jimboston wrote: PLAYER57832 wrote:jimboston wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:
AND... vouchers pull money from the public schools.
Yes... the Public Schools would get less money.
Those school would also have fewer kids to educate, so their costs would (SHOULD) go down proportionally.
The whole fact that public schools CAN'T control their costs is a good example why we need programs like vouchers.
WRONG
Because you assume that educating each student costs the same and that is the fundamental error.
What Florida REALLY shows is that private schools are more than happy to educate the kids without significant problems, particularly those on the upper ranks of intelligence and ability... but when it comes to kids who are less intelligent, who have serious disabilities, or behavior issues related to medical issues, or even just who come from a poorer, unsupportive background and home -- FORGET IT! Though the schools are theoretically not allowed to exclude those kids, in fact they do.
ALSO, public schools do very much provide many other services that many private schools do not.. ranging from providing lunches and breakfasts to specialized medical services. ONE student who I know about because its a friend of ours, in our district costs over $50,000. She (adopted, I will add), has many serious issues and has to be in a residential care program. The money comes out of the local public school budget.
1) Schools shouldn't provide things NOT related to education.
Those services came because kids who don't eat, are not healthy don't learn well. ALSO, when the services are provided in the school, there is assurance that it is the kids themselves who are eating the food, etc. Its harder to assure that in other formats.
BUT.. that really has little to do with vouchers. I include it only becuase these things are included as part of a public school cost per student figure and not for private schools.
jimboston wrote: 2) There SHOULD be a limit to the "specialized services" that schools are required to provide. Otherwise we might as well just open our wallets and forget it.
Yeah, let's go back to the days when kids who are not perfect are just shoved in big rooms together with gaurds to watch.
AGAIN, that is not a voucher issue. It is just another example of why the figures get distorted so it seems like public education is more expensive than it really is for society.
I agree that there is a limit, but it needs to be thought out and put forward as a real plan that will work. Vouchers are not supposed to do that.
jimboston wrote:The job of Gov't is to PROVIDE THE OPPORTUNITY for kids to get an education. The job should not be to ENSURE all kids get an EQUAL education. If you can't follow what I mean by this statement don't ask... you need to have taken advantage of the OPPORTUNITY you received.
You are still avoiding the issues.
I disagree, but that is a different debate. MY issue is that you are claiming that public education is more expensive and ineffective, but that is only true because the data is skewed by outside factors. In truth public educaiton is CHEAPER and more effective than public education.