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President Trump Can Use the Crisis to Dramatically Transform Education
FrontPage Magazine ^ | 7/23/2020 | Daniel Greenfield

Posted on 07/23/2020 1:22:23 PM PDT by Louis Foxwell

President Trump Can Use the Crisis to Dramatically Transform Education

Taxpayers are spending billions on schools and teachers who won’t teach.

Thu Jul 23, 2020

Daniel Greenfield

72

Daniel Greenfield, a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the Freedom Center, is an investigative journalist and writer focusing on the radical Left and Islamic terrorism.

The Los Angeles Unified School District spends $18,788 per student. Its goal is to up that spending to $20,000. The mammoth LA school district is 7th in urban spending and has around half a million students. And the costs only went up after a United Teachers strike extracted a 6 percent raise.

Last year, LAUSD approved a $7.8 billion budget.

Governor Newsom demanded federal aid during the coronavirus and proposed moving over $4 billion in federal pandemic relief to the non-functioning schools.

"Cuts to funding at schools will forever impact the lives of children," Superintendent Austin Beutner warned. "The harm children are facing is just as real a threat to them as is the coronavirus."

Apparently cutting the budgets of closed schools is just as lethal as a pandemic.

"The notion that schools can continue to operate safely in the fall with a decreased state budget is not realistic," deputy superintendent Megan Reilly complained after a proposed 7% budget cut.

The schools are aren’t opening in the fall. Instead, LAUSD is staying closed. But it has piled up $200 million in "emergency coronavirus costs" from handing out free computers and internet.

What are those billion-dollar budgets buying now?

The Zoom classes managed to have only two-thirds of students logging in on any given school day. 40,000 high school students were not participating after school closures. That’s not surprising because the teachers’ union had reached an agreement that would avoid any pay cuts, would allow teachers to set their own schedules, free them from video lectures, and require them to work only 4 hours a day.

Meanwhile millions are being spent on protective equipment, not because LAUSD schools are teaching students, but because they’re open only to illegally use federal funds to serve food to the homeless.

And the situation at LAUSD is typical of the broken Democrat school model across the country.

It’s bad enough when taxpayers and parents were stuck with billion-dollar bills when there were at least functioning schools. Now struggling families are paying a fortune to subsidize Democrat activists who make their own schedules and might condescend to spend a few hours handing out class projects.

Don’t ask them to turn on their video or actually monitor the students they’re “teaching”.

“If schools aren’t going to reopen, we’re not suggesting pulling funding from education, but instead allowing families ... take that money and figure out where their kids can get educated if their schools are going to refuse to open,” Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos suggested.

That suggestion has been met with howls of outrage from the teachers’ unions. How dare the country’s top education official suggest that education funding should be used to teach children.

Under the current regime of pandemic closures, the entire system of school districts makes no sense.

If students are going to be taught online, then their geographic location only matters when they hit a time zone change. The massive burden of property taxes on local homeowners that has been used to fund the public education system through sweetheart deals with union activists has no reason to exist.

Those contracts were for teachers who showed up in classrooms to teach students. Democrat activists have negotiated with Democrat politicians to pay them a fortune to only occasionally teach online.

That’s not a good deal for anyone except the unions and the Democrat officials they’ve bought off.

Secretary of Education DeVos is correct. Education funding is meant to fund education, not homeless soup kitchens, which LAUSD considers more essential than functioning classrooms. That money doesn’t belong to unions or political bosses. It was extracted from taxpayers through a broken promise.

Parents have the right to pull that money from school districts and use it to educate their children.

That can mean finding private schools that are willing to open up for in-person learning, it can mean competitive distance learning at private and public schools around the country, or it can mean homeschooling through pods. Or any learning that meets curriculum requirements.

The public education system was broken badly before. Now it effectively doesn’t exist.

The system, at every level from elementary through college, has shed what few standards it had, while maintaining ridiculously inflated expenses of tens of thousands per student for teaching zoom classes.

Competitive alternatives could easily offer individual students more instruction time, more access to teachers, and more personalized instruction for a fraction of the money that is being spent today.

School districts react hysterically to both budget cuts and proposals to reopen. But they can’t have it both ways. They protest that the infrastructure must be maintained, even as they insist that they have no idea when they’re going to be able to use it again. They argue that, unlike every other profession, it’s vital to keep teachers employed, even when they’re really not doing anything useful.

While so many people who want to work are losing their jobs, why should some government employees who won’t do their jobs be immune from economic realities because of their political power?

The answer is political corruption.

Municipal unions have gotten away with murder because they’ve had their fingers on a vital service. Mess with them and they can turn out the lights, stay home when the fires break out, or force you to keep your kids entertained at home. Pandemic closures have entirely neutered that last threat.

The pandemic emergency has created an education emergency. And the public school system is unable and unwilling to meet that crisis because of its cronyism, corruption, and general incompetence.

President Trump has the opportunity to help parents meet that education emergency by taking executive actions that will empower private schools, homeschoolers, and the more functional elements of the public school system to step forward and competitively meet the needs of students and parents.

