School Choice Is Winning in Arizona—and Beyond
"There's a new special interest group in town: parents."

Finally! Now more states will let parents use their tax money to educate their kids at a school they choose.
In Arizona, families can get $6,500 to spend on private school, tutoring, or even homeschooling.
The education establishment is horrified—especially teachers unions. They don't want competition.
But competition makes us all better. The Ford Model T was a breakthrough. But it's lousy compared to what we have today. That's because carmakers compete to make better cars.
But American education has barely changed since the days of Henry Ford. Kids still sit in a room, watching a teacher at a blackboard.
For my video this week, I debate a union leader.
He's David Walrod, president of the Fairfax, Virginia, chapter of the American Federation of Teachers. The AFT has been controlled by union boss Randi Weingarten for 14 years. I once provoking her by saying, "Unionized monopolies like yours fail!"
"We are not a unionized monopoly!" she replied. "Folks who want to say this…don't really care about kids."
Weingarten won't talk to me anymore, so I'm glad Walrod would.
"What's wrong with giving parents a choice?" I ask. After all, competition makes us try harder.
"If I compete directly against you, I have a vested interest in doing better than you," he said.
Isn't that good?
"Not in education," he replies. Parental choice would just "duplicate bureaucracy."
But his schools are already drowning in bureaucracy. They spend $16,505 per student! That's more than $300,000 per classroom. $300,000 would fund several good teachers, but the bureaucracy prevents that money from going to actual teaching.
"Any ideas you have for lowering bureaucracy—you're not gonna hear any disagreement from the teachers union," says Walrod.
But his union supports the complex rules that protect every teacher's job.
"Teachers that aren't up to snuff should be let go," says Walrod.
But the school's human resources handbook makes that nearly impossible. Fairfax schools spent more than $70,000 on lawyers trying to fire a teacher they considered incompetent. They failed.
Another reason some parents want to escape government-run schools is because during the pandemic, many stayed closed while private schools reopened.
"There are definitely valid arguments to say that some districts played it too cautious," Walrod admits, "but we were dealing with an ongoing health crisis…CDC guidelines."
I push back. "Seems like you were eager to embrace the CDC's message…so you didn't have to go to work!"
"Online teaching was harder than in-person teaching," Walrod responds. Really.
Attitudes like that are a reason 5,000 students left Fairfax public schools during the pandemic.
Another reason was: hard-left indoctrination.
Fairfax paid Ibram X. Kendi $20,000 for a one-hour Zoom presentation on racism.
Maybe Fairfax parents want their tax money spent this way. But I bet not all do.
If parents want their kids to study critical race theory, wear masks, or learn that America constantly oppresses people, they should be able to choose a school that offers that.
But they should have a choice.
Choice would allow families to "take their children to institutions that best align with their values," says education researcher Corey DeAngelis.
Walrod had told me, "Public schools have consistently outperformed charter schools."
When I asked for evidence, he said, "Look in educational policy journals."
Some studies have found that school choice hasn't raised test scores.
That's "cherry-picking the evidence," says DeAngelis. Most studies found test score gains.
Additionally, "Public schools actually upped their game in response to competition."
That was an unexpected benefit.
After school choice was allowed in Washington, D.C., both charter and public schools improved. That's a win for kids and taxpayers.
"Government-run schools spend over $30,000 per year [per student] in D.C. The voucher's only about a third of that," says DeAngelis.
There aren't many reforms that bring results like that.
"For a long time…the only special interest group was the teachers unions," says DeAngelis. "Now there's a new special interest group in town: parents."
COPYRIGHT 2022 BY JFS PRODUCTIONS INC.
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Lose the beard, brah. Makes you look unwashed, not manly.
2nd.
One step at a time...if he keeps going, he might become worthy of a Lysander Spooner beard.
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Letterman beat him to it.
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LOLOL i was literally about to comment about i wish he would shave and LOLOL thanks for making my day
For real tho, John Stossel 2024
He looks like he trimmed his pubes and glued them to his face. Not a good look.
Cut him some slack. He looks pretty good for being 75.
"Fairfax paid Ibram X. Kendi $20,000 for a one-hour Zoom presentation on racism."
Well I guess nobody knows racism like an avowed racist.
When you need instruction on hating white people, call in the experts.
Surprised Tim Wise and Saira Rao weren't included as special guests.
