Passage of the Day: John Stossel on Schools and Competition
A true consumer advocate, this guy’s so clear-headed it’s scary:
Last week, Florida’s supreme court ruled that public money can’t be spent on private schools because the state constitution commands the funding of only “uniform . . . high-quality” schools. How absurd. As if government schools are uniformly high quality. Or even mostly decent.
Apparently competition, which made even the Postal Service improve, is unconstitutional when it comes to public education in Florida.
Remember when the Postal Service said it couldn’t get it there overnight? Then companies like FedEx were allowed to compete. Private enterprise got it there absolutely, positively overnight. Now even the Post Office guarantees overnight delivery sometimes. Competition works.
Why can’t education work the same way? If people got to choose their kids’ school, education options would be endless. My tiny brain can’t begin to imagine the possibilities, but even I can guess there soon would be technology schools, cheap Wal-Mart-like schools, virtual schools where you learn at home on your computer, sports schools, music schools, schools that go all year, schools with uniforms, schools that open early and keep kids later, and, who knows? If there were competition, all kinds of new ideas would bloom.
This already happens overseas, and the results are good.
For “Stupid in America,” a special report ABC will air Friday, we gave identical tests to high school students in New Jersey and Belgium. The Belgians trounced the Americans. We didn’t pick smart kids in Europe and dumb kids in the United States. The American students attend an above-average school in New Jersey, and New Jersey kids’ test scores are above average for America. “It has to be something with the school,” said a New Jersey student, “’cause I don’t think we’re stupider.”
She was right: It’s the schools. At age 10, students from 25 countries take the same test, and American kids place eighth, well above the international average. But by age 15, when students from 40 countries are tested, the Americans place 25th, well below the international average. In other words, the longer American kids stay in American schools, the worse they do. They do worse than kids from much poorer countries, like Korea and Poland.
This should come as no surprise since public education in the USA is a government monopoly. If you don’t like your public school? Tough. If the school is terrible? Tough. Your taxes fund that school regardless of whether it’s good or bad.
And guess who actually has a competitive school set-up? Be seated first:
Kaat Vandensavel runs a Belgian government school, but in Belgium, school funding follows students, even to private schools. So Vandensavel has to work hard to impress the parents. “If we don’t offer them what they want for their child, they won’t come to our school.” That pressure makes a world of difference, she says. It forces Belgian schools to innovate in order to appeal to parents and students. Vandensavel’s school offers extra sports programs and classes in hairdressing, car mechanics, cooking, and furniture building. She told us, “We have to work hard day after day. Otherwise you just [go] out of business.”
“That’s normal in Western Europe,” Harvard economist Caroline Hoxby told me. “If schools don’t perform well, a parent would never be trapped in that school in the same way you could be trapped in the U.S.”
Vandensavel adds, “America seems like a medieval country . . . a Communist country on the educational level, because there’s no freedom of choice — not for parents, not for pupils.”
Even socialist Western Europe believes in school choice. Why don’t we? I’m even willing to grit my teeth and say “we ought to be more like them” (ooh, that hurts) in this one regard.










ABC’s Friday evening documentary on the status of public schools in the United States was absolutely riveting. After watching the data presented I was both relieved that the follies of public education in this Country were laid bare- -and disturbed at the prospects of trying to right a wrong that has the support of mainstream educators and politicians in this Country.
In a short segment of the show ABC paid homage to the Milwaukee School System which has an established charter school system. Be careful on that- -this system is still tightly regulated by the State Legislature and the Governor- -which is, itself, tightly regulated by the Milwaukee Teachers and their political arm, the Wisconsin Education Association. While current State law limits the number of students in Milwaukee who may attend charter schools to 15 %, teachers in the Milwaukee School System make the conscious choice to send 30% of their own children to private schools. The Wisconsin education Association, the largest financial contributor to our Governor, has convinced him to twice veto legislation which would have raised the 15% barrier.
Nationwide 22% of children of public school teachers attend private schools- -almost twice the national average. In New York City this figure is 33 % (versus 23% of the general public); Chicago 39% (versus 23%); Los Angeles 25% (versus) 16%).
If these choices are good enough for teachers, why not for other parents?
Bill Miller
2201 Fern Lane
Wausau, WI 54401
(715) 355-7156
billonhill@charter.net
Comment by BILL MILLER — January 16, 2006 @ 7:58 pm