long term most precincts with multiple public schools could close one or more of them because the students are in private school. In the end, it will save money on these students, freeing up more resources for the students remaining in public school. Of course, if the public school system is beyond saving, as I guess it might be somewhere in America, then it wouldn't be a crime if they did manage to privatize the whole system. Remember, this is not an all or nothing proposal. Most cities have acceptable public school systems. Vouchers could make them better, to be sure, but their main focus is saving students from god awful public schools where they exist. As for the rant above, I admit the No Child Left Behind Act sucks, but we're talking about vouchers.
9/30/2005 8:49:51 AM
i personally dont like vouchers b/c to me its been a way to seperate the have's from the have nots.
9/30/2005 10:02:29 AM
exactlyand if you look at the collegiate levelsure there are some marquee private schools, but for the whole, you don't go to a private school for the pure educationi know if my goal in college was just to learn, i wouldn't have gone to campbell(note: i'm not saying i didn't get a good education at campbell)
9/30/2005 10:16:15 AM
^^ How? It would let the have-nots attend the same schools as the haves. Or do you think the current system is equitable? The poor must attend public school, they have no choice, while the rich go to private schools because they can afford them.[Edited on September 30, 2005 at 10:30 AM. Reason : ^]
9/30/2005 10:30:16 AM
9/30/2005 10:52:40 AM
^ What is your point? That I stated the obvious? Perhaps your point was too obvious for me to discern.
9/30/2005 12:11:06 PM
9/30/2005 12:19:09 PM
Well that's not hard. "Children are only eligible for vouchers if their parents collectively earn less than $50k a year."Happy now? I may love the market, and honestly feel privatization can save public education, but I still hate rich people. I think rich people should never get a cent from government, no Social Security, no Medicare, no vouchers.
9/30/2005 1:16:41 PM
9/30/2005 1:53:58 PM
9/30/2005 2:38:46 PM
It would not let the havenots join the haves. What is 2,500 a year going to do for the people that make less than that a month? Nothing. And thats what we are talkign about here. Its not the middle class, b/c you know what they're gone. Vouchers would cripple the public school system and bolster the notion of better education for the rich. It would give the border-line upper class the advantage to better only their children, while leaving funding cut for others. Yes thats fine and what every parent should strive for, nor should they be punished for that. But whats good for the goose is not always good for the gander.has anyone here taught in public schools?[Edited on September 30, 2005 at 3:11 PM. Reason : spaces]
9/30/2005 3:11:30 PM
9/30/2005 3:36:52 PM
10/1/2005 12:21:16 AM
Keynes, I think you are splitting hairs on whether public education is a service or enterprise. I'm not sure what you think would be different, except maybe the influx of for profit companies running schools. We have a little bit of that and non-profits already in NC with the charter schools. I don't think any of the for profit schools have worked out very well. Also, look at for profit universities. Not too impressive, eh?Maybe I'm missing something, but I don't see how this would improve anything. I think the for-profits would either sacrifice quality or fail and the non-profits wouldn't be any cheaper.
10/1/2005 9:49:51 AM
10/1/2005 9:51:33 AM
hahaha, there is something classic about Keynes' response -- take a very specific issue and go on a long diatribe about something that is dubiously related
10/1/2005 9:59:10 AM
10/1/2005 9:59:51 AM
10/1/2005 10:50:21 AM
Democrats are all teachers. That is why they suck at like - no experience outside the classroom.
10/1/2005 11:13:22 AM
Yup. They all suck at like.
10/1/2005 12:14:46 PM
Sucking at like is destroying America
10/1/2005 1:27:11 PM
GGMon is a perfect example of the problems with our public education system. It's people like him that I want to help.
10/1/2005 1:42:17 PM
10/1/2005 2:30:37 PM
self pwnt. Whatever.
10/1/2005 4:50:25 PM
yeah, youre right. teachers suck. sure hope you never bothered with any of those morons in your lifetime.oh, waitwhat amazing, intellectually stimulating job do you have? you must be some kind of nuclear engineer im guessing?
10/1/2005 6:14:50 PM
Interesting point all around, sorry about the NCLB rant. As a future teacher I'm not looking forward to dealing with it and the political bullshit behind it.Vouchers are, however, simply a means of aggravating social stratification. Like so many have hinted before, vouchers don't pay the entire cost of private education. They merely subsidize it, leaving families to pay the difference. The result? The poorer kids will remain at public schools, but more middle/upper class kids will attend the private schools. It promotes social segregation without really addressing the problems with public education. Basically those kids with parents rich enough to put them in private schools get saved, the rest get marginalized.Now if you're looking strictly at the numbers, yes this helps MORE students receive better education. It fails however to address the problem at hand, which is public education and how to fix it. I personally believe it's a fundamental right of every American to receive quality education. Therefore I cannot support a system like vouchers which can only claim to give quality education to those wealthy enough to afford it.