The public health emergency has created an education emergency that President Trump can solve.

If a public health emergency can be used to confine millions of people in their homes, to close countless businesses, to suspend the Bill of Rights, and even to ban husbands and wives from sharing a bed, it can certainly be used to redirect education funding from systems that aren’t teaching to those that are.

It’s either that or go on giving billions to broken districts like LAUSD where the teachers might show up for 4 hours of work and some of their students might occasionally tune in to do the work.

In the old public school system, teachers pretended to teach and students pretended to learn. Now no one is pretending anymore. The teachers aren’t teaching and the students aren’t learning. The big expensive buildings are standing empty, the school supplies are going unused, and the endless layers of administration serve no function except to draw six figure salaries. It’s time to end the charade.

The billion-dollar boondoggles were not created to maintain themselves which is all they’re doing now.  

America’s students deserve better. So do the taxpayers who have funded this mess. The public education system has shut itself down. It’s time to build a new flexible system that can handle the stresses of the pandemic and deliver results without holding students and parents hostage to unions.

President Trump can take the first step by breaking parents and students free of broken districts and shuttered schools by putting federal education funds at the disposal of parents during this emergency. Voucher programs have already been successfully implemented in many states, especially in districts with underperforming schools, and a pandemic voucher program would offer flexibility and results.

Parents would be able to enroll their children in the distance or in-person learning options that work for their families. A competitive educational environment would adapt to the challenges much more readily and provide better value for students. And the failing public school system would have an incentive to improve. The alternative is wasting billions on schools and teachers who refuse to teach their students.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society
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Daniel Greenfield, a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center, is a New York writer focusing on radical Islam.

To get on or off the Greenfield ping list please FReepmail me.

1 posted on 07/23/2020 1:22:23 PM PDT by Louis Foxwell
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To: daisy mae for the usa; AdvisorB; wizardoz; free-in-nyc; Vendome; Georgia Girl 2; blaveda; ...

Front Page mag - A Project of the David Horowitz Freedom Center

Daniel Greenfield Ping List Notification of new articles.

I am posting Greenfield's articles from FrontPage and the Sultan Knish blog. FReepmail to get on or off the Greenfield ping list.

I highly recommend an occasional look at the Sultan Knish blog. It is a rich source of materials, links and more from one of the preeminent writers of our age.

FrontPage is a basic resource for conservative thought. Lou

2 posted on 07/23/2020 1:24:14 PM PDT by Louis Foxwell (A deep and terrible ignorance born of abject corruption is required to hate our president.)
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To: Louis Foxwell

Thanks for the ping.

My thoughts, exactly!


3 posted on 07/23/2020 1:25:56 PM PDT by Jane Long (Praise God, from whom ALL blessings flow.)
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To: Louis Foxwell
President Trump can take the first step by breaking parents and students free of broken districts and shuttered schools by putting federal education funds at the disposal of parents during this emergency. Voucher programs have already been successfully implemented in many states, especially in districts with underperforming schools, and a pandemic voucher program would offer flexibility and results.

Parents would be able to enroll their children in the distance or in-person learning options that work for their families. A competitive educational environment would adapt to the challenges much more readily and provide better value for students. And the failing public school system would have an incentive to improve. The alternative is wasting billions on schools and teachers who refuse to teach their students.

Totally agree.

4 posted on 07/23/2020 1:26:09 PM PDT by 1Old Pro (#openupstateny)
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To: Louis Foxwell

Dis goan be great...


5 posted on 07/23/2020 1:26:54 PM PDT by kiryandil (Chris Wallace: Because someone has to drive the Clown Car)
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To: Louis Foxwell

If anything good can come of COVID 19, it will be the fundamental transformation of public education.

Cutting the school district budgets by 50% now would be a good start. Then start focusing on private schools with tax credits for parents who homeschool.

Public schools have failed out children. And have been failures since the 1960’s. Time to wind them down.


6 posted on 07/23/2020 1:28:12 PM PDT by Responsibility2nd (Click my screen name for an analysis on how HIllary wins next November.)
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To: Louis Foxwell

TA DAA!


7 posted on 07/23/2020 1:31:52 PM PDT by Louis Foxwell (A deep and terrible ignorance born of abject corruption is required to hate our president.)
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To: Louis Foxwell

LAUSD publicly admits that 66% of their High School Graduates can NOT read, write or count above the 3rd grade level. ABOLISH THE WHOLE THING!!!


8 posted on 07/23/2020 1:35:50 PM PDT by eyeamok
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To: eyeamok
66% of their High School Graduates can NOT read, write or count above the 3rd grade level

But you can bet they'll know which box to check when they vote.

9 posted on 07/23/2020 1:43:17 PM PDT by workerbee (==)
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To: 1Old Pro

Problem is, all the in-person private schools have also been shut down, at least in CA (so far). So a voucher for that wouldn’t help.

But vouchers would be good to use to choose between private and public “distance learning.” Private remote learning is around $300/a class at the moment. And it is much better than the public version.


