Cheating scandal prompts parents to want more educational options

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Guest Columnist

For far too many years, Georgia public schools have been teetering on the brink of disaster. Let's not forget Clayton County, which won national headlines when it became the first district in the country in 40 years to lose its national accreditation.

To add insult to injury, state auditors have revealed that as much as 10 percent of public elementary and middle schools administering the state's Criterion-Referenced Competency Test may have been involved in cheating.

Mix in a high dropout rate, and Georgia parents are continuing to ask this fundamental question: Are Georgia public schools really designed to help students or benefit the adults?

THE EVIDENCE points to an education bureaucracy that is more concerned about job protection than educating children.

Nothing speaks more to this conclusion than an unbelievable announcement recently that school districts would investigate their own cheating allegations. If school districts are granted the ability to police themselves and potentially put the protection of employees above the needs of students, then the fox truly is in charge of the henhouse.

With an independent investigation resulting in a true picture of CRCT results and verifiable cheating conclusions, parents and taxpayers would know which schools are failing children, and be able to hold them accountable.

Instead, this scandal and bogus follow-up probe adds to parent mistrust of the system and a growing desire for a one-way ticket out of schools that no longer work for their children.

In Georgia, home schooling is blossoming, and interest in charter schools is growing stronger by the day. Support for vouchers is also exploding, as evidenced by a statewide public opinion poll last year that showed 68 percent of voters supported vouchers for all students to attend the schools of their choice.

RECENT LEGISLATION also illustrates growing support for vouchers:

- Georgia's Special Need Scholarship Program. Enacted in 2007, this program offers state-funded vouchers to children with disabilities to transfer to the private school of their choice. During the 2008-09 school year, almost 1,600 students used the program with an average scholarship of $6,331. A survey by the Center for an Educated Georgia released last summer showed overwhelming parent satisfaction with the program.

- The Georgia Tuition Tax Credit Program. This $50 million program is the fastest-growing in the nation. It allows corporations, couples and individuals to take a tax credit on Georgia income taxes when they donate to one of Georgia's 26 student scholarship organizations. With more than $33 million in tax credits approved for 2009, taxpayers show they would rather provide scholarships to kids than write another check to the government.

- Vouchers for military families. The Georgia Senate is debating a popular proposal called the Early Hope Scholarship Program which would give scholarships ranging from $5,000 to $9,000 to children of military families and foster children to attend the public or private school of their choice. Military and foster children can get behind in their studies due to frequent moves or when a parent is out of the country. With 14 military installations in the state, including Fort Gordon near Augusta, there is much support for aiding these families.

There likely are many well-intentioned educators in public schools that want to get to the bottom of this scandal, but they will never regain public confidence in their mission if they seek to audit themselves. No one believes that Wall Street banks should audit themselves. It shouldn't be any different for our schools.

IN THE END, parents will see through the charade of self-auditing. They are tired of the same old song and dance. Parents will no longer tolerate a system that defends mediocrity and fails our children.

Adults have a responsibility to set an example for children, and to show them how to behave with integrity. If public schools won't look parents in the eye and give them the truth, then we should give parents the freedom to move their children to a school that will, whether that school is public or private. Let them use their own tax dollars to educate their precious children by any means possible.

(The writer is president and CEO of the Foundation for Educational Choice -- the legacy foundation of Milton and Rose Friedman, founders of the school choice movement.)

Comments (6)

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corgimom
43
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corgimom 02/24/10 - 06:50 am
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Or, the state could get rid

Or, the state could get rid of those terrible standardized tests that only measure what a child answered on that particular day.

1941
0
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1941 02/24/10 - 07:00 am
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I can not understand, how

I can not understand, how parents can blame every one else for their childrens lack of learning. What happened to helping your children with their homework, taking them to the library etc..They want someone else to raise their children, while they sit on their behind and complain, but they want government out of their buisness!!! They need to make up their minds!!!! If they think the school's are not teaching, their lazy brats, then take them out and home school them!!!!

Dixieman
40
Points
Dixieman 02/24/10 - 07:23 am
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Government schools = child

Government schools = child abuse. Beg, borrow, take a second job, etc. to get your children into a private school.

orgpsych
0
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orgpsych 02/24/10 - 10:05 am
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Studies have shown repeatedly

Studies have shown repeatedly that a good student in a bad school will generally outdo a bad student in a good school. The good student gets that from a combination of heredity and a solid upbringing. Between the two I think the solid upbringing is the more important. Kids who aren't "geniuses" canbe motivated to work hard and "get it." That means parental involvement.

That said, No Child Left behind tried to take a sound principle of accountability and misapplied it so that teachers now fear for their jobs. Add the increasing number of students who were being failed and they were overworked something awful. Unfortunately, NCLB just passed those problems on to the next grade/class. The easiest way out is to teach the test. Integrity is important but pressure over time will erode that.

I have met several people who were teachers and just couldn't handle the situation with the students any more. It wasn't the numbers as much as it was the lack of "gratitude." One teacher tried to reward students for hard work and was laughed at because the reward wasn't more expensive. That reflects on the parents, not the teachers.

If we want quality educators it has to be worth their while. That has to start at home. Private schools may be an option for those with the resources to afford it, but it's not the answer for our society as a whole. People bandy the term "class war" around as a political hot potato. If we don't fix this system we are just setting the stage for that situation to exist.

Dixieman
40
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Dixieman 02/24/10 - 10:26 am
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I would support gov schools

I would support gov schools ONLY if they were in a full-blown unrestricted voucher program, enabling parents to vote with their feet and yank their kids out of underperforming schools.

johnston.cliff
1
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johnston.cliff 02/24/10 - 07:01 pm
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What? Government schools are

What? Government schools are a scam? Who would have guessed. And just because they're run by the union mentality, you'd think they'd be honorable institutions. I wonder why the teacher unions are spending every penny possible to stop parents from getting school vouchers. The wealthy can afford to buy their children an education while paying the confiscatory (union) education tax. Get government out of the school operation business (agenda other than education) and allow ALL parents to choose the best school for their children (voucher). There will still be plenty of government fodder since many parents think the nanny state is a good thing. The only ones moving on to better education and life positions would be those who are offspring of people who believe in individualism and personal responsibility.

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