wcelliot wrote:
Agree with you completely on the first point and in principle on the second. It would indeed save money, but not a "huge" amount compared to the elephants in the room.
One step at a time. I'll take that.
wcelliot wrote:
Disagree. You can't separate the two. Like it or not, it's inherent in the system and is the major portion of the problem. It would like trying to separate out the costs of UAW labor when discussing how to lower the price and increase the quality of a new GM car. To substantially fix one, you must fix the other.
Okay. You say "disagree" but what you explain is "not practical". The way the system is currently set up, if I’m reading you right, you don’t think it’s possible to eliminate the cost of busing with public money to private schools. But we looked up some examples and found that in Georgia, for instance, and there are probably other places, they are able to do just that. So it can be separated if we chose to do it.
wcelliot wrote:
It's interesting that you think competition/choice within the bureaucracy will improve things (where we both agree), but allowing expanded choice is categorically rejected out of hand.
I think it might improve things. I think it's worth exploring. But, yes, I think government subsidy for private industry is going backward.
You called it "interesting". I agree it's an interesting point of view only in that it's so rare that anyone has consistent views on issues like this. I'm certainly more liberal than you, and most would associate "liberals" with support for government subsidy. I do not. Without debating the specifics (sometimes there are situations that force us to make calls we are ideologically opposed to) in general, I agree with people who say government bailouts are bad. Some may argue that in some cases we had little choice. That's neither here nor there. In this case we do have a choice. I chose no government bailout of private schools and I consider it a liberal position in the interest of "the people".
wcelliot wrote:
A lot of your suggestions are excellent for small, incremental improvements. But again: That you cannot _substantially_ change costs or system performance by protecting the bureaucracy and insulating the system from outside competition
I get your point and am not arguing semantics. It's just that the words you chose are so perfect for my point. You say "a lot" and "incremental improvements". Exactly what I'm saying. I called it the death of a thousand cuts earlier. That's exactly what I think has happened to public education. And if we're going to improve it we will have to make a lot of incremental improvements, which is exactly what I've been exploring in my line of thinking in this thread.
You can hold the position that it won't, ultimately, lead to significant improvement and you may be right in that assessment. But I would suggest that small changes are a lot more possible than a radical overhaul of the education system. And at the worst, it would save a little money. Why not move that direction? Maybe it doesn’t get us anywhere. But there’s no harm in it.
Again, I'll reference the health care bill because it fits so well. Moving to a system that I think you are advocating would mimic the health care bill in scope and approach. Take the public funds we’re spending on education now, and allow people to spend those funds on private education. I’m not sure if that’s an idea you’d like to see tried or not. But that’s the impression I get. Feel free to correct me. I think that kind of measure would be just as difficult or more difficult to pull off than the health care bill was. And just as neither side really likes what we came up with there, I don’t think either side would like that either. And just as there was a public outcry about tax dollars going toward private banking and auto companies, I think there would be public outcry about tax dollars going toward private education. Ironically, I just thing you’d have to move around the “R”s and the “D”s on the name supers, but could use the same sound bites. In the health care debate, the Republicans suggest that we should have made smaller, incremental changes. I doubt their sincerity in actually making those changes, but their proposed approach may be right. I just wonder why none of them did any of it when they had total control of Washington.
The figures in the articles I posted were hundreds of thousands of dollars. I bet that's a fair bit of money for many school districts. But save that ten times and it's some real money. Do it a hundred and it's a lot by any measure.