But "government school" is the great evil. No, I'm not touching the virtues of early childhood education, because that's not what Drazkowski is talking about here. This is about "government school" v. private school, and the next step is to get public money to flow to private schools. Without, of course, any oversight, because then it's just government school again.MN state Rep. Steve Drazkowski (R) argues for abolishing early childhood education:
— Heartland Signal (@HeartlandSignal) May 9, 2022
"We should let parents raise their kids until they're 5 at least before government comes with a school bus, backs it up to the maternity ward room door and takes them to the government school." pic.twitter.com/qV1abRUnaQ
“We can fully fund public schools while also giving parents a choice about which school is right for their child,” Abbott said during a campaign event in San Antonio. “Empowering parents means giving them the choice to send their children to any public school, charter school or private school with state funding following the student.”
I had my daughter in private school, for many years. Believe me, what the state will provide a parent in a voucher won't begin to cover the cost of a good private school. There are two charter schools in my district, both of which use school property and work with the school districts. They aren't going to take new students on an expanded voucher program, either. Oh, they may take a few, but they won't take all the applicants who could decide that's the better option. And of course the option is only going to be available to parents who can transport their kids to those schools, afford the uniforms and fees (of private schools, at least), etc., etc., etc. This is a sop to a few people who don't want to extend themselves for private school, but don't like sending their children to the public school with all those non-white students and families.
And it won't happen anyway because the Legislature remembers what happened the last time they tried this. And over and over and over again, they have declined to put any more money into schools. Higher taxes, you know; can't have that. If the funding follows the student without oversight, you're throwing away tax dollars (that was the problem the one time Texas tried this). If there is oversight, you just have charter schools, which Texas already has. And those schools get to limit attendance. Ramping up new charter schools is not like buying an electric car company and turning out crappy product (every Tesla on the road, every last one of them, has been recalled for one problem or another) with snappy marketing to fool the rubes.
But that's all this is: rube bait. Abbott is starting to get desperate. He's chasing the urban vote (which is strongly Democratic) because the rural voters fear vouchers will further reduce funding of their public schools (not too many charter schools in towns with only one high school).
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