Meadmaker
Unregistered
- Joined
- Apr 27, 2004
- Messages
- 29,033
I’m an advocate for school vouchers, and I’ll support them in this thread, but, to the extent it is possible to do so, I would like to focus on one aspect of the school choice debate.
Why are people opposed to vouchers? And why do people support them? I’ve read all sorts of reasons, and different people have different motivations, but in researching the issue, something leapt out at me.
In analyzing voter patterns, something became clear. People without children, who own their own homes, and who live in poor neighborhoods, support vouchers. People without children, who own their own homes, and who live in wealthy neighborhoods, oppose vouchers.
It isn’t hard to figure out the difference here. People with no children have no specific self interest related to the education of their own children. However, they have a great interest in property values, and also in quality of life in general.
Apparently, people in all neighborhoods seem to think that school choice would make bad neighborhoods better, and good neighborhoods worse (or at least, less elite). I agree, and that has always been my primary motivation for supporting school choice. I think the public school system as it exists in the US is a major contributor to racial and economic segregation. On an anecdotal level, I have several friends who were middle class whites, and they lived in the city of Detroit, right up until their oldest child turned 4 years old. In fact, I did the same thing. (I didn’t live in Detroit, but I lived in a poor, mostly black, suburb, and when my child was four years old I moved to richer, lily white, suburb, and I did it for the quality of the schools.)
Here’s some discussion.
http://www.fordhaminstitute.org/institute/gadfly/comment_add.cfm?edition=&content_id=477
Why are people opposed to vouchers? And why do people support them? I’ve read all sorts of reasons, and different people have different motivations, but in researching the issue, something leapt out at me.
In analyzing voter patterns, something became clear. People without children, who own their own homes, and who live in poor neighborhoods, support vouchers. People without children, who own their own homes, and who live in wealthy neighborhoods, oppose vouchers.
It isn’t hard to figure out the difference here. People with no children have no specific self interest related to the education of their own children. However, they have a great interest in property values, and also in quality of life in general.
Apparently, people in all neighborhoods seem to think that school choice would make bad neighborhoods better, and good neighborhoods worse (or at least, less elite). I agree, and that has always been my primary motivation for supporting school choice. I think the public school system as it exists in the US is a major contributor to racial and economic segregation. On an anecdotal level, I have several friends who were middle class whites, and they lived in the city of Detroit, right up until their oldest child turned 4 years old. In fact, I did the same thing. (I didn’t live in Detroit, but I lived in a poor, mostly black, suburb, and when my child was four years old I moved to richer, lily white, suburb, and I did it for the quality of the schools.)
Here’s some discussion.
http://www.fordhaminstitute.org/institute/gadfly/comment_add.cfm?edition=&content_id=477