Author
Sam Chaltain writes an insightful analysis in anticipation of tonight’s State
of the Union address by President Trump. We reproduce it here for our readers. Readers can read a previously published
article by the author in our Volume 3
issue of the Journal of Educational Controversy, entitled, Ways of Seeing (and of Being Seen): Visibility in Schools.
Feb. 4, 2020
In his State of the Union address tonight, President
Trump will renew a call for tax breaks in order to provide more scholarships
for students to attend private schools.
The Education Freedom Scholarships would provide up to $5
billion in federal tax credits to individuals and businesses who donate to
scholarships for families to use at private, faith-based schools or to fund
homeschooling. “For decades,” Trump explained, “countless children have been
trapped in failing government schools. We believe that every parent should have
educational freedom for their children.”
To which I say, buyer: beware.
And: it’s complicated.
As a resident of Washington, D.C., site of one of the
country’s most ambitious school voucher plans to date, and a city in which half
of the city’s students attend public charter schools, I feel like I’ve seen
this movie before. And, for what it’s worth, I even support school choice. I
helped launch a charter school here. My sons attend another one, and the city
is beginning to see some real collaboration between its charter schools and the
district. Good things are happening.
At the same time, I worry about what could happen if too
many of us simply assume that the invisible hand of the modern school marketplace
— or, worse still, the incentivizing hand of the federal official — is a
sufficient strategy for ensuring that all children receive equal access to a
high-quality public education.
One sees, for example, the horror stories from Michigan —
aka Ms. DeVos’s former laboratory — where four out of five charter schools are
run by for-profit entities (read that again).
One sees the sizable discrepancy between the expulsion rates of charter and
district schools in D.C. and elsewhere. And so one should take seriously the
warnings of scholars like Harvard’s Michael Sandel, who urges us to think much
more carefully about the role market-based thinking should have — scratch that,
does have — in our lives.
“Markets don’t just allocate goods,” Sandel writes in What Money Can’t Buy: The
Moral Limits of Markets. “They also express and promote
certain attitudes towards the goods being exchanged.” And what has occurred
over the past thirty years is that without quite realizing it, we have shifted
from having a market economy to being a market society. “The
difference is this: A market economy is a tool — a valuable and effective tool
— for organizing productive activity. A market society is a way of life in
which market values seep into every aspect of human endeavor. It’s a place where
social relations are made over in the image of the market.”
Anyone who has closely followed the sturm und drang
of American school reform over the past decade has seen evidence of what Sandel
is describing. Our growing reliance on — and resistance to — data-driven
decision-making is a direct result of an ascendant technocratic
faith in applying scientific rigor to the previously opaque art
of teaching and learning. Economist Gary Becker sums up this thinking well when
he asserts: “The economic approach is a comprehensive one that is applicable to
all human behavior, be it behavior involving money prices or imputed shadow
prices, repeated or infrequent decisions, large or minor decisions, emotional
or mechanical ends, rich or poor persons, men or women, adults or children,
brilliant or stupid persons, patients or therapists, businessmen or
politicians, teachers or students.”
That’s a mouthful, and it captures the sea change Sandel
wants us to see. Whereas in the not-too-distant past, economic thinking was
restricted to economic topics — inflation, investment, trade — today it is
being used to outline a new science of human behavior: one that assumes modern
society will work best when human beings are allowed to weigh the costs and
benefits of all things (including where to send their children to school), and
then choose whatever they believe will yield the greatest personal benefit.
The part of me that agrees with that logic is the part
that supports the basic idea of school choice. After all, we have tolerated a
system of unequal opportunity in this country for too long, and there’s real
merit in the argument that one’s zip code should not
become one’s destiny. School choice in cities like mine gives
everyone the same chance at a high-quality education, and empowers each family
to set its own “shadow prices” — the imaginary values that are implicit in the
alternatives we face and the choices we make — and then make their own
decisions about where to send their children to school. As the rally cry goes,
MY CHILD, MY CHOICE.
Who could argue with that?
Certainly not Texas Senator Ted Cruz, one of the
legislative sponsors for the new plan. “Competition improves,” he asserted.
“And in this case, injecting new money to give that freedom, to give that
competition, to give that power of choice, will enhance the quality of
education to kids all across the country.”
But here’s where it gets complicated.
In the end, should we define public education as a public
good, or a private commodity? Will our efforts to unleash self-interest (which
is, after all, what the economist seeks to economize) strengthen or weaken the
connective tissue of our civic life? And will the current trajectory of the
school choice movement unleash a virtuous cycle of reforms that improves all
schools, or merely add another layer in our historic apartheid system of schooling?
On these questions and others, I agree with former
Chinese premier Zhou Enlai, who, when asked by reporters in 1971 to offer his
assessment of the impact of the French Revolution of 1789, said: “It is still
too soon to say.” But I also agree with British sociologist Richard Titmuss,
who argued that “the ways in which society organizes and structures its social
institutions can encourage or discourage the altruistic in man, foster
integration or alienation,” and strengthen or “erode the sense of community.”
President Trump’s myriad other amoral tendencies
notwithstanding, our changing notion of community should be the central concern
of anyone who cares about school choice. How can greater choice bring us closer
to each other, and to a revitalized notion of civic virtue and egalitarianism?
How can we ensure that school choice does not contribute to an even wider
divide between the haves and the have-nots, and an even wider discrepancy
between those who know how to negotiate the increasingly commodified assets of
modern life, and those who are merely left to take whatever comes their way?
And how can school choice reflect this basic truth about democracy — that while
it does not require perfect equality, it does require that citizens share in a
common life, one that is grounded as much in the “we” as the “me”?
These are the questions we must explicitly ask — and
answer — if we want school choice to become a force for good. And we can’t do
that without explicitly debating the extent to which market-based thinking can
get us there. As Michael Sandel reminds us, “when market reasoning is applied
to [an issue like] education, it’s less plausible to assume that everyone’s
preferences are equally worthwhile.
“In morally charged arenas such as these, some ways of
valuing goods may be higher, more appropriate than others.”
Check out Sam Chaltain’s
four-part short film
series, Diverse by Design (produced in partnership with Pigeon Roost), that provides a different
picture of what school choice can (and must) resemble.
Permission granted to reprint.
Permission granted to reprint.
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