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Friday, April 06, 2007
School Choice and Civil Rights
By Ken Blackwell
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Thirty-nine years ago this week, an assassin's bullet took the life of Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. Rev. King fought against the intolerance and ignorance that denied African-Americans equal access to public transportation, education, employment and justice.

Since his death, America has come a long way.

Today, our nation is a testament to both Rev. King's accomplishments and those of whom he inspired. African-Americans hold positions of power and influence at the highest levels of government and industry. Progress has been made on the old civil rights battle fronts. But new fronts have opened.

The battle over school choice is one. In fact, school choice programs - developed to free poor urban and rural children from failing public schools - represent this century's defining civil rights issue.

While the battle is brewing in Texas and Florida, nowhere is it more crucial than in Ohio. Here, newly elected Governor Ted Strickland, in a nod to his political allies in the state teachers' unions, is waging an aggressive attack on school vouchers and charter schools.

Calling school vouchers "undemocratic" and charter schools a "dismal failure," Gov. Strickland, in his first major public policy address, slammed the door of educational opportunity on thousands of poor children and crushed the hopes of their parents.

By denying these children the equal access to a quality education that choice programs offer, he also denied that the bloated public education bureaucracy and its entrenched unions have failed our children. Gov. Strickland positions his opposition to choice as part of an overall effort to eliminate inefficiency and force accountability, but he misleads.

Currently, large numbers of Ohio's public schools, particularly those in the state's urban areas, fail to teach our children. Public school failure can be measured in many ways. For example, over 115,550 students in Ohio's eight largest cities are attending 251 schools not meeting even the state's minimal education standards. Far larger numbers of children are receiving educations that leave them completely unprepared for today's global economy.

In contrast, school choice programs are working and growing. First in the form of charter schools for 76,000 pupils in over 200 schools, then in an autism scholarship expanding choice to key middle class constituencies, and now to the EdChoice program making another 50,000 students eligible for 14,000 vouchers to escape failing public schools.

These fledgling choice programs are becoming increasingly popular because public schools are performing so poorly. In fact, Ohio's charter schools and vouchers are only available to students living in districts in academic emergency or academic watch.

Parents like the programs because they empower them. Teacher unions oppose the programs because they weaken their position at the collective bargaining table. Continued...

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About The Author
Mr. Blackwell, contributing editor of Townhall.com, is a senior fellow at the Family Research Council, the American Civil Rights Union and the Buckeye Institute in Ohio.
 
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Subject: School Vouchers
I support school vouchers. For what I have seen and heard from students that I personally mentor and what is being added to the public school curriculum - for example: alternative lifestyles, evolution, supporting abortion, and anti-christian beliefs, just to mention a few, I would appreciate the opportunity to put my child in a school that reflect my values and not subject my child to those teachings.

What is even more interesting is, when it comes to terminating a pregnancy, they say "a woman should have a choice", but when it comes to the education of my child I should not have a choice? Hum, go figure.

Imagine ..
.. A presidential candidate whose platform for education included the following:

A) Making tuition to accredited Private Schools tax deductible

AND / OR

B) Providing vouchers to families with school age kids - vouchers that could be used at accredited public AND private schools

Such a candidate would get the interest of parents (read: voters) from both sides of the political spectrum.

Needless to say, such a candidate would not appeal to most union-istas - except for those who also happened to be parents who put their kids' education ahead of the political loyalties.

What would the above proposals achieve?

They would:

* constitute a relatively minor change in our existing system - and give us a chance to see if this reforms the system
* revive private education - currently struggling, with some notable exceptions
* increase competition for teachers - raising salaries for good teachers
* set the country on a path towards free-enterprise-education; IMO this should've been our approach from day one!

Please take a moment and jot down your responses to the following questions:

1) Would you vote for such a candidate regardless of the candidate's party affiliation?

2) Are there any disadvantages to either of the two proposals?

3) Can you name any candidate with the huevos to take on the status-quo in education?

4) Can we accept the status-quo?
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