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Spending Less for Better Education (Who says you have to spend more money to educate children?)
American Thinker ^ | 11/10/2010 | Robert Weissberg

Posted on 11/10/2010 7:01:14 AM PST by WebFocus

The GOP's victories on November 2 have once again raised the call for smaller government, and given soaring budgets and lack of improvement, reducing K-12 education spending is one obvious target. This will not be easy, but there is a sensible strategy.

Begin by recognizing that abolishing any specific program, even clear-cut ineffective boondoggles, is doomed to fail. All have constituencies -- education school professors, benefiting parents, program employees, foundation experts, bureaucratic administrators, plus erstwhile pro-education members of Congress who can readily mobilize to defeat axe-wielders. Scanning the budget line by line to cut waste is a cost-saving dead end. GOP skinflints will be overwhelmed and labeled mean-spirited enemies of "helping the children."

Successful cost-cutting requires satisfying three conditions. First, reductions must improve education, not just make mediocrity less expensive. Second, measures must defeat interests who sustain an expensive, personally lucrative status quo. Finally, cutbacks must create powerful counter-constituencies to resist the inevitable rear-guard action from teachers' unions and all profiting from government's largess.    

The aim should be to reduce demand for conventional K-12 schooling: lower enrollments bring lower expenses, so cut enrollments. In practice, this requires ending the largely failed efforts to keep kids in school who are dying to leave. Here's how: award every currently enrolled student past the age of sixteen a lifetime GI Bill-like, no-expiration-date voucher cashable at any government-approved vocational school, internship, or union or business apprenticeship (and simultaneously remove all financial incentives for schools to prevent dropouts).

A "Get Out of Jail Free" card for millions, but we'll call it "Lifetime Learning." The exact amount is negotiable, but to prevent cries of cheapness, $10,000, yearly adjusted for inflation, would suffice, since this is about what the average U.S. schools spend per pupil.  

This voucher would undoubtedly heighten an already large exodus from schools, but it is unambiguously pro-education! It acknowledges that learning occurs over a lifetime while conceding the uselessness of keeping a restless, bored sixteen-year-old cooped up in school. The pattern is a familiar one whereby an immature teenager drifts aimlessly and gets into trouble, then grows up and "gets religion," and then seeks -- but cannot always find -- a better job. Now, however, thanks to the Lifetime Learning voucher plus a little maturity, he or she is finally motivated and in a position to acquire market-relevant skills. This was the secret of the GI bill -- college for those hungry to learn with minimal bureaucratic overhead. 

American schools would dramatically improve almost overnight and without any multi-billion-dollar Washington panaceas or massive bureaucratic directives. With few exceptions, refugees would be the most rambunctious, those  who impede the learning of classmates. Many violent, low-performing "bad" schools would suddenly turn "good" almost by magic, and diligent students could now learn unimpeded. In addition, while there now would be fewer staff, those who remain would relish the improvement, and without all the miscreants, the teaching profession would attract better recruits. And by ending make-the-numbers pressures to bestow diplomas at all costs, this exodus would restore the value of the high school diploma, a substantial economic benefit for those who stay the course. A more effective, quicker, less expensive way to improve schools academically is hard to imagine.

The cash savings would be immense. If the Lifetime Learning voucher were equal to a single year of school expenditures, and if those who took it departed at the end of their sophomore year, the instant overall education budget savings would be huge. This savings would be especially large in school districts showering immense resources on kids struggling with basics, e.g., Washington, D.C. Relieved of uplifting the troublesome bottom, schools could cut back educationally unproductive school security, the armies of counselors ministering to disruptive students, paperwork to ensure racial fairness in school discipline, and countless resource-draining social welfare-type programs. Administrators would also no longer be pressured to fudge the numbers regarding "progress" for those disinclined to learn.

The voucher resembles a debit card and thus would be cheap to put into practice. Money for education would be finally almost entirely money for education.

But more important than saving a dime, allowing education consumers to shop the marketplace with their "own" money would undoubtedly promote enhanced learning and help the overall economy. So, for example, rather than sleep through English 3, our older, now more motivated student will seek out more attractive and income-producing learning opportunities. After all, he or she now has painfully experienced low-skill, dead-end jobs. Moreover, since for-profit schools must compete for customers, they have powerful incentives to reduce the non-educational administrative bloat paralyzing today's public education. Again: education means motivated students learning something useful.

Enrollees would also benefit from flexible hours of instruction and a curriculum that keeps pace with shifting job requirements. Voucher recipients also have inducements to place graduates in jobs. After all, not even a dim student would use his or her personal voucher if there is no payoff. This is totally unlike public schools, where the financial incentive is to entice the student just to show up so as to collect attendance money.          

Now for the political part. Lyndon Johnson accurately said an enduring program requires a constituency to push and defend it. So what can counter the teachers' unions and all the rest of the soon-to-be-unemployed? First are the fans of reduced taxes, notably the Tea Partiers and other proponents of smaller, simpler government -- a formidable force, as the 2010 election demonstrated. Further add those currently working for educational choice, since the Lifetime Learning voucher extends the choice principle beyond high school. Between 2002 and 2005, for example, there were some 1,200 organizations advocating school choice, and the record is one of great success. Now include the for-profit school industry, such as privately run "career" colleges that in 2010 numbered some 3,000 and are rapidly expanding (see here). Add the numerous technical schools offering more humdrum instruction (for example, see here). Significantly, large firms have entered this for-profit education industry and will be happy to defend Lifetime Learning. Businesses will also be enthusiastic supporters given lower training costs, while unions will gain from government-funded apprenticeship programs. This is hardly a powerless coalition against today's education establishment.   

