Categories
links

Townhall: A More Civilizing Education

Sharing

Public schools are designed, in part, to solve a problem . . . that may not exist.

Click on over to Townhall.com, then come back here for a little more reading. Or a lot. It is up to you. It’s your education.

First, for links to the study, consult Wednesday’s Common Sense for links.

For a gimlet-eyed view of Horace Mann’s philosophy — peering behind the strata of praise heaped upon his reputation — try the work of education historian Joel Spring. In Educating the Worker-Citizen Spring: The Social, Economic and Political Foundations of Education, , Spring writes much of interest:

Mann’s arguments were based on his fears about how individuals would act, given the opportunity to elect their own governors. In calling for the teaching of a republican catechism, Mann was essentially saying that a republican society could function only if people acted the way he thought they should act. Or, stated another way, people could be free as long as they acted in a good manner and endeavored to do right. “Good” and “right” were to be defined by people like Horace Mann. (p. 13)

Much later in the book, Spring contrasts Mann’s idea of compulsory attendance and funding of public schools with the ideas from those on the opposite end of the spectrum, Milton Friedman being his primary example. What, he asks, about another area of possible government support, “free and compulsory eating?”

As [E. G.] West argues, it seems strange that contemporary governments provide free and compulsory education establishments but not free and compulsory eating establishments; there would seem to be more proof of the beneficial effects of diet than of the beneficial effects of schooling. . . . West’s illustration highlights the uniqueness of government-provided schooling in terms of other services provided by government. (p. 165)

E. G. West’s contributions to the economics of schooling and education reform are fascinating and important. You can learn a lot from reading West. But Spring seems more radical. His basic take? See chapter nine of the book I’ve been quoting from: “The major hindrance to the completion of the liberal revolutions of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries has been the rise and expansion of the modern school.”

1 reply on “Townhall: A More Civilizing Education”

Homeschooling is totally compatible with vouchers. If you want to give parents a choice, hand them a voucher with their portion of their hand earned tax money and let them take that voucher as tuition wherever they choose to enroll their children. The only way to destroy bad schools is to defund them and vouchers would destroy bad schools in 2-3 years. It’s the free market way of creative destruction that goes on in all industries. Allow choice…in where a parent chooses to enroll their kids whether it’s at home or private school. New Orleans did it after Katrina to rousing success. I can’t find the episode from 60 Minutes or i would post it up. Parents were lining up to get their kids in and the kids couldn’t wait to get to school.

Not only that, you also kill the Teacher Pension System that eats up a HUGE amount of the total budget.

See Pensiontsunami.com. Two birds with one stone.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *