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Silence of the Left
Townhall.com ^ | March 15, 2014 | John C. Goodman

Posted on 03/15/2014 7:32:43 AM PDT by Kaslin

The topic du jour on the left these days is inequality. But why does the left care about inequality? Do they really want to lift those at the bottom of the income ladder? Or are they just looking for one more reason to increase the power of government?

If you care about those at the bottom then you are wasting your time and everyone else’s time unless you focus on one and only one phenomenon: the inequality of educational opportunity. Poor kids are almost always enrolled in bad schools. Rich kids are almost always in good schools.

So what does the left have to say about the public school system? Almost nothing. Nothing? That's right. Nothing. I can't remember ever seeing an editorial by Paul Krugman on how to reform the public schools. So I Googled to see if I have missed something. The only thing I found was a negative post about vouchers. And Krugman is not alone.

You almost never see anything written by left-of-center folks on reforming the public schools. And I have noticed on TV talk shows that it's almost impossible to get liberals to agree to the most modest of all reform ideas: getting rid of bad teachers and making sure we keep the good ones.

Here is the uncomfortable reality:

1.Our system of public education is one of the most regressive features of American society.

2.There is almost nothing we could do that would be more impactful in reducing inequality of educational opportunity and inequality overall than to do what Sweden has done: give every child a voucher and let them select a school of choice.

3.Yet on the left there is almost uniform resistance to this idea or any other idea that challenges the power of the teachers unions.

Over and over again, liberal pundits come up with objections to the idea of school choice. What they completely ignore is that we already have a system of school choice.

How school choice currently works. The vast majority of parents are already participating in a system of school choice. For example, there are 79 school districts within a 50-mile radius of downtown Dallas. Assuming each district has at least two campuses at each grade level, a typical family has a choice of about 158 public schools — provided the parents can afford to buy a house in any neighborhood and are willing to drive a considerable distance to work.

How well does this system work? Better than you might think. A study by researchers at Southern Methodist University and the Dallas Federal Reserve Bank found that North Dallas houses near higher-ranking elementary schools sold for about 20 percent more than houses near lower-ranking schools. The authors conclude that the market for education works surprisingly well. Parents can discern quality and the market charges a premium for it.

This conclusion is supported by an informal survey conducted by Dallas attorney H. Martin Gibson of housing prices in Highland Park — a wealthy Dallas suburb. Although most Highland Park homes are inside the Highland Park Independent School District (HPISD), a few are in the Dallas Independent School District (DISD). Gibson found that, all else equal, homes on the HPISD side of the street sell for 24 percent more than those on the DISD side. This implies that many Highland Park homeowners are paying about $72,000 just for the right to send their children to Highland Park schools.

More recently, the Brookings Institution investigated the same phenomena nationwide:

•Across the 100 largest metropolitan areas, housing costs an average of 2.4 times as much, or nearly $11,000 more per year, near a high-scoring public school than near a low-scoring public school.

•This housing cost gap reflects that home values are $205,000 higher on average in the neighborhoods of high-scoring versus low-scoring schools. Near high-scoring schools, typical homes have 1.5 additional rooms and the share of housing units that are rented is roughly 30 percentage points lower than in neighborhoods near low-scoring schools.

If the system works well for those who have money, how does it work for those who don't? What happens to families who cannot afford to buy a house in an expensive neighborhood? Unfortunately, they're out of luck. Since the current choice system in Dallas and across the country rations educational opportunity through the housing market, it's almost inevitable that the children of low-income families will end up in schools no one else wants to attend. These are the schools with the worst teachers, the worst principals and the lowest test scores.

A compounding factor is that parents who can afford more expensive homes are much more adept at dealing with public sector bureaucracies. If a bad teacher or principal is identified at a school in a wealthy neighborhood, parents typically will complain until that person is transferred to another school. Then the parents at the next school will likely complain. This transfer process will continue until the worst teachers and worst principals wind up at schools where either the parents don't complain or nothing happens if they do. These invariably are schools in low-income neighborhoods.