10 posted on 07/23/2020 1:51:03 PM PDT by olivia3boys
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To: Responsibility2nd
AGREED




11 posted on 07/23/2020 1:57:59 PM PDT by knarf
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To: Louis Foxwell

And he should clean house at our schools right about the time school is supposed to start next month.

Put an ultimatum to the unions and teachers. Teach or you’re fired. There seem to be plenty of people available to replace these teachers and everyone who actually cares about their children’s education will be better off if this were to occur.

Since I have little doubt the teacher unions will refuse to do what’s right, the best thing to do is get the anti American indoctrinators out of our schools permanently.

I know, wishful thinking, particularly right before the election, but I can always wish!


12 posted on 07/23/2020 1:58:42 PM PDT by Pox (Eff You China. Buy American!)
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To: Louis Foxwell

“Don’t ask them to turn on their video or actually monitor the students they’re “teaching”.”

If there is no student/teacher interactions, then they can lay off all the teachers, save one to put together the videos. Once the videos are completed, they could lay off that last one.


13 posted on 07/23/2020 2:01:09 PM PDT by rightwingcrazy (;-,)
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To: Louis Foxwell

SF and NY, and likely more cities, are busily right now setting up free “learning pods” to educate children in the absence of schools. Childcares that will assist children with their “remote learning,” and offer lunch, recess, and social contact with other kids. In other words, school.

This is what the Dems will demand the pandemic emergency school funds be used for. That and laptops.

The middle class and wealthy kids will be left to band together and pool together funds to hire their own tutors for “microschools.” This is happening—but can the entire middle class afford to do this?

The United States educational system is rapidly transforming all this week. I hope the fed govt does something quickly.

Effectively the entire middle/upper classes in the US are being asked to leave—are being pushed out from—public school altogether, but are of course being asked to foot the bill for it. It’s OK to leave them home alone on their laptops apparently.


14 posted on 07/23/2020 2:02:02 PM PDT by olivia3boys
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To: rightwingcrazy

You don’t understand. No one is laying off the teachers—they are all locked into contracts for next year.

But long term, yes—you are right. We could save billions if we as a nation all turn to online education permanently. But remember that Europe and Asia have already returned to in person education. Which is superior (generally).


15 posted on 07/23/2020 2:03:36 PM PDT by olivia3boys
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To: kiryandil

It’s not great. . .we are looking at another year of no school, no sports, no graduations, not proms, no human connections or classmates, no music, no drama. . .and millions of children (K-12 and also college adults) staring at a laptop all day. Not healthy, and soul deadening.

I also hope reform may happen as a side effect, but for those of us with teens and young kids right now, this is heart wrenching.


16 posted on 07/23/2020 2:07:46 PM PDT by olivia3boys
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To: olivia3boys
and millions of children (K-12 and also college adults) staring at a laptop all day

Distance learning shouldn't be staring at a laptop all day.

Now, I agree about the social isolation part for the yutes of America, but there are ways around that, too.

Disclaimer: I have always been able to take or leave social transactions. I like to read, and I like people to leave me alone.

17 posted on 07/23/2020 2:13:16 PM PDT by kiryandil (Chris Wallace: Because someone has to drive the Clown Car)
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To: kiryandil

Both my teens—one in private, one in public—will be now resuming their “distance learning” next month.

I do think it will be better than it was in March, when we were locked down, shelter in place, etc. Now they can go out and see their friends. Which is why they might as well be in school. As the rest of the Western civilized world now is.


18 posted on 07/23/2020 2:16:59 PM PDT by olivia3boys
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To: rightwingcrazy
...they can lay off all the teachers, save one to put together the videos. Once the videos are completed, they could lay off that last one.

Actually they could save a lot of time by laying them all off and using legitimate videos, already in existence, from the private-sector education industry, completely devoid of queer and communist content.

19 posted on 07/23/2020 2:22:26 PM PDT by ROCKLOBSTER (Celebrate "Republicans Freed the Slaves Month".)
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To: Louis Foxwell

Thanks for posting this.

I having fun in California asking, “When will we get lower property taxes since there are no schools, just food programs for the “poor”.

One listener in the East bay may have beat back a property tax increase in their school district with that question.

I am hoping that the Jarvis TaxPayer groups will start challenging increases and even maintaining Tax $’s for closed schools.

A long time conservative, who lives near a public grade school challenged their monthly floor buffing routine of a group as not needed. They stopped that and they are now pulling plants and planting new shrubs. Summer is not really a good time to be doing that. Basically every fence surrounding every school has been replaced.

New slides, swings and other outdoor play gear is at most schools now. They have yellow tape around the new gear, so the nearby kids can’t use the new gear. That is totally different. Neighboring kids have been able to use the slides, swings and other gear at any time.


20 posted on 07/23/2020 2:35:20 PM PDT by Grampa Dave (If CV19 is so easily spread, hy do they shove a Qtip up your nose antd into your brain for a sample?)
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