Originally posted by: charrison
Originally posted by: EatSpam
Bascially, you'd be taught how to be a good consumer.
Poor parents would love that option, but most poor familys only have the "choice" of consuming poor public education. But I guess you like it that way.
See, that's why I used to support a voucher system. I bought into the propaganda that it would help poor families by getting their kids out of crummy innercity public schools. But that's all it is, propaganda, because as I really started looking at it, I realized that argument made no sense.
Think about it. The reason innercity public schools are so bad is mostly an issue of funding. If the vouchers we give to those parents going to allow them to send their kids to better schools, the voucher system will have to be better funded than the innercity schools they are trying to escape. And for a fair system, the vouchers will have to be given equally. Which means the government would be paying for school for EVERYONE at some level determined to be adequate to fund a "good" education. Far from saving any money, the education system would be far more expensive.
Of course I'm not against more education funding, I just see no reason we shouldn't just pump it into the schools that need it. Innercity public schools aren't bad because they are in the innercity (well, at least not for the most part), they are bad because they are underfunded. I went to one of the best public high schools in the country, but it was the best because I lived in a city that could afford to fund a good school system. A voucher system would require almost the same amount of money as funding that sort of school in every city, so why not just do that?
Ah, but I forgot the OTHER part of the argument...the free market. The public school system seem to inspire rage in conservatives, but whether it's because it doesn't involve the free market, or whether it's because conservatives see public education as a bastion of liberal ideas, it's hard to say. However, the "solution" is kind of a red herring. Vouchers, as I pointed out, would be VERY expensive to fund correctly. Sending everyone to the private school of their choice is a fine idea, but the reality is that this would probably be an underfunded mandate (sort of like "No Child Left Behind", actually), where the people who only need a little boost to afford private school can do so, but people who rely on the public school system will be left in the cold. And of course people will balk at paying for a voucher system AND paying local taxes for schools, so I'm guessing currently underfunded schools will be even worse off.
It's not a bad idea, but it's fairly difficult to do correctly...at least assuming helping poor people is a goal of the project. In an ideal world, this might be how things would work. But as conservatives love to point out to liberals, this isn't the land of puppy dogs and lollypops, this is reality, and wishing will not make it any different.