Education
Tacking into the Wind: Another argument for choice in education PDF Print E-mail
Written by Craig Westover   
Tuesday, 25 March 2008 08:36

The Star Tribune is reporting today that Forest Lake Area High School Students abruptly canceled the appearance of the National Heroes Tour, featuring decorated veteran from the fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Steve Massey, the school principal, said the decision to cancel was prompted by concerns that the event was becoming political rather than educational and therefore was not suitable for a public school.

He said the school had received several phone calls from parents and others, some of whom indicated that they may stage a protest if the event took place.

"The event was structured to be an academic classroom discussion around military service. We thought we'd provide an opportunity for kids to learn about service in the context of our history classes," Massey said. "As the day progressed, it became clear that this was becoming a political event ... which would be inappropriate in a public setting.

I’m sure much of the furor surrounding this bit of news will focus on the fact that it is a patriotic event being canceled. But there is an underlying problem at work here: Contrary to the notion that public schools are a place for bringing together diversity, public schooling often forces people of disparate backgrounds into political combat, as the Forest Lake decision makes plain.

Think about it: Whether one opposes or supports the war in Iraq, don’t we have to ask ourselves how public education reached the point where political controversy is “inappropriate in a public setting?”

Such value-based clashes are inevitable in government-run schooling because all Americans are required to support the public schools, but only those with the most political power control them. Political conflict is an inescapable public schooling reality – to the detriment of actual academic activities. That observation passes the smell test and is well-documented by the Cato Institute’s Neal McCluskey (“Why We Fight: How Public Schools Cause Social Conflict”).

 
Artwork by Derek BrighamTacking into the Wind: To end the fighting caused by state-run schooling, we should transform our “public education system” from one in which government establishes and controls schools, to one in which individual parents are empowered to select schools that share their moral values and educational goals for their children. Instead of an education funding formula that funnels money to district schools, we ought to have an education funding formula where money follows the student to district schools, charter schools, private schools, religious schools, online schools and home schools. Of course, the problem is those with the political power to control education -- Education Minnesota, legislators and bureaucrats -- are not willing to consider parental empowerment at expense of their own power. But nonetheless, fighting to empower families with maximum educational choice is a battle worth fighting.

 

 
Minnesota is the Best State for Charter Schools PDF Print E-mail

Senior Policy Fellow John LaPlante notes that Minnesota has been recognized for its pioneering role in the Charter School movement.

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If Venezuela can . . . . PDF Print E-mail
Monday, 03 December 2007 09:31

Any of these educational ideas sound like something new, something you haven't heard proposed right here in Minnesota?

-- We must train socially minded people to help the community.

-- If they attack us because we're indoctrinating, well yes, we're doing it, because those capitalist ideas that our young people have -- and that have done so much damage to our people -- must be eliminated.

-- The goal is to develop "critical thinking," not to impose a single philosophy.

-- A state role in regulating education is internationally accepted.

-- The new curriculum would help students develop values of "cooperation and solidarity" while learning critical reflection, dialogue and volunteer work.

-- Education based on capitalist ideology has corrupted children's values. We want to create our own ideology collectively -- creative, diverse.

Last Updated ( Saturday, 15 December 2007 12:34 )
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Teacher Quality and Student Performance PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 29 November 2007 09:28

“Waterboarding good research to make it confess conclusions not supported by the data may be modus operandi for politicians, but should be anathema to think tanks,” writes Minnesota Free Market Institute senior policy fellow Craig Westover. The “good research” is a study of cost effective methods of improving student performance, the “waterboarding” is reducing the study to a set of bullet points and the “think tanks” are Growth & Justice and “Minnesota 20/20.”

In his Pioneer Press Opinion page column, “Squeezing statistics to make them fit pre-fab politics” (Nov. 15), Westover looks at how “when think tanks use research the way a drunk uses a lamppost, for support rather than illumination, the public is ill served, misinformation becomes widely distributed, policymakers are misled and bad policy follows.

Last Updated ( Saturday, 15 December 2007 12:34 )
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Out-of-the-box Education Reform PDF Print E-mail
Tuesday, 13 November 2007 11:00

Last week voters went to the polls in 99 of Minnesota’s 336 school districts to register their opinions on higher property taxes to fund local schools.  While the results were mixed one thing is clear, with last weeks referendums behind us, the chant for more state education spending has already begun at the Capitol.

“Hold on to your wallet because the education cartel is about to rev-up the rhetoric on the need for more funding for education,” writes Taxpayer’s League of Minnesota president Phil Krinkie. In “Does More Money Equal Better Education?” Krinkie provides some out-of-the-box thinking on class-size reduction, but predicts such real education reform faces an uphill battle in the legislature “because there is less political risk in continuing to dump more and more money into a broken funding system that rewards the status quo rather than change the system to improve outcomes for students.” 

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 26 February 2008 10:47 )
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