Of course, it is possible to turn a truly bad school into a good one through some Herculean effort. But if the effort was successful and perceived to be permanent, "gentrification" would occur. Middle-income families would move into the neighborhood and bid up housing prices. Low-income residents would be priced out of the market and would have to move somewhere else. It is no accident that the worst schools are consistently found in low-income neighborhoods that lie predominantly in urban areas. Indeed, it could not be otherwise.

How liberals view school choice. There have always been some on the left who want to liberate poor children from bad schools. But, sad to say, they are in a distinct minority. Here is Krugman on school choice:

… [P]roposals for school vouchers should be critiqued not only on educational or cost-efficiency grounds but also because they raise the risk of a collapse in the political support for public education. (If upper-middle-class families are allowed to "top up" their vouchers with their own money, they will soon realize that it is in their interest to cut the size of the vouchers as much as possible). And-dare we say it?-we should in general oppose privatization plans if they are likely to destroy public sector unions. After all, people on the right tend to favor privatization for exactly the same reason.

And what exactly would be wrong if the teachers unions went away? Clearly they view the schools as a jobs program far more than a way of lifting children out of poverty. What the teachers unions do systematically is support big government. They want higher taxes and more government spending. Even if you thought that these were good things, is it worth it to sacrifice millions of poor children in the process? The left apparently thinks so.

Postscript: Newly elected New York City Mayor Bill De Blasio appeared on Morning Joe the other day to explain why he wants to close some of the city's best charter schools:

Among the 870 Success Academy seats blocked was a modest 194-student expansion for Success Academy students in Harlem to move into a new middle school. That triggered days of searing press coverage pointing out that those 194 students, all low-income minorities, were coming from a school, Success Academy 4, that killed it on the new state test scores, with 80 percent of the students passing the math test, and 59 percent the English test. The co-located middle school the mayor is protecting and where many of those 194 charter students would end up: P.S. 149, where 5 percent of students passed the math test, and 11 percent the English test. (Slate)

While the other guests rightly pound on the mayor and expressed outrage, Economist Jeffrey Sachs sat by and said nothing. And everyone has a right to be silent. But not if you intend to turn around and tell us how important it is to do something about inequality.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; US: New York
KEYWORDS: billdeblasio; chirlanemccray; deblasio; inequality; newyork; newyorkcity; theleft

1 posted on 03/15/2014 7:32:43 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

The Left only supports undeserved transfers because that buys votes.


2 posted on 03/15/2014 7:40:25 AM PDT by UnbelievingScumOnTheOtherSide (HELL, NO! BE UNGOVERNABLE! --- ISLAM DELENDA EST)
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To: Kaslin

Fred on Everything nails it in his latest column. We’re Effed.

Onward into the Night (Or Uganda, Anyway)
March 14, 2014

Despite much wringing of teeth and gnashing of hands about the decline in schooling in the United States, I have seen very little concrete comparison between then and now, whatever one means by “then.” In my small way, as a mere anecdote in a sea of troubles, I hereby offer an actual comparison. Permit me to preview the result: Much of the United States has sunk to the level of the lower ranks of the Third World.

http://fredoneverything.net/SchoolsBrooklyn.shtml


3 posted on 03/15/2014 7:42:01 AM PDT by Travis McGee (www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com)
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To: Kaslin

Excellent piece. I’ve made that argument to my leftist friends whenever they try to argue “inequality.” And I really make them mad when I say I agree and we can lay it all at the feet of the public school establishment and the teachers unions. They either go ballistic or they shut up.


4 posted on 03/15/2014 7:43:58 AM PDT by MNnice
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To: MNnice

” It only stands to reason that where there’s sacrifice, there’s someone collecting the sacrificial offerings. Where there’s service, there is someone being served. The man who speaks to you of sacrifice is speaking of slaves and masters, and intends to be the master.”

