But how is that a convincing argument? Wouldn't it be better to put those taxpayer dollars to a school that appeals to more parents, not less? People choosing a Hebrew/Amharic/Tagalog school out of "desperation" doesn't seem like it's the best use of taxpayer dollars. Actually, it's the families who can't afford private who are exactly the demographic for a private school-on-the cheap in the form of a charter. |
I agree that choosing a niche school out of desperation isn't the most efficient use of taxpayer dollars. But that ship sailed a long time ago--just ask the parent who wants Mundo Verde to celebrate American holidays, those who are making new plans because Inspired Teaching doesn't have a permanent home, and more. The place tasked with making centralized decisions regarding the city's educational needs and how to meet them is DCPS. Charters are laissez-faire chaos. I doubt that Congress, who we can thank for our charter system in the first place, will let us change the system to add a relevancy test for new charters. (And if they did, where would the Council draw the line?) |
I wonder if we're working with different definitions of "can't afford private." In my mind it's everyone whose in-bounds DCPS is unacceptable but who happens not to have $30k/child/year. We're the ones who take up OOB slots and flock to charters, including charters that are poor fits for us. Does your definition assume more privilege than that? |
That's totally consistent with my definition of "can't afford private." My definition also assumes a very wide range of parental educational levels. There are lots of 2-masters degrees families working in NGOs who can't afford private, and lots of well-educated lower-income families, and lots of families with lower educational levels, all of whom can't afford private but place a high value on getting a good education for their kids. |
| Then what's the problem with a "private-like" charter, assuming it complies with DC law & admits all comers? It seems like the pp was criticizing WashHebrew for aspiring to be such a school. (Or is my reading comprehension way off?) |
And if they don't get a suitable school, they'll pack up and move to MoCo, and take their tax base with them. If you want the middle and upper-middle class to stay in DC, you'd better give them a reason to. Pretty simple, really. |
State and Defense, duh. |