In her latest column, Rep. Cynthia Davis, R-O"Fallon, offers her views on education, which mainly amount to the idea that taxpayers should foot the bill for private school education and homeschooling since parents who opt for those choices are thinking more about their children's education anyway. The column is printed below:
Last week was the 50th anniversary celebration of Citizens for Educational Freedom (CEF). This was so important because it brought out a diverse group of people all committed to one goal---helping parents to help their children achieve their maximum potential. This organization is committed to promote the primary rights of parents to pursue freedom of choice, justice and quality in education for all. These economically difficult times should inspire us toward vigilance to assure our tax dollars are being used in the most equitable manner.
As the mother of seven children, I can attest to the reality that all children have a variety of educational needs and responses to different environments. It is shortsighted to assume that what is best for one is best for all. Children need to be considered individually and put into the learning structure that will allow them to thrive. In addition, many come from homes where their parents cannot afford any other option besides public school. We need to consider the whole person and support whatever options will be of greatest benefit to the students. The best answer is to allow the parents to decide what will help their child the most.
When families feel it is best to put their children into an alternative educational setting, they receive no credit or appreciation for having made such sacrifices. Private school or homeschooling requires far more parental time, transportation expenses and tuition or curriculum acquisition with no assistance from the government, even thought these parents also subsidize the government public schools through property taxes. This structure can make alternative education choices prohibitive to parents who are on the lower end of the economic ladder. Citizens for Educational Freedom believes that parents, regardless of income, should decide where their children will attend school. Through programs that allow choice, all families will be treated equally, competition among schools will be fair, and the quality of education will improve for everyone.
Instead of perceiving children’s education to be the job of the schools, we need to see that it is the parent’s job to assure their children are educated and the schools exist to assist in that goal.
(Photo: Cynthia Davis is shown with Mae Duggan, founder of Citizens for Educational Freedom and Mrs. Duggan's husband, Martin.)
Randy, remember when you said this:
ReplyDelete“It is easy to extol the virtues of private schools when those schools are able to cherrypick their students. Take Thomas Jefferson Independent Day School as an example. That school has no interest in vouchers and for good reason. It is able to attract the children of doctors, lawyers, and businessmen who are looking to put their children in the most exclusive schools. Of course, those kinds of parents, parents who challenge their children to reach their full potential, are also going to be providing them with help at home. They probably work with their children on their homework or are able to hire tutors for them. They have subscriptions to newspapers and magazines and have bookcases jammed full of reading material. They provide a positive example for their children that a proper education pays off.”
Sounds totally different from what Davis said doesn’t it.
I have a step-daughter that is being home schooled by her mother and she has gone so far backwards that it's not even funny! She used to be so smart and now she doesn't know anything! Nobody to regulate it either. We've tried! She also wants to go back to public school but her mom says no!
ReplyDeleteThere are some parents that are great at schooling their children and I commend them for that! But our situation is just horrible and there's nothing we can do about it!
There are so many parents that say they homeschool and the kids do not even have books to study. I personally investigated many of these situations and it is the kids who miss out. Parents keep them home for so many reasons, to help around the house, they don't want to go, they don't want them around those other kids, etc. I sure hope she doesn't plan to give these parents money for their kids education.
ReplyDeleteI attended Catholic School for free back in the fiftys, I'm doing a lot better than most who attended PUBLK SKOOL!
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