- Ayn Rand


5 posted on 03/15/2014 7:52:46 AM PDT by jsanders2001
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To: Kaslin

There is a leftist answer to this: busing. They do it in Raleigh, NC, where I went to high school. The Leesville and, later, Wakefield districts were brand new, very nice multi-grade campuses with nice, expensive homes nearby. Then, since it’s unfair to the downtown Raleigh kids for white bread types to have good schools, they bused the, ah, “urban” youth into those school districts. Leesville and Wakefield both are now crap with plummeting safety standards (couldn’t tell you if their test scores are falling, too, but it would follow).

Once again, instead of lifting up the bottom element, they drag the top down to the bottom, so everyone can equally share in the misery.


6 posted on 03/15/2014 7:54:20 AM PDT by Future Snake Eater (CrossFit.com)
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To: jsanders2001

“Run for your life from any man who tells you that money is evil. That sentence is the leper’s bell of an approaching looter.”

- Ayn Rand


7 posted on 03/15/2014 7:55:03 AM PDT by jsanders2001
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To: Kaslin
Home schooling can be a tough row to hoe for parents. It adds another time consuming task to already full schedules of parents who care and show it every day.

We were never wealthy but were lucky. We made enough to send our kids through the Catholic School System in Mpls/St. Paul. Their education was as good as any and better than most.

The Public School System in our neighborhood has some celebrated failures that make it child abuse to send kids to them. Even our worst schools don't have a 95% failure rate.

If our only available public education resource guaranteed a failed life for my kid, I would have to take a run at home schooling. If I could not possibly do worse that paid teachers, why not at least try?

8 posted on 03/15/2014 7:56:15 AM PDT by stevem
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To: Kaslin
Across the 100 largest metropolitan areas, housing costs an average of 2.4 times as much, or nearly $11,000 more per year, near a high-scoring public school than near a low-scoring public school.

Said another way, children of higher-IQ professionals are more likely to be high-IQ themselves, and thus able to score high on standardized tests.

The one thing that few people are willing to voice, is that the real problem is not low-quality schools, but low-quality students.

That said, one thing that would lift up scores, would be better competence tests for teachers. At the very least, they should be able to score in the top 10% on the tests that are administered to their students. Any unable to score high on tests of their subject matter should be fired.

9 posted on 03/15/2014 8:09:14 AM PDT by PapaBear3625 (You don't notice it's a police state until the police come for you.)
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To: UnbelievingScumOnTheOtherSide

Sickness of the Left.


10 posted on 03/15/2014 8:28:46 AM PDT by Starboard
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To: Kaslin
Nothing can repair the inner city schools until the inner city "culture" changes. However, that doesn't mean we shouldn't attempt to help those that want an education and a brighter future. Vouchers and charter schools are the morally appropriate response to inner city rot.

Government employee unions (like the teachers union) can't stand up to scrutiny. The success of charter schools and vouchers exposes them to the sunlight, which makes them look very bad. Their position is to just hide the rotting carcass of public education and spend more money on failure.

11 posted on 03/15/2014 8:36:44 AM PDT by Senator_Blutarski
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To: Kaslin

Krugman’s argument is typical doublespeak. Obama, and the rest of the 1% send their children to private schools because the public schools are a mess (Krugman has no children of his own so he hasn’t made the choice). He opposes vouchers, not because they don’t work, but because he expects the upper middle class to “top off the vouchers” so they can send their children to better schools. What Krugman fails to acknowledge is the wealthy and most parents in the middle and upper middle class who can do so either send their children to private school or home school them.

As to the fear the topping off of vouchers will lead to a demand for lower funding of public education by the affluent, wouldn’t that have already happened? His premise is that parents who pay taxes for the public schools and 100% of the private school tuition for their own children are suddenly going to demand lower funding for public education when they begin receiving voucher’s from the state to partially offset the private tuition they are paying? Contrary to what Krugman indicates, those affluent parents are more likely to support programs from which they receive a benefit than those which provide zero benefit to them.