Going one step further, black and Hispanic advocacy groups will (or should) see the work/apprenticeship voucher as a straightforward solution to high levels of chronic teenage unemployment. For these youngsters, many of whom leave school empty-handed anyhow, subsidized internships and apprenticeships overcome the minimum wage barrier and thus provide that vital first step on the job ladder. The availability of no-cost, hands-on, flexible instruction may also be attractive to single mothers (many of whom never completed high school) and thus ultimately reduce welfare costs. The "stay in school for a degree" message offered by minority advocacy groups has gone nowhere for these teenagers; better to replace it with "leave school now, and when you see the folly of being unskilled, get some practical education of your own choosing."

Support may also come from foes of unrestricted immigration, especially the influx of those with low skills. It is well-known that many jobs in construction, food service, transportation, landscaping, and the like depend on imported labor, so if Americans acquired these skills, albeit at say age 25, the demand for non-U.S. workers would shrink. That is, a sixteen-year-old American high school student may have scant interest in learning to install drywall, so the job goes to a more highly motivated worker from Mexico or El Salvador. But what if our dropout ten years hence could enroll in a trade school or a union training program at no cost and learn that skill? Substituting Americans for imported workers would lower unemployment and reduce the pathologies associated with both unskilled domestic workers and those from abroad competing for these jobs.     

Educational reforms are notable for undelivered promises, so there can be no guarantees. For-profit education is hardly a risk-free panacea (see here), nor do young adults always respond sensibly to opportunities. Nevertheless, the Lifetime Learning proposal is simple, relatively inexpensive, reflects hard-nosed human nature, and is politically feasible. By reducing demand and not directly killing off well-protected non-education waste, it will reduce bloat and bring better education for less -- a lot less money.               

Robert Weissberg is Professor of Political Science-Emeritus, University of Illinois-Urbana. His latest book is Bad Students Not Bad Schoolsbadstudentsnotbadschools.com



TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: education; spending

1 posted on 11/10/2010 7:01:19 AM PST by WebFocus
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To: WebFocus
Virtual school is on the rise here. You can get HS Honors credits in a matter of a few hours a week versus 7 to 8 hours in class. What to do with all those Administrators, hmm?
2 posted on 11/10/2010 7:12:07 AM PST by poobear ("The greatest tyrannies are always perpetrated in the name of the noblest causes." -- Thomas Paine)
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To: WebFocus

Im tired of my taxes being funneled into a decrepit school system when clearly it needs to be slashed and re-organized.
The tax money should be focused on defense and borders with so many illegals invading our national agenda should be focused on defending the country from foreign invaders.


3 posted on 11/10/2010 7:18:10 AM PST by cull501
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To: poobear

Money is harmful to education. What counts is curriculum. Ours in the US has been hopelessly stupid since the 1950s.


4 posted on 11/10/2010 8:02:00 AM PST by kabumpo (Kabumpo)
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To: WebFocus
Any child of any age should be allowed to take the GED or a similar private exam should be developed. If they pass they should be awarded a standard high school diploma from their local high school. This diploma should be completely indistinguishable from any other high school diploma awarded in the state.

Doing this alone would save the states and communities MILLIONS a year!

The child should have all the access to scholarships, loans, and college admission that other students enjoy.
It is disgraceful to see Westinghouse science winners ( and other similar academic competitions) **still** in high school! They should be finishing college and already working on their Ph.D. thesis. Think about the enormous waste of talent languishing every school day in our government kiddie prisons. ( oops! “schools”)

Every year a law is proposed in our state that would allow students of any age to take the GED and be eligible for admission to college and access to scholarships. Every year the teachers unions shoot it down. What a waste of money and ( most of all) our bright children's lives.

Some government school teacher nitwit is sure to post...”Our school has AP courses!”

NO! NO! No! AP courses taught by high school teachers in high school are NOT equivalent to earning a B.S.( at age 18) in mathematics from our flagship university....as two of my homeschoolers did. AP courses are NOT NOT NOT equivalent to being in **graduate** school in mathematics at the age of 18!

5 posted on 11/10/2010 10:01:08 AM PST by wintertime (Re: Obama, Rush Limbaugh said, "He was born here." ( So? Where's the proof?))
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To: WebFocus

I know this is not your article, but have you seen anything this author has written about what to do with students who need more than 10k a year for education?


6 posted on 11/10/2010 10:24:51 AM PST by SoftballMominVA
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To: poobear

My younger daughter took 5 different AP classes through the Virginia Virtual High School, including the golden plum of AP English. She found that her time was more valued and the assignments more meaningful.

The reason I call AP English a ‘golden plum’ is that a 5 on that exam translates into a lot of hours in college. In her case, her score of a 5 allowed her to skip 12 hours of college English. At 600 per credit hour, that’s a lot of money saved out of mom and dad’s pockets!

Not all classes give that much bang for the buck. Other 5’s gave her nothing more than a 3 hour elective credit; others maybe 2 classes.


7 posted on 11/10/2010 10:29:12 AM PST by SoftballMominVA
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To: SoftballMominVA

RE: but have you seen anything this author has written about what to do with students who need more than 10k a year for education?


No I haven’t. Maybe you can give us a brief summary of what he proposed. I for one am eager to hear/read it...


8 posted on 11/10/2010 11:48:07 AM PST by WebFocus
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To: WebFocus

**chuckle** I’m asking if you’ve seen anything. I haven’t.

I LIKE the idea of having a set amount for each child. In fact I also like the idea of having X number of years of education available for each citizen. If someone chooses to leave school at 16, but has two years left eligible, sees the light at 24, and wants to attend night school on the taxpayers dime, I’m for that too.

My concern is when someone plunks down an amount and says “that’s enough for anyone’s education, no more” without taking into account the law of IDEA.

As always, the devil is in the details.


9 posted on 11/10/2010 12:37:54 PM PST by SoftballMominVA
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