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Captives or Consumers? Public Education Could Be Facing a Major Change
/jonathanturley.org ^ | 1/31/2023 | Jonathon Turley

Posted on 01/31/2023 1:59:55 PM PST by Presbyterian Reporter

What if they offered public education and no one came? That question, similar to the anti-war slogan popularized by Charlotte E. Keyes, is becoming more poignant by the day.

This month, Florida is moving to allow all residents the choice to go to private or public schools. Other states like Utah are moving toward a similar alternative with school vouchers. I oppose such moves away from public schools, but I have lost faith in the willingness of most schools to restore educational priorities and standards.

Faced with school boards and teacher unions resisting parental objections to school policies over curriculum and social issues, states are on the brink of a transformative change. For years, boards and teacher unions have treated parents as unwelcome interlopers in their children’s education.

That view was captured this week in the comment of Iowa school board member Rachel Wall, who said: “The purpose of a public ed is to not teach kids what the parents want. It is to teach them what society needs them to know. The client is not the parent, but the community.”

State Rep. Lee Snodgrass (D-Wis.) tweeted: “If parents want to ‘have a say’ in their child’s education, they should home school or pay for private school tuition out of their family budget.”

Now legislators are moving to do precisely that — but with public funds. It could be a game-changer. Parents overwhelmingly appear to support a classical education focused on core subjects rather than “social change.” They overwhelmingly support parental notice when their children engage in gender transitioning or other major decisions.

Many parents also are angered by teachers, unions and boards shutting down schools during the pandemic despite other countries keeping them open and studies that showed children were not at high risk. The United States experienced soaring mental illness rates and plunging test scores.

Parents who questioned those policies were treated as extremists.

Michelle Leete, vice president of training at the Virginia PTA and vice president of communications for the Fairfax County PTA, said parents would not force them to reverse their agenda: “Let them die. Don’t let these uncomfortable people deter us from our bold march forward.”

Many of us have advocated for public education for decades. I sent my children to public schools, and I still hope we can turn this around without wholesale voucher systems. Yet teachers and boards are killing the institution of public education by treating children and parents more like captives than consumers. They are force-feeding social and political priorities, including passes for engaging in approved protests.

As public schools continue to produce abysmal scores, particularly for minority students, board and union officials have called for lowering or suspending proficiency standards or declared meritocracy to be a form of “white supremacy.” Gifted and talented programs are being eliminated in the name of “equity.”

Once parents have a choice, these teachers lose a virtual monopoly over many families, and these districts could lose billions in states like Florida.

While I remain concerned how vouchers could be the death of public primary and secondary education, I believe states need to use the power of the purse to reform higher education.

Despite years of complaints over a rising orthodoxy at schools, most universities have reduced conservative and libertarian faculty to rare oddities. Some schools have virtually no Republican faculty. Faculty have created political echo-chambers that advance their own views while excluding alternative voices. As a result, polls show a high number of students are fearful about sharing their views in classes.

I oppose laws prohibiting certain theories from being taught in universities, but I also believe academics can no longer show open contempt for the half of this country with conservative, libertarian or independent views. At many public universities, the message is that you need to give universities not only total deference but total support in excluding conservative views and maintaining intolerant ideological environments.

It may be too late for private universities, which are likely to continue to exclude all but a tiny number of conservatives or libertarians. They have the support of many in the media. Above the Law’s senior editor, Joe Patrice, defended “predominantly liberal faculties” and argued that hiring a conservative academic is akin to allowing a believer in geocentrism — the idea that the sun orbits the earth — to teach.

While some private schools like the University of Chicago have stood firm in support of free speech, most of the schools on the top of a recent ranking were public universities. That is no surprise. As state schools, these universities are subject to First Amendment protections and there is greater ability to contest the current academic orthodoxy. Indeed, courts repeatedly rule against universities. Yet administrators have an incentive to yield to the mob, even at the cost of millions in litigation costs. And few academics have an incentive to fight for greater political diversity on campus and risk being tagged in cancel campaigns.

This is why public universities could be the final line of defense for free speech in higher education.

States are no more captive to these schools than are parents. Why should conservatives and independents continue to pay taxes for universities that actively exclude faculty who share their values or viewpoints? Half of this country funds schools that have little tolerance for their values or voices; they can reduce their support and let such universities seek private funding if they insist on making a “liberal education” a literal goal.

