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Archive for the ‘Education’ Category

A Message on Liberty in Learning

Tuesday, June 17th, 2008

Washington, D.C. school choice leader Virginia Walden Ford talks about the importance of families sharing their experience in the scholarship program. My favorite quote from this clip:

Legislators need to see the faces of the children who will benefit from their parents having choices.

Go here for more Voices of School Choice.

Special Needs voucher (SB 57) debated in Ohio House today

Thursday, May 29th, 2008

Update:

The House vote on SB 57 has been delayed until probably June 10th, since Representative Widowfield, a bill supporter, resigned from the House yesterday and was unable to vote today.

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The Special Needs voucher, SB 57, may be debated and voted on in the Ohio House today.

Interested citizens can follow the debate here on the Ohio Channel.

Warning: there may be scenes that will anger or disappoint you. For example, the pervasive distain many legislators will have for parents’ abilities to choose what is best for their children, or, their unquestioning embrace of socialistic principle in defending a one-size-fits-all government monopoly of public education.

As we heard in the Senate debate, there will be gross distortions of the facts, particularly the cost of the program. When any number more than $70 million in terms of money spent though the voucher program is mentioned, know that to be a whopper. And the opportunity for the program to save money for taxpayers (because the vouchers are capped in certain instances and because private schools - namely your community’s Catholic, Christian or Jewish schools well-versed at efficient operations - are simply less expensive that public schools) will probably not be aired.

Finally, watch for a poison-pill amendment perhaps coming from OEA-beholden Republican Randy Gardner. Rep. Gardner may propose what will sound like a good idea, to remove the voucher funding from the current flow of state money to local schools for special needs children.

But think of the perverse incentive this creates for public schools: if they are able to get rid of their special needs students into the Voucher program, they still get to keep all of the state funding as if the child were still filling a chair in their building. Also, the competitive effects - of public schools improving their activity because of parental/market accountability — that have been found in Florida would no longer apply. There would be no ‘whip of competition’ to condition the public schools to perform better.

The true purpose of this amendment will be to redesign the voucher as a costly, duplicative program thereby giving Gov. Strickland a more defensible excuse to veto it.

Showing the teacher unions who’s the boss

Wednesday, May 28th, 2008

We read with disappointment the progress of teacher (and nurse, and janitor, and lunchroom employee) union contract negotiations in Hilliard, Ohio which concluded earlier this month. 

The Hilliard union employed the usual tactics of industrial era labor conflict including ’work-to-rule’ and filing harrassing unfair-labor-practices charges, all of which only reinforce how obsolete and obstructionist teacher unions are in the 21st Century. (more…)

Boots on the ground

Friday, May 16th, 2008

As S.B. 57, passed by the Ohio Senate, gears up in the Ohio House, there’s little doubt that the teachers unions, Democrat party and Gov. Ted Strickland will be angling toward the veto. The bill would establish scholarships for students with disabilities.

Strickland’s view is, “Funding private schools with public tax dollars deprives the state and its taxpayers of proper oversight .”

Yep. Proper oversight.

Meanwhile, here in the real world, a few free individuals are allowed to do what actually works, rather than report to bureaucracies and do the happy dance when their ignorance ratios move from 56 percent to 55 percent. Teachers, students, parents and those who care about getting actual things done for actual children have opened a school that avoids patterns in the decoration, installs obscuring, movable screens over mirrors - all things that are important to autistic students.

Autistic students gained their ability to benefit from funds spent for them several years ago, thanks to efforts by many people, including state Rep. Jon Peterson, R-Delaware.

Too bad students with other disabilities won’t be able to do the same.

Answering the critics of liberty in learning: SB 57 in committee today

Tuesday, May 6th, 2008

Up for a vote today in the Ohio Senate Education Committee is a bill giving families of children with disabilities new options for their education. The provisions of Senate Bill 57, also known as a special needs voucher, were passed by the General Assembly last year as part of the budget bill but were vetoed by Governor Strickland.

The Governor gave two reasons for his veto: first, school choice programs lack accountability; and, second, school choice programs harm public schools and the children who remain in them.

(more…)

Tragedy of the Commons: The Sequel

Friday, May 2nd, 2008

Okay, now I’m afraid.

While Marc Dann was copping a feel, er, plea, the real news was a few blocks north at the Arena Grand movie theater, where about 400 people in pretty expensive suits were discussing Managing a Changing Climate: Challenges and Opportunities for the Buckeye State.

The entire political, industrial, legal and accounting world is planning on moving forward with laws that could readily rewrite the world, including plans for a Carbon Market Efficiency Board.

If we’re lucky, the board would act like the Federal Reserve and would do relatively few things; basically, establish a gross amount of carbon pollution, if pollution it be, and thereby enable trading in the right to emit the stuff. Of course, the sense of that depends upon whether it is sensible to consider carbon a pollutant. Apparently the real tragedy of the commons is that everything is capturable now.

But we won’t be so lucky as to have such a board merely establishing property rights. Instead we’re going to get politicians playing Lilliput, tying us down until we can’t emit.

And meanwhile, they’ll be jetting around the world collecting awards for it.

What Income Gap?

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

The Newark Advocate has a story about an “awareness raising” event at a few universities in Ohio centered around this misleading notion: “According to Business and Professional Women/USA, in 2006 the average median annual earnings of women were only 77 percent of men’s salaries. The 23 cents in the purse illustrates the disparity between genders.”

Dr. Thomas Sowell does a good job of demolishing this nonsense in a short video:

Here Dr. Sowell discusses these issues in print and makes an excellent point:

People without the slightest knowledge of economics or the slightest experience running a business will boldly assert that women are paid only 75 percent — or some other percent — of what men make for doing exactly the same work.

Think about it. If an employer could hire four women for the price of hiring three men, why would he ever hire men at all?

Even if the employer was the world’s biggest sexist, he could still not survive in business if his competitors were getting one-third more output from their employees for the same money.

Ed Choice Vouchers Popular With Parents

Friday, April 18th, 2008

Today is the deadline to sign for Ed Choice VouchersOhio’s popular Ed Choice school voucher program continues to grow. Today is the sign-up deadline for the coming school year and it’s clear that Ohio parents want educational choice.

The program has enjoyed sustained growth since it was implemented three years ago. In fact, this year’s applications have already surpassed last year’s by 12 percent according to the Ohio Department of Education. Parents seeking information on the program should contact School Choice Ohio at (614) 223-1555.

Read more about the program in today’s Cincinnati Enquirer.

Test Scores and Tenure

Wednesday, April 9th, 2008

test_scores.gifIt is not very often that I run across a New York Times editorial that I agree with, but today is an exception. Apparently, a small provision was inserted into the state’s pending education budget bill which “bars school administrators from considering student test scores when determining whether a teacher deserves to get tenure.” The folks on the editorial board are against the measure, and blame the state’s teacher union for trying to thwart better school management.

“To judge whether a teacher elevates the class or sets students spiraling backward, administrators should look at the biggest possible picture. That includes the teacher’s education and experience, of course. But what about the students’ work, including their performance on standardized tests? Shouldn’t that also be considered before giving a teacher a virtually permanent job in New York State? The ban is so nonsensical that lawmakers clearly decided that the only way to get it passed was to keep it hidden deep in the budget documents.”

(more…)

Buckeye Institute Refutes Union-Funded Study

Wednesday, April 9th, 2008

Yesterday, Buckeye Institute Education Policy Analyst Beth Lear testified before the Senate Education Committee to refute specific findings of a labor union-backed report critical of Ohio’s successful Autism Scholarship program.

Senate Bill 57, currently under deliberation in the Senate, will expand the special needs choice program.