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- <text id=90TT2318>
- <title>
- Sep. 03, 1990: Pick A School, Any School
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Sep. 03, 1990 Are We Ready For This?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- EDUCATION, Page 70
- Pick a School, Any School
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A conservative idea gains liberal disciples: vouchers that would
- give parents freedom to choose where their kids will be
- educated
- </p>
- <p>By Walter Shapiro--With reporting by Janice M. Horowitz/New
- York
- </p>
- <p> It is a hot summer day on Maple Street. See Dick and Jane
- play Nintendo. See Mommy and Daddy turn off the switch. Whine,
- Dick, whine! Pout, Jane, pout!
- </p>
- <p> "Today is a very special day," explains Mommy. "You get to
- pick your school."
- </p>
- <p> The family drives to a big school of red brick. "This was
- where I went," says Daddy proudly. "In olden days, they made
- kids go here. But you, Dick and Jane, are so very lucky. You
- can choose."
- </p>
- <p> A nice teacher with a big smile greets them. She uses large
- words like achievement and learning modalities. Then she tells
- Dick and Jane about important stuff. "You could have hot dogs
- or hamburgers every day for lunch," she says.
- </p>
- <p> The next school is made of stone and surrounded by pretty
- trees and grass. "This was my school," says Mommy proudly. "It
- cost your grandparents lots of money to send me here. But it
- was worth it."
- </p>
- <p> "Do we have the money?" ask Dick and Jane eagerly.
- </p>
- <p> "You don't have to be rich to go here anymore," says Mommy.
- "These days, the government gives everyone money to go to any
- school they like."
- </p>
- <p> "Oh, goody!" shout Dick and Jane.
- </p>
- <p> The notion of freely choosing between public and private
- schools may no longer be just a Dick-and-Jane fable. Next week
- more than 400 students from Milwaukee's inner city will begin
- attending private neighborhood academies with the aid of $2,500
- grants from the state of Wisconsin. In November, Oregon will
- vote on a landmark initiative that would give parents as much
- as a $2,500 tuition tax credit for each child in a private or
- religiously affiliated school. Already, students statewide in
- Minnesota as well as in such widely praised individual school
- districts as Cambridge, Mass., and New York City's East Harlem
- can select which public schools they will attend. These are
- grass-roots manifestations of a political idea that is rapidly
- gaining momentum and, if fully implemented, holds the
- potential to radically transform American public education.
- </p>
- <p> Originally known as the "voucher system" and now often
- referred to under the innocuous shorthand of "choice," the
- theoretical concept is daringly simple. Instead of funding and
- administering public schools through stifling bureaucracies,
- government would provide tuition vouchers for every student.
- These could be cashed in at any state-certified school--public, private or perhaps even parochial. Ideally, the result
- would be that schools of all kinds--both old and new--would
- jostle and compete in the free marketplace.
- </p>
- <p> The winners would be those schools that attract a full
- enrollment of students, probably through innovative programs
- or a demonstrated record of academic success. But the real
- victors would be children of the poor and the hard-pressed
- urban middle class, who now have no alternative other than
- attending their crumbling local public school. And if some
- publicly run schools fail to compete successfully, they would
- go out of business. A brutal system perhaps, but one guaranteed
- to shake the torpor out of American education.
- </p>
- <p> The battle over educational vouchers blurs ideological lines
- by pitting theorists of the right and the left against cautious
- centrist reformers and the custodians of the educational status
- quo. The idea was popularized by economist Milton Friedman in
- his 1962 conservative classic, Capitalism and Freedom. Liberal
- activists then gave the notion a brief vogue in the early 1970s
- as an experiment sponsored by the Office of Economic
- Opportunity. The Reagan Administration tepidly tried to revive
- vouchers in the mid-1980s, and George Bush gave lip service to
- the concept during the 1988 campaign. But the current
- intellectual momentum stems from the publication of Politics,
- Markets, and America's Schools by political scientists John
- Chubb and Terry Moe. This influential book bears the imprimatur
- of the Brookings Institution, Washington's leading liberal
- think tank.