10/1/2005 10:05:19 PM
10/2/2005 1:10:51 AM
10/2/2005 7:57:44 AM
10/2/2005 11:32:10 AM
10/2/2005 11:37:49 AM
i don't know about y'all, but i go to Stateprivate schools like Duke can STFU
10/2/2005 11:40:12 AM
10/2/2005 12:00:37 PM
10/2/2005 12:05:36 PM
Other countries call our public universities private because, heaven forbid, we STILL pay tuition. They would call it subsidized private education.
10/2/2005 12:46:19 PM
10/2/2005 3:44:47 PM
private =/= for profit, a lot of private schools at the primary and secondary level are non-profitassuming your goal is equal ed. for all, not just you get the education you can afford. Providing vouchers will certainly further seperate the poor from the middle class/upper-middle class. As said before vouchers will not cover the full cost of tuition at most private schools, those in the middle class/upper middle class will then be able to afford private schooling more easily if they choose to do so. Where as the poor still will not be able to afford the private school, keeping them in the public schools. The voucher money that the parents would use for their kids to go to private schools would be pulled from the public school systems, I'm not saying this isn't fair but it will certainly hurt the public schools which in most places do not have enough funding as is. Thus lowering the quality of education at the public schools which the poor kids are attending.Neither private nor public schools are created equal across the nation. Private schools are not by default better than public schools. Quality of ed. isn't the only reason kids are sent to private schools. Religion could be the reason, the expectation of better behaved students , and the belief that they're better (though in my experience this wasn't the case). I knew a lot of kids in high school attending private schools. Their tuition was as much as mine is at NCSU as an out of state student. They didn't score any better on SAT's than me, and didn't take any higher level classes than me. But they did get to put the name of their school on all of their college applications, that may have helped them. Their parents thought they were getting a better education but they weren't. Their parents thought the kids wouldn't be as bad as in public schools, but that wasn't the case. I'm not saying that I don't believe the decision should be theirs but I do not believe that most parents are informed enough to decide which school has the best education. Some middle class college educated parents may be able to decide which school has the best quality ed., but that doesn't mean all of them can. And how many of the not so well off parents are going to be able to tell which school has the best quality of eduaction, we're talking about people that may not even have a true highschool education.Vouchers may or may not be a good idea for specific areas. Schools are funded by local tax payers. Go to SE suburbs of PA and school taxes are rediculous, but they have some of the best pubic schools in the nation. Teachers are paid good, and the colleges their have some the best education programs period. Private schools there are going to have a tough time beating public schools in quality of ED.. But I'm sure a lot of ignorant parents still think private is better than public and would send their kids to private schools if they could. Vouchers some place like that may hurt the public systems just bases on repution and ignorance. But some place where the public school systems aren't very good, the private schools have a better chance at having comparatively better qual. ed.. So some place like that vouchers may be a good idea if there is some sort of compensation for the families that can not afford the remainder of the tuition after the voucher. Or if the schools are some how forced or agree to set the tuition at the value of the voucher, there a voucher system may be beneficial although it would make the public schools completely unnecassary forcing them to close. Then the private schools would have to be bigger and have more teachers to accomadate more students, in turn costing them more money, that the increased volume of students may or may not cover.[Edited on October 2, 2005 at 5:05 PM. Reason : .]
10/2/2005 4:58:29 PM
alsohas anyone addressed that you don't have the same level of accountability for teachers @ private schools?i.e., not as stringent on certification
10/2/2005 5:07:27 PM
10/2/2005 5:11:50 PM
^ white people don't hang out with mostly white people? Do you go to NCSU? the school that claims to be so diverse but yet none of the racial groups really intermingle. Now of course there are some exceptions but even then it's usually when the other races have been some what "americanized". All groups stick to people who are culturally similar.And it's not that the blacks would be choosing to go to shittier schools, it's that they wouldn't be able to afford the better schools.[Edited on October 2, 2005 at 5:24 PM. Reason : usually]
10/2/2005 5:24:04 PM
most usamericans are white. if no whites were racist, we'd still have mostly white friends.
10/2/2005 5:32:45 PM
10/2/2005 5:34:34 PM
^^ so you're suggesting that it has absolutely nothing to do with cultural/economic differences? It' just solely a numbers game? There is some truth in the numbers thing, but it works both ways. Most not so well off areas are predominatley occupied by minorities, so because they are more exposed to minorities they're more likely to hang out with minorities. Just like a white person growing up middle class is more likely to know more white people.^ The point you quoted 4 posts up was that money would be taken out of the schools which the poor people attended. Thus it would not be them choosing between a good school or shitty school, they would be getting stuck with the shitty school. We're not talking about two TV's next to each other in store, obvoiusly if you can't afford the $400 tv you have to get the cheaper one. The point was that an alright school ($400 tv) would lose quality (the $400 tv you bought magically morphs into the $200 tv). The poor people wouldn't have the ability to upgrade to the better quality school even if they wanted too, they would be stuck in those now shittier schools.[Edited on October 2, 2005 at 6:02 PM. Reason : .]
10/2/2005 5:56:21 PM
give schools money proportional to the number of students. problem solved
10/2/2005 6:01:03 PM