Adam Schaeffer and Chaim Katz | The best gift for kids is a better education


Another Christmas has come and gone, and the New Year is here with the resulting resolutions. Many of us use this time of year to reflect on the spirit of giving, especially in the midst of rising unemployment and uncertainty. Some people had less to give or perhaps nothing at all, or even relied on the giving of others, but many people continued with their charity despite their own increasing hardships.

However, as belts tighten all around, we should think hard about what gifts are the most powerful, which ones help those in need the most. No matter how well-intentioned, if a program of giving is indefinite and its outcome is not ultimately uplifting, it’s not charity. It’s welfare. Unlike charity, welfare victimizes its recipients. Since anyone can fall on hard times, charity is an essential component of a compassionate society. However, its purpose must be a hand up, not a hand out. In order to actually help people while strengthening their sense of dignity, the best gifts allow people to not rely on charity in the future. As gifts go, fishing lessons beat a salmon sandwich any day of the week.

It’s no accident that we say teaching a man to fish is more useful than giving a man a fish. When we teach, we prepare students to do things that they were unable to do before. Good teaching gives a student something which no one can take away. Good teaching improves a person permanently, not temporarily. Good teaching is the greatest gift of all.

When we think of teaching, we generally think of schoolchildren. Teaching in American schools ranges from outstanding to inadequate. Tragically, many kids in America simply don’t get taught much of anything in the educational system. Two facts tell the tale. First, three in ten secondary-school students will fail to graduate from high school, which means their lifetime earning prospects drop by an average of one-third or more. Second, only about one in three public-school eighth-graders in Virginia is “proficient” in reading and writing, according to the NAEP test, the “Nation’s Report Card.” And unfortunately, on top of the overall poor average performance of students, there’s also a large racial gap. African-Americans are two-to-three times more likely than white children to be “below basic” in math and reading.

Americans feel strongly that we owe all children a decent education and a fair shot at succeeding in life. However, that’s not what millions of children are getting. So how can we give children the one gift that we truly owe them?

To make our educational intentions and hopes a reality, we need a dollar-for-dollar school tax credit for middle-class parents along with scholarships funded by donation tax credits for low-income families.

Education tax credits reduce the amount a taxpayer owes the government for each dollar he spends on his own child’s education or on scholarships for children who need them. That money comes straight off anyone’s tax liability, so it’s essentially found money; you can either pay it to the government or use it for the kind of education you want to support. For instance, if you or a corporation owe the state $1,000 and donate $1,000 to a scholarship-granting organization, you would pay nothing in taxes. The same kind of benefits can be applied to individuals for their donations, or for money they spend on their own child’s education. Tax credits for donations to scholarship organizations help support school choice for lower-income families, and personal-use credits help middle-class families.

Our commitment to education for all is laudable, but the unquestioned support for the current government-run monopoly school system is badly misguided. Actually, it’s worse. Our support for a constantly failing system makes a mockery of our ideals. With millions of children in jeopardy, there is no time for tinkering with a broken system at its edges. Every child should have the right to exit a failing school and enter one that works for them — whether it’s public, independent, or religious.

Imprisoning children in poor schools robs them of a productive and fulfilling future. Poverty, unemployment, and crime ultimately increase when children fail to get a safe and effective education, characterized by discipline and rigor.

The gift of education isn’t just the best gift we can give to America’s children. It is one of the few that we truly owe them. And it’s one we can give without cost through school choice.

 

- Adam B. Schaeffer, Ph.D., is an adjunct senior fellow with the Education Reform Initiative at the Virginia Institute for Public Policy, and a policy analyst at the Cato Institute’s Center for Educational Freedom. Chaim Katz is a Ph.D. candidate in political science at the University of Virginia.

Print Friendly

Related posts:

  1. Adam Schaeffer | To improve education, let parents choose schools The school year is in full swing, and a lot less learning is taking place than one might anticipate. However, it’s not just the kids....
  2. Education: How many children left behind? The Top Story by Chris Graham freepress2@ntelos.net Twenty, twenty-five, close to thirty percent of students who start the ninth grade in the Shenandoah Valley aren’t...
  3. The future of higher education Column by Bob Goodlatte For many students and families, there is the promise of higher education. But for far too many others, the burden of...
  4. Adam Bessie: The Savage Nation Party? Column by Adam Bessie Reprint from OpEdNews.com Michael Savage, host of the controversial conservative talk show “The Savage Nation,” who claimed in his New York...
  5. A gift from the deep Story by Theresa Curry AGratefulSeason.com For years Greg Cole, professor at UCLA’s school of medicine and associate director of its Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center, has...

Comments

2 Responses to “Adam Schaeffer and Chaim Katz | The best gift for kids is a better education”
  1. Jody grogan says:

    I guess I’m wrong about AFP being a progressive voice in the region’s media. Why on earth are you running columns like this from Va’s right-wing think tank?

    Vouchers, tax credit schemes attack public education and are a wrong-headed approach to supporting and improving our free schools. The *real* agenda, I’m convinced, of this crowd is apply free market principles to everything, shrink government to the bare minimum, and let everybody fend for themselves. Forget about the notion of an educated electorate basic to our democracy: Just give us our tax money so we can support private (and profit-making) schools.

    Couching the argument in terms of helping poor children, etc., is a transparent and hypocritical argument to mask the real motives here.

  2. chrisgraham says:

    We like to challenge ourselves and our readers to think. And we like to think things through logically rather than emotionally.

    I’d be remiss if I didn’t say that my wife and I say often that when we have our one good kid, we’re going to send them to private school. Public schools today are struggling under the weight of the SOLs and No Child Left Behind to teach kids how to take tests. I want my child to be able to think for himself or herself.

    I also wonder about the kneejerk reaction of progressives to school choice as being a bad thing as a given because it’s conservatives who are pushing the idea. In an era when 75 percent of ninth-graders in public schools aren’t graduating four years later, perhaps it’s time that we think outside the box a bit in terms of crafting solutions to that core problem.

    And just for the record, I grew up in a single-parent-headed household that qualified for food stamps and free school lunches, and I’m now an honest lower-middle class small businessman trying to make ends meet in our difficult economy. And I’m a progressive who believes in gay civil rights and regulation of financial markets and economic development. And I’m wondering whether school choice as described above isn’t a good idea.

Speak Your Mind