What Choice Won't Do
When it comes to the advocates of school choice, there are many points with which I disagree. I disagree with many of their assessments of the public school situation ("a dead end for which we spend more money than God and get results lower than dirt"). I disagree with many of their policy goals (why exactly should parents-- and no other taxpayers-- have a say about how tax dollars are spent).
These are disagreements about policy and systems that can be debated and argued (when people on both sides of the discussion are speaking in good faith). But what I find frustrating in the choice debates is the pro-choice arguments that simply aren't so.
There are some things that school choice simply won't do.
Choice Will Not Save Money
Multiple duplicate school systems must cost more than one single system. When businesses want to save money, they consolidate operations. They don't open more branches and raise their costs.
School Choice Will Not Unleash Competition That Will Spur Excellence
This will not (and has not) happen. For one thing, it's a zero-sum system in which losing means CURMUDGUCATION: What Choice Won't Do: