| Defund pubic schools and give out vouchers |
I’m not sure about vouchers but I’d be totally ok with support directly to Catholics schools, since they have already demonstrated they can educate kids well at affordable tuition levels. |
Vouchers are not going to happen, but if it makes you guys feel empowered to keep repeating this tired, empty mantra, have at it, I guess. |
Actually no, often they don't during civil war or pandemics. |
Those kids are enduring those things regardless of covid so stop picking on them to preach your morality when for all these years you have been part of the problem, not solution. If anything there are more supports now in terms of housing and food than ever before. There are so many meal hand outs that no child should be going hungry. And, schools don't change the home life. |
14 states and DC already have private school voucher programs. Public support for vouchers will increase the longer public schools remain closed. |
Read up on history again. There's no precedent for blanket closing schools for a year+ in countries with functioning governments, regardless of whether you're looking at wars, pandemics, famines, or natural disasters. |
Okay. If you think they're going to fund enough vouchers for the 800,000 kids in this area - keep dreaming. A single year of grants for every child at $10,000 would be 8 billion dollars. That's more than the entire budgets of all the northern VA school districts and the D.C. schools budget combined. |
Most people can do the math. Where do you think millions of kids are going to go with those vouchers? Every private and parochial school has wait lists a mile long without vouchers. |
They're not closed. Welcome to the 21st Century. And quite frankly - school actions during this pandemic will be cited for future cases and needs in the oncoming decades. Tele-school is here to stay. |
There aren't enough privates to even take all those kids. |
I agree it will be cited. But I don't think history will look kindly on the decision to keep school ls closed for so long. Much of the effects are not being measured right now because schools have dramatically decreased expectations, many students aren't participating, and special education programs are not meaningfully operating. |
Why would expect changes to occur overnight? |
+1, no schools are closed. They have changed how they teach and you no longer get child care. Schools at best are about 100-140 years old. And, many have closed and right now those open will continue to open/close with positives which will be much more disruptive than the stability we have now. |
Typo. Why would *you* expect changes to occur overnight? |