- </p>
- <p> At first glance, the book seems unlikely to send anyone to
- the educational barricades. It is a laborious statistical
- analysis of the crisis in public education. But in their final
- two chapters, Chubb and Moe suddenly transform themselves into
- radical deconstructionists. They theorize that "excessive
- bureaucratization and centralization are no historical accident...They are inevitable consequences of America's
- institutions of democratic control." The more political
- pressure is exerted to improve the schools, they argue, the more
- bureaucracy is created to monitor the new reform nostrums. In
- their view, only a choice system that frees the schools from
- political pressures entirely--and introduces the competition
- of the marketplace--can make a lasting difference.
- </p>
- <p> The most controversial aspect of any voucher plan (a term
- that Chubb and Moe avoid because of its Friedmanesque heritage)
- is the idea of permitting private and even parochial schools
- to compete with public institutions. But Chubb insists that
- choice plans that allow open enrollment only within the
- public-school system will not provide enough competition or
- sufficient diversity. "Public-school choice," he argues, "is
- merely a demand-side test. There's no change on the supply
- side."
- </p>
- <p> Under a full-fledged voucher system, private institutions
- would spring up to cater to the needs of parents who demand
- better education. The vouchers would, in theory, provide
- roughly the same amount of money as it now costs to educate
- each student in the public schools; in some over-bureaucratized
- systems like New York City's, that is more than $5,500 a year,
- higher than the tuition at some private schools. Government
- would still have a role: private schools, as they do today,
- would have to abide by state certification standards and could
- not racially discriminate. Chubb and Moe also suggest that
- there could be extra financial incentives to encourage schools
- to accept problem students. Thus even potential dropouts would
- have an alternative to their local P.S. 99.
- </p>
- <p> Critics argue that adoption of voucher plans would sound the
- death knell of the public school as a democratic institution
- that melds children from all classes, backgrounds and races in
- a modern-day melting pot. In truth, that pluralistic dream died
- years ago in most districts. Today 63% of all black students
- attend predominantly nonwhite schools. Public education is also
- increasingly economically segregated. A voucher system may not
- foster the ethnic diversity of a Benetton ad, but by diluting
- the distinction between public and private schools, it would
- add much needed equality to American education.
- </p>
- <p> The harshest attacks against Chubb and Moe have come from
- some of the educators most sympathetic to incremental reform.
- "Their book is a profound example of the intellectual
- community's abandoning our most important democratic
- institution," claims Bill Honig, the California superintendent
- of public instruction. The choice model of rewarding schools
- for attracting students rather than successfully educating them
- troubles Albert Shanker, the president of the American
- Federation of Teachers. "If your goal is merely to recruit
- students," Shanker says, "you can do that by offering a trip
- to Disneyland or with a good football team."
- </p>
- <p> The debate over educational vouchers can be seen as a
- symptom of America's loss of faith in liberal government
- itself, for public schools have always been the collective
- institution most closely monitored by the people. If, as Chubb
- and Moe argue, a free market is the only antidote to
- educational bureaucracy, then virtually all government
- programs, save tax collection, are implicitly called into
- question. Yet the crisis in the schools is so severe that
- vouchers must be seriously considered, which is why Dick and
- Jane seem well on their way toward becoming free-market
- conservatives.
- </p>
- <p>PICK A SCHOOL, ANY SCHOOL
- </p>
- <p>-- In September 400 inner-city Milwaukee students will enter
- private schools with $2,500 grants from the state of Wisconsin.
- </p>
- <p>-- In November Oregon will vote on an initiative that would
- give parents up to $2,500 in tuition tax credit for each child
- in private school.
- </p>
- <p>-- Excessive bureaucracy leads to inflated public-education
- costs: spending per pupil averages $4,590 in public schools
- compared to $2,690 for Catholic secondary schools.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-