Close
the Government Schools
by
Vin Suprynowicz
by Vin Suprynowicz
DIGG THIS
Just a year
on the job, District of Columbia Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee
has shuttered 23 schools, fired more than 30 principals and given
notice to hundreds of teachers and administrative workers.
Shes
making bold changes as she tries to accomplish what six would-be
reformers in the past decade could not, the Washington
Post reported last week: rescue one of the nations
most dysfunctional school districts.
So far, Ms.
Rhee has streamlined Washingtons central office by firing
nearly 100 employees. She dismissed 36 principals she considered
ineffective, including one at the elementary school her two daughters
attend. She also sent termination letters this summer to 750 teachers
and teachers aides who missed a certification deadline.
Although the
district is among the nations highest-spending school
systems, the Post reports well examine
that understatement shortly its students rank near
the bottom in reading and math proficiency. Schools have leaky roofs
and broken fire sprinklers. Bathrooms are decrepit, with broken
toilets and missing stall doors. Not surprisingly, enrollment in
the 49,000-student system is shrinking as parents move their children
to charter schools, which are publicly funded but independently
operated.
Curiously,
this was the only reference in the Posts report to
the capitals once-ballyhooed experiment with school choice.
Just a week
earlier, Post staff writer Bill Turque filed a report which
the papers editors headlined School Choice Program Offers
Few Options.
Back in August
of 2004, the first ever federally funded school voucher program
was launched in Washington, D.C. Eligible students would be able
to attend a private school of their choice in the District of Columbia,
proponents declared. Each participant would receive up to $7,500
for school tuition, fees, and transportation. In addition, the D.C.
Public School System (DCPS) and D.C. charter school system each
received $13 million in federal grants to improve their programs.
But for all
its promise, school choice in the nations capital
is now largely dismissed as a bad joke.
Earlier
this month, parents of students in 81 low-performing D.C. public
schools almost two-thirds of the District system got
a packet in the mail announcing that federal law entitles them to
transfer their children to a stronger school, Mr. Turque of
the Post reports. The notice goes out every August,
required under the federal No Child Left Behind law. But in a system
filled with failing schools, parental choice can be a hollow proposition.
Perhaps thats why officials reported Friday that they had
received just 34 applications for transfer. The deadline is tomorrow.
What
a joke, LaCrisha Butler told the city daily.
Ms. Butler
wants to pull her nephew, Travis, out of Coolidge High School, which
this year failed, for the fifth time in a row, to hit math and reading
test benchmarks required by the law.
But the eight
other mainstream high schools he might attend also are
under federal mandate to restructure and improve, which means they
would offer no improvement and are thus off the table.
That leaves the Districts five specialty high
schools, including the Duke Ellington School of the Arts, all of
which have admission requirements that pose significant obstacles
for Travis, a special-needs child who has an individualized education
plan.
Younger
students face a similarly narrow band of choices, the Post
reports. Alternative schools must be academically sound and
sufficiently secure so they are not deemed persistently dangerous,
as defined by D.C. law. That leaves the nearly 5,000 children in
the Districts 11 floundering middle and junior high schools
have just two choices under the No Child Left Behind option.
Needless to
say, two schools, already operating at capacity, cant take
5,000 new students.
Add to that
the fact that the number-crunching required to decide which kids
can (theoretically) change schools, and which few other public schools
might be allowed to take them, delayed mailing of appropriate notifications
till Aug. 5 this year, giving families less than three weeks to
make decisions and apply for transfers before classes begin.
In the case
of special tutoring available for kids who stay where they are,
notices of available programs were received by parents ONE DAY before
the deadline to sign up.
The notices
generally come so late that, practically speaking, they dont
mean much, the Post reports. The most desirable
public charters are full.
The best solution?
On April 6,
the Post ran an op-ed submission from Andrew Coulson, director
of the Cato Institutes Center for Educational Freedom, headlined
The Real Cost of Public Schools.
Were
often told that public schools are underfunded. In the District,
the spending figure cited most commonly is $8,322 per child,
Mr. Coulson wrote.
But total
spending is close to $25,000 per child on par with tuition
at Sidwell Friends, the private school Chelsea Clinton attended
in the 1990s.
Mr. Coulson
added up all sources of funding for education from kindergarten
through 12th grade, excluding spending on charter schools and higher
education.
For the
current school year, he found, the local operating budget
is $831 million, including relevant expenses such as the teacher
retirement fund. The capital budget is $218 million. The District
receives about $85.5 million in federal funding. And the D.C. Council
contributes an extra $81 million. Divide all that by the 49,422
students enrolled (for the 200708 year) and you end up with
about $24,600 per child.
For comparison,
total per pupil spending at D.C. area private schools among
the most upscale in the nation averages about $10,000 less.
For most private schools, the difference is even greater.
So why force
most D.C. children into often dilapidated and underperforming public
schools when we could easily offer them a choice of private schools?
Some
would argue that private schools couldnt or wouldnt
serve the Districts special education students, at least not
affordably, Mr. Coulson wrote. Not so.
Consider
Floridas McKay Scholarship program, which allows parents to
pull their special-needs children out of the public schools and
place them in private schools of their choosing. Parental satisfaction
with McKay is stratospheric, the program serves twice as many children
with disabilities as the D.C. public schools do, and the average
scholarship offered in 2006-07 was just $7,206. The biggest
scholarship awarded was $21,907 still less than the average
per-pupil spending in D.C. public schools. If Florida can satisfy
the parents of special-needs children at such a reasonable cost,
why cant the District?
The
answer, of course, is that it could.
Instead, Mr.
Coulson concludes, the failure to think outside the box
leaves Washingtons parents, students, teachers, and even well-meaning
reformers trying to manage a bureaucracy so Byzantine it would
give Rube Goldberg an aneurysm.
Does
anyone worry that Chelsea Clinton will become a threat to society
because she attended a private school? he asks. Was
Barack Obama unprepared for public life because of his time in a
Catholic school? The District should give every child the educational
opportunities now enjoyed only by the elite.
Mr. Coulson
is right. They should close the District of Columbia public schools.
September
6, 2008
Vin
Suprynowicz [send
him mail] is assistant editorial page editor of the daily Las
Vegas Review-Journal and author of The
Black Arrow.
Copyright
© 2008 Vin Suprynowicz
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