The coronavirus has been horrible news, most obviously because of death and suffering. But the disease has also wreaked havoc with the economy and given politicians an excuse to push counterproductive policies.
But if you want to find a silver lining to that dark cloud, the virus may be putting pressure on America’s government school monopoly. For instance, John Stossel explains that it may lead to more homeschooling.
Given the large amount of evidence showing superior outcomes for home-schooled students, this is definitely a much-needed bit of good news.
Matthew Hennessey, in a column for the Wall Street Journal, also opined about how the coronavirus may produce a permanent expansion of home schooling.
Most students will return to traditional classrooms when the crisis passes. But some families—perhaps many—will…decide that homeschooling is not only a plausible option, but a superior one. …An economy of high-quality online educational materials has sprouted in the past decade.
All you need is a laptop, headphones and a quiet corner of the house, and your kid can study everything from calculus to ancient Greek. …Education has managed to stave off innovation for a variety of reasons. Inertia is one—most people have a hard time reimagining something as basic as school. …Teachers unions are politically strong and uninterested in anything that threatens their power. But now the pandemic…can shake up the established order… If more Americans come to see the viability and value of home education, it could be a silver lining in a very dark cloud.
Private schools also provide a superior alternative to the government’s monopoly system.
That was true before the coronavirus, and it’s even more true today. This report from the New York Times has some details.
Public schools plan to open not at all or just a few days a week, while many neighboring private schools are opening full time. …the ways in which private schools are reopening show it can be done with creative ideas
…reopening plans are just another way the pandemic has widened gaps in education. Private schools were able to offer much more robust online learning last spring, and research suggests that school closures have widened achievement gaps. …Independent schools don’t have all the same regulations for the curriculum or facilities that public schools have, and teachers generally aren’t unionized.
Writing for Reason, Corey DeAngelis highlights the more competent response of private schools.
A nationally representative survey conducted by Ipsos Public Affairs found that private and charter schools were substantially more likely to continue providing students with meaningful education services during the lockdown than traditional public schools. …Private and charter schools were about 20 percent more likely to introduce new content to their students during the lockdown.
…Another national survey…found…students were more than twice as likely to connect with their teachers each day, and about 1.5 times as likely to attend online classes during the closures. …Parents of children in private and charter schools were at least 50 percent more likely to report being “very satisfied” with the instruction provided during the lockdown than parents of children in traditional public schools. …Private schools can adapt to change more effectively because they are less hampered down by onerous regulations than their government-run counterparts. …Private and charter schools know that their customers—families—can walk away and take their money with them if they fail to meet their needs.
Unsurprisingly, defenders of the status quo often claim that the government monopoly does a poor job because of inadequate money.
This is utter nonsense. I periodically share a chart put together by the late Andrew Coulson which shows how per-pupil spending in government schools has skyrocketed (with zero improvement in educational outcomes).
Perhaps even more relevant, it costs more, on average, for kids to attend government schools than it does for them to attend private schools.
And that assumes government schools are actually being honest about their true costs.
Yet that doesn’t seem to be the case. Researchers who have investigated the numbers have discovered pervasive under-counting (or non-counting) of big expenses such as building costs and pension obligations).
Adam Schaeffer narrated a video on this topic about ten years ago. Here’s a screenshot of the official numbers from various local governments compared to the actual costs.
What’s the bottom line? Instead of throwing good money after bad by rewarding under-performing government schools with bigger budgets, the right answer is comprehensive school choice.
P.S. School choice doesn’t automatically mean every child will be an educational success, but evidence from Sweden, Chile, Canada, and the Netherlands shows good results when competition replaces government education monopolies.
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[…] guest on) John Stossel’s TV show, and I’m now a big fan of his videos (see here, here, here, here, here, here, and […]
[…] maybe pandemic policies such as masking, remote learning, and […]
[…] guest on) John Stossel’s TV show, and I’m now a big fan of his videos (see here, here, here, here, here, here, and […]
[…] guest on) John Stossel’s TV show, and I’m now a big fan of his videos (see here, here, here, here, here, here, and […]
[…] guest on) John Stossel’s TV show, and I’m now a big fan of his videos (see here, here, here, here, here, here, and […]
[…] guest on) John Stossel’s TV show, and I’m now a big fan of his videos (see here, here, here, here, here, here, and […]
[…] TV show, and I’m now a big fan of his videos (see here, here, here, here, here, here, […]
[…] been a lot of progress on school choice this year, which is partly a response to the self-serving actions of the government school monopoly during the […]
[…] guest on) John Stossel’s TV show, and I’m now a big fan of his videos (see here, here, here, here, here, here, and […]
[…] on) John Stossel’s TV show, and I’m now a big fan of his videos (see here, here, here, here, here, here, and […]
[…] been a lot of progress on school choice this year, which is partly a response to the self-serving actions of the government school monopoly during the […]
[…] There’s been a lot of progress on school choice this year, which is partly a response to the self-serving actions of the government school monopoly during the […]
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[…] want to find a silver lining, the government’s bungled response to the pandemic has exposed some weaknesses in the government school […]
[…] that we have a pandemic, the argument against government-run schools is even stronger. Simply stated the government monopoly is too politicized and too inflexible – and that means […]
[…] month ago, I wrote that expanded school choice might be a silver lining to the dark cloud of […]
Absolutely agree smapple….100%.
For anyone who read the books and essays of the absolutely wonderful writer and educator….the late Richard Mitchell….Underground Grammarian ..Graves of Academe etc…it’s so disheartening to see the nihilist violence and inanity of the organisations that have seduced so many young African Americans in recent years with little apparent fightback from parents and politicians .
You have to wonder …in light of the terrible statistics from the violence and mayhem in places like Chicago …how different things could have been had Mitchell been the one that politicians and the education bureaucracy had listened to …instead of to the teachers’ unions who treated him with contempt and saw America’s children as nothing but fodder for political activism and destructive victimhood.
Young African Americans had such great role models in Mitchell…Thomas Sowell ..Shelby Steele …Ben Carson…Stephen Carter and many others…yet leftist teachers and university academics have been able to drown out the voices of reason to wantonly destroy young lives with absolute impunity.
We have a similar situation here in Australia…UK as well…every bit as life-destroying but on a much smaller scale.
If only….
Firstly, home schools are not for everybody. They are a success because those who decide to do so are committed to it. What I hope we see out of this is a public outcry for vouchers. It occurs to me that we could afford to pay teachers who are tenured to just sit at home and voucher children into private schools at a lower cost than the current public school system- and with better outcomes. The issue we are facing right now is that those who have done home schooling have worked to see their children are also socialized. And the shutdown nazis have prevented that until further notice.
Reblogged this on Boudica BPI Weblog.
Note. I believe it was Los Angeles Unified that built one of the first BILLION dollars high schools.
You can hide a LOT of “real” spending with a slush fund that sized.
18 years ago I tried to do a back of the envelope calculation for the spending for special needs kids in my state.
I came up with $100,000 per student. That “sounded” reasonable.
Several years later I revisited the calculation and discovered that is was closer to $10,000 in addition to whatever they were spending per student.
Now I see this Stated vs Real chart.
We are wasting every cent of that.