We need public universities to offer a free-speech alternative. If we can maintain that protection, we may find that public universities become the primary choice of many who want to learn in politically diverse, tolerant environments.

For elementary, middle and high schools, voucher programs may allow parents to speak with their feet. I hope we do not come to that — but the opposition to vouchers is telling. The alarm is based on the recognition that, given a choice, many families would not choose what public schools are offering. This includes many minority families who want to escape from a cycle of education that leaves many students barely literate and lost. They likely would prefer an alternative to a system like Baltimore’s, where a student failed all but three classes and still graduated in the top half of his class.

I worry about how voucher systems will impact public schools because many districts would fare poorly in a competitive market. However, these proposals are a shot across the bow to all such districts. They could easily find themselves with an agenda-packed curriculum but far fewer students to teach.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: schools
Once again Florida is leading on this issue. Except for Utah, what are the other GOP led states doing?????

"""This month, Florida is moving to allow all residents the choice to go to private or public schools. Other states like Utah are moving toward a similar alternative with school vouchers.""""

1 posted on 01/31/2023 1:59:55 PM PST by Presbyterian Reporter
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To: Presbyterian Reporter

Here is the current list of GOP Governors. It is fair to ask what they are doing (OR NOT DOING)to address CRT and other WOKE indoctrination in their schools.

GOP GOVERNORS IN 2023

Alabama Kay Ivey Republican

Alaska Mike Dunleavy Republican

Arkansas Sarah Huckabee Sanders Republican

Florida Ron DeSantis Republican

Georgia Brian Kemp Republican

Idaho Brad Little Republican

Indiana Eric Holcomb Republican

Iowa Kim Reynolds Republican

Mississippi Tate Reeves Republican

Missouri Mike Parson Republican

Montana Greg Gianforte Republican

Nebraska Jim Pillen Republican

Nevada Joe Lombardo Republican

New Hampshire Chris Sununu Republican

North Dakota Doug Burgum Republican

Ohio Mike DeWine Republican

Oklahoma Kevin Stitt Republican

South Carolina Henry McMaster Republican

South Dakota Kristi Noem Republican

Tennessee Bill Lee Republican

Texas Greg Abbott Republican

Utah Spencer Cox Republican

Vermont Phil Scott Republican

Virginia Glenn Youngkin Republican

West Virginia Jim Justice Republican

Wyoming Mark Gordon Republican


2 posted on 01/31/2023 2:01:58 PM PST by Presbyterian Reporter
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To: Presbyterian Reporter

Public schools.are child abuse.


3 posted on 01/31/2023 2:03:51 PM PST by Fai Mao (Stop feeding the beast, and steal its food!)
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To: Presbyterian Reporter

I support destroying the public schools.

Generally, there goes a large percentage of Democrat votes,
never a question.

Give parents a way to remove their kids from these
wicked establishments. Vouchers, whatever...


4 posted on 01/31/2023 2:05:57 PM PST by DoughtyOne (I pledge allegiance to the flag of the USofA & to the Constitutional REPUBLIC for? which it stands.)
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To: Presbyterian Reporter

Tennessee is all CRT and gendermanderring in schools.
Every state amendment was straight democrat.
Now TN has rolling blackouts… even if it is the coldest week of the winter so far.
There are electric buses… very empty electric buses.
I should mention… this is the conservative part of the state. :)


5 posted on 01/31/2023 2:56:45 PM PST by momincombatboots (QEphesians 6... who you are really at war with)
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To: Presbyterian Reporter

Florida is ‘leading’ but Iowa already passed it earlier this year! Voucher (IIRC $7k) for every kid.


6 posted on 01/31/2023 4:10:43 PM PST by JohnBovenmyer (Biden/Harris a events are called dodo ops)
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To: Presbyterian Reporter

Plank #10 of the Communist Manifesto: Free education for all children in government schools.

https://www.laissez-fairerepublic.com/TenPlanks.html


7 posted on 01/31/2023 4:21:32 PM PST by E. Pluribus Unum (The worst thing about censorship is ████ █ ██████ ███████ ███ ██████ ██ ████████. FJB.)
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To: Presbyterian Reporter

Public education is PRISON. What other institution FORCES you to go to a place, with people you don’t like, away from friends and family, where you must obey authority, for 12 years?


8 posted on 01/31/2023 4:33:46 PM PST by Organic Panic (Democrats. Memories as short as Joe Biden's eyes)
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