That would have cut into Kendi’s fee. And no one is greedier than a Marxist.
School choice is a dog whistle for Trumpism.
Well he DID send out a lot of tweets...
Mmmm i suppose to some extent, you're probably right. But that's just because Trumpism is an incoherent philosophical amalgam; it doesnt actually have any substance in and of itself.
However, it is very possible that the merits of "school choice" are credible, and that public schooling (particularly in densely populated areas) is inefficient and broken... also just because "Trumpism" endorses a particular brand of "school choice" doesn't mean that "school choice" doesn't work.
A specific kind of "School choice" being a Trumpism ideal is NOT mutually inclusive with "School choice" being inferior to standardized public schooling. It does not necessarily follow.
Trumpism is a cult of personality. Has nothing to do with any coherent philosophy other than what's good for Trump.
Indeed
WTF are you talking about? Milton Friedman was talking about school choice all the way back in 1962.
He's being sarcastic.
"There's a new special interest group in town: parents."
No John, those are domestic home grown TERRORISTS!
They show up and ask questions? My God, call the FBI!!!!
Who is that masked man?
Arizona is getting pretty anarchic when it comes to the school choice game, mostly driven by the Phoenix metro, where abut 70% of the state's population lives. SI had an article just this week talking about how its extremely liberal transfer rules basically made PUSD a farm system for the big football programs in the East Valley.
They have had open enrollment for a few years, even for the pure public schools. Let HS compete for players using the rules if it allows parents to choose where their kids go to school. Not a big deal at all.
It was like that in Colorado as well, at least for a little bit. The rules tightened up a bit after some instances of players trying to transfer in the middle of, or right before the season. You don't see players trying to "championship shop" or build super-teams quite as much now as it was in the late 90s-late 2000s.
Had a confusing conversation with this progressive woman about school choice. She was all for it because she thought it meant letting school nurses provide abortions without the parents' knowledge. When she figured out I meant parents having a say in where their kids go to school she went ballistic.
Wow, she had not even heard of school choice. Wow.
The word "choice" is a synonym for "abortion." So school choice must mean abortions in school.
Lol did this really happen or are you just being sarcasmic?
I'm serious. It was a real conversation in the comments on a local newspaper. She was totally on board with school choice when she thought it meant abortions, and freaked out when I said parents should have a right to decide the fate of their children. Called me a nazi and worse. This was a while back. 2005ish.
Haaaahahaha that made my day, dude, thank you lolol
+1 OBL.
An ex-girlfriend was just finishing up an education major when we were dating. One of the (minor) reasons we broke up was her self-righteous stance on the evils of school choice.
You’ve used that one before.
Always cracks me up when progressives talk so much about evil corporate monopolies, but the biggest monopolies in our country are government run systems; such as schools. Monopolies are bad for competition and hurt the customers.
What about the government monopoly on schools? Wouldn't competition help?
Why do you hate children! You monster!!!
Lol did this really happen or are you just being sarcasmic?
Parents Are Winning in Arizona—and Beyond
Kids Are Winning in Arizona—and Beyond
Learning is Winning in Arizona—and Beyond
Social Justice Warriors Are Losing in Arizona—and Beyond
Groomer Are Losing in Arizona—and Beyond
Pedophiles Are Losing in Arizona—and Beyond
Woke Teachers Are Losing in Arizona—and Beyond
Indoctrination is Losing in Arizona—and Beyond
The Biden Administration is Losing in Arizona—and Beyond
Public School Teachers: Nationally, more than 20% of public school teachers with school-age children enroll them in private schools, or almost twice the 11% rate for the general public.
Parents have been a special-interest group for a long time, and so-called school choice only exacerbates this tendency.
“I want my kid to have (football, girl’s wrestling, junior-high badminton, jazz ensemble, choir, drama, younameit), and I want the taxpayer to finance it.” For every parent who wants little Bobby to get into a school with a high-powered STEM program, there’re probably a dozen who want to enroll him in a school with a domed football stadium.
Let’s make “school choice” a real thing, and not a slogan, by requiring public schools to charge income-based tuition. Like vouchers, that will tend to level the playing field for private vs. public schools. Unlike vouchers, it won’t represent a huge transfer of taxpayer funds to a special-interest group that wants lots of expensive goodies with little or no educational value.
As long as taxpayer money continues to go directly to public schools, the current vouchers idea is a good step forward.
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