In any event, the proposition can be tested. Take the federal government completely out of public education. Let the states that want to experiment with vouchers do so and those who don’t keep the current system. Measure the performance of the students today and again in 10 and 20 years. A twenty year trial will demonstrate best practice.

One thing we know for sure. Today’s public education system condemns most of the children participating in it to mediocrity. More of the same isn’t the answer unless you are childless and live in an academic ivory tower completely insulated from reality.


12 posted on 03/15/2014 9:02:10 AM PDT by Soul of the South (Yesterday is gone. Today will be what we make of it.)
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To: PapaBear3625
Your comments are, of course, apt. Any analysis of educational problems; of inequality of wealth; of differing levels of any type of achievement, that does not directly acknowledge that there is no real equality in any of the members of any advanced species, is fundamentally flawed.

No one reading this ever sat in a class-room, where his or her equal sat on either side, unless it was his or her twin or triplet! Whether the subject for comparison was academic, in general, physical in general; or confined to a particular discipline, a particular social attribute, etc., etc.; we all differ.

Now that does not mean that a good teacher cannot enhance performance; but that pursuit of enhancement must be directed at the unique personalities with which that teacher has to interact. That interaction, in turn, is an immediate, local interpersonal dynamic. Sweeping pronouncements by agenda seeking egalitarians contribute absolutely nothing worthwhile to a discussion of the process.

William Flax

13 posted on 03/15/2014 9:20:55 AM PDT by Ohioan
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To: Kaslin

Has anyone looked at the Forever stamps put out by the Post Office?

The have a flag on the stamps and the stamps say, Justice, Freedom, Liberty, and.......Equality.

Uh, our country has never before espoused “equality” as anything other than we are all born equal in the eyes of God. The outcome in America is up to the individual.


14 posted on 03/15/2014 9:28:57 AM PDT by dforest
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To: Ohioan
One thing that would have an immediate effect, would be the abolition of teachers unions, followed by the abolition of "boards of education". Have there be a superintendent of schools, appointed by the mayor, with the ability to fire the principals of low-performing schools, with the principals in turn being able to fire low-performing teachers.

Accountability up and down the line. Which means the government employees will fight it to the bitter end.

15 posted on 03/15/2014 9:32:40 AM PDT by PapaBear3625 (You don't notice it's a police state until the police come for you.)
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To: dforest
No I haven't seen them.

I stocked up on the Forever Stamps in 2007 when they first came out. It was the one with the Liberty bell. The next Forever Stamp book I bought was the one with the flag and Lady Liberty. I very seldom go inside the post office. If I have to mail something I put it in my mail box with the flag up at the end of our yard, and the mailman picks it up. Or I drive to our post office which is less then a mile away and drop it in one of the 2 Mail boxes that are outside

16 posted on 03/15/2014 9:48:32 AM PDT by Kaslin (He needed the ignorant to reelect him, and he got them. Now we all have to pay the consequenses)
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To: PapaBear3625
"Accountability up and down the line. Which means the government employees will fight it to the bitter end."

Accountability is essential in the provision of any social service from any institution to any segment of society.

It would probably be beneficial to get Government out of education, altogether, if there was some non political body that could manage a safety-net for those children whose parents are not able, otherwise, to secure their education.

The way that the "Welfare" ("Safety-Net") was handled in Jefferson's time, is a model for what actual works in social programs--although, admittedly, education involves a quite different set of immediate considerations. (See Jefferson On Welfare.)

17 posted on 03/15/2014 10:41:57 AM PDT by Ohioan
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To: PapaBear3625
One thing that would have an immediate effect, would be the abolition of teachers unions.

On my wish list of constitutional amendments is the abolishment of all public employee unions.

18 posted on 03/15/2014 10:46:16 AM PDT by VRW Conspirator ( 2+2 = V)
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To: AdmSmith; AnonymousConservative; Berosus; bigheadfred; Bockscar; cardinal4; ColdOne; ...

Same data, no spin. Thanks Kaslin.


19 posted on 03/21/2014 3:17:54 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
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