DC has a voucher program. It has nothing to do with hate .. you are just lacking basic knowledge. |
Let’s say 15k. Show me where those fifteen thousand private school seats are in DC. Go ahead. |
Catholic schools are about $10-15k for k-8, and $20-25k for high school. |
No, fifteen thousand private school places, not tuition. And that’s not even counting the over 40k students in DCPCS schools. |
There’s no market for it yet, but it’s conceivable that with vouchers, new private schools will serve the students some likely employing teachers and administrators from existing public schools. |
I heard that’s what got him elected to the vice-presid…Oh, wait… |
Would these new schools be for profit? |
Which kids get to attend? |
The new schools would of course be non-profit, just like the private ones today. Kids that would go to public, will now have the option to attend these schools if they choose so. |
This. Vouchers are economically the same thing as student loans + guaranteed loan forgiveness, with the same effect: spiraling tuition. |
Yes, likely increased tuition for the top private school, but there are some limits on income for the TX voucher program, $160k per family. I don’t think the $10k catholic schools will be 20k because of the voucher, because then you’ll have cheaper schools serve the families that can’t afford to pay above the voucher amount. |
Which kids get to go to which schools? Who decides? Will there be enough voucher money for every child in DC? Nearly 100,000 students? |
In the TX system, a family has to make under $160k to qualify? |
Why wouldn’t a $10k school raise tuition to $20k ? |
You seem very uninformed about the Texas voucher law. Maybe read up for 5 mins before commenting. Schools may or may not raise the tuition it depends what students and families they want to attract. If the increase in tuition goes into better paid teachers or smaller classes, that is not necessarily a bad thing. |