Published: October 1, 1998
Few educational issues generate more heat than the question of whether
to use publicly funded vouchers to offset students' tuition in private
and parochial schools. The idea is to teachers' unions what gun control
is to the National Rifle Association. That explains in part why
Democrats tend to rail against vouchers while Republicans embrace them
as the solution to public education's ills. Even in the very civil
halls of academe, where you don't know your throat's been cut until you
shake your head, researchers and scholars are calling each other names
over the issue of vouchers.
Ronald Reagan pushed in vain for vouchers in the early 1980s under the label of "tuition tax credits." John Chubb and Terry Moe laid a philosophical and economic foundation for vouchers in their 1989 book, Politics, Markets, and America's Schools. Resistance was quick and fierce, but slowly and steadily the idea of vouchers has gathered adherents, including recently Arthur Levine, esteemed president of Teachers College, Columbia University. So far, only Milwaukee and Cleveland have made major commitments to vouchers, and both stepped into a mare's-nest of controversy and litigation.
Proponents see vouchers as a no-lose approach to the failure of today's public schools. They argue that vouchers will introduce competition into what is now a monopoly, allowing students to leave bad public schools for better private ones. To compete, public schools will have to improve. If the public system doesn't respond, advocates say, then it ought to be replaced with an alternative that offers better education.
Opponents see vouchers as an attack on public education that could destroy the common school by diverting money and talent to private schools. They argue that poor and minority students would ultimately be left behind and that the public would wind up paying for the educations of the 5 million or so affluent and middle-class kids now in private schools.
There is a lot of baloney in the arguments of both sides. Proponents and opponents alike greatly overestimate the potential of vouchers to change the status quo significantly. Here's why:
Both proponents and opponents ought to scale back their respective aspirations and fears and look at vouchers as a possible way of rescuing the neediest children in the nation's most dysfunctional urban schools. It is a crime to sacrifice one generation of inner-city kids after another because we can't seem to fix our city schools. Something wonderful might result if both sides collaborated on a voucher program to give these youngsters a decent education in alternative settings and let educators go about the work of creating a public system that works.
-Ron Wolk
Vol. 10, Issue 2, Page 6
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