Here's a good question for you: Why have public schools at all?
OK, cue the marching music. We need public schools because blah blah blah
and yada yada yada. We could say blah is common culture and yada is the
government's interest in promoting the general welfare. Or that children are
the future. And a mind is a terrible thing to waste. Because we can't leave
any child behind.
The problem with all these bromides is that they leave out the simple fact
that one of the surest ways to leave a kid "behind" is to hand him over to
the government. Americans want universal education, just as they want
universally safe food. But nobody believes that the government should run
nearly all of the restaurants, farms and supermarkets. Why should it run the
vast majority of the schools - particularly when it gets terrible results?
Consider Washington, home of the nation's most devoted government-lovers
and, ironically, the city with arguably the worst public schools in the
country. Out of the 100 largest school districts, according to the
Washington Post, D.C. ranks third in spending for each pupil ($12,979) but
last in spending on instruction. Fifty-six cents out of every dollar go to
administrators who, it's no secret, do a miserable job administrating, even
though D.C. schools have been in a state of "reform" for nearly 40 years.
In a blistering series, the Post has documented how badly the bureaucrats
have run public education. More than half of the District of Columbia's
teenage kids spend their days in "persistently dangerous" schools, with an
average of nine violent incidents a day in a system with 135 schools.
"Principals reporting dangerous conditions or urgently needed repairs in
their buildings wait, on average, 379 days ... for the problems to be
fixed," acco |