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The
Promise of Equality
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WASHINGTON (By Jeff Jacoby, NYTimes) May
31, 2004 - Fifty years after Brown v. Board of Education struck down the
doctrine of "separate but equal," genuine equality of education remains a
distant dream. The state of public schooling in general these days is nothing
to boast about, but for black and Hispanic kids in particular, it is shocking.
Disparities in education have become so pronounced, as the scholars Abigail and
Stephan Thernstrom have shown, that the average black high school senior today
is less competent in reading, math, and history than the average white
8th-grader.
"At age 17 the typical black or Hispanic student is scoring less well on the
nation's five most reliable tests than at least 80 percent of his or her white
classmates," the Thernstroms write in No Excuses, their acclaimed 2004
book on the racial learning gap. "In five of the seven subjects tested by the
National Assessment of Educational Progress, a majority of black students
perform in the lowest category -- Below Basic."
Not all of this is the fault of the schools. As the Thernstroms stress, culture
is critical: Students who do well academically are more likely to come from
homes where expectations are high, the work ethic is strong, and the TV is
turned off.
But crummy schools are clearly part of the problem, and few are crummier than
the dreadful urban public schools in which so many minority kids are trapped.
For countless families in inner-city neighborhoods, these dead-end facilities
are the only educational option there is. They can't afford the escape hatch of
private or parochial school, and they can't send their children to better public
schools because there aren't any where they live.
The Supreme Court in Brown described education as "perhaps the most important
function of state and local governments" -- so important that "it is doubtful
that any child may reasonably be expected to succeed in life if he is denied the
opportunity of an education." Such an opportunity, it held, "must be made
available to all on equal terms."
Half a century later, Jim Crow is dead and local officials no longer segregate
schools by race. Yet Brown's core promise -- educational opportunity "available
to all on equal terms" -- is still a mirage. Though per-student spending has
soared and a vast new army of teachers has been hired, the quality of public
education remains wildly unequal: occasionally high, typically mediocre, but far
too often abysmal. And no one is more likely to be stuck with the worst
schools, the most burnt-out teachers, or the least responsive administrators
than the very students Brown was meant to rescue: poor blacks.
By now it is obvious that spending even more money and hiring even more teachers
isn't going bring about the equality that Brown called for. Neither will
shifting students around on the basis of skin color, as decades of forced busing
certainly proved. Mandatory testing hasn't led to equality, Head Start hasn't
led to equality, and huge federal mandates like No Child Left Behind are not
likely to lead to equality either.
So maybe it's time to try a *really* radical reform: choice.
Education policy in the United States treats Americans as too incompetent to
provide for their children's schooling. Unlike food or clothing or health care
-- where the market generates lots of options and parents are free to choose
among them -- education is mostly supplied on the Soviet model: Schooling is
"free," but the schools are owned and operated by the state. A small fraction
of parents pay to educate their children privately, but the great majority
simply take what the state supplies.
The public education system is essentially a monopoly, and like most monopolies,
it wastes money, performs indifferently, and doesn't much care if its customers
-- American mothers and fathers -- are satisfied. But give those mothers and
fathers the same freedom of choice when it comes to their kids' education that
they have when it comes to their kids' shoes or dinner, and all of that would
change.
State and local governments should stop spending hundreds of billions of dollars
to run public schools directly. Instead they should spend the money on vouchers
that would let parents freely choose the schools their children attend.
Education would still be compulsory. It would still be publicly financed. But
no longer would it be the inferior, one-size-fits-all product of sclerotic
government bureaucracies. Vouchers would transform education into a vibrant and
competitive free market, with all the innovation, flexibility, and
accountability that implies.
This is not a new idea. The Nobel Prize-winning economist Milton Friedman
proposed it as far back as 1962 in his classic work, Capitalism and Freedom.
If universal school choice had been adopted when he first suggested it, can
anyone doubt that American education today would be radically improved? Choice
and competition have led to revolutionary advances in virtually every area of
modern life, from cars to computers to communications. But public education
remains a backwater, sluggish, unimaginative, and essentially unchanged from 50
-- or 150 -- years ago.
For two generations we have listened to the claim that educational equality is a
constitutional right. The way to finally make good on that claim is to offer a
voucher of equal value to the parents of every child -- letting the funding
follow the student, no matter who runs the school. Putting power in the hands
of parents is the real key to equality -- and the key to excellence, too. | |
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