Tag Archives: schools

Well Gollllllyyyyyy!

It’s like beating my head against a wall……repeatedly.

The Deseret News finally published what I and thousands of others have been saying all along:

Voucher funds limited:$3,000 could cover less than half of typical tuition

At least this finally came out before the elections.

Continue reading

School Vouchers, Continued

In this month’s CATALYST Magazine  John deJong addresses school vouchers in his monthly column:

What’s wrong with vouchers?

Well, everything.

If you like the idea of your gas money going to Saudi Arabia to support radical Moslem madrasas, you’ll love the idea of your education tax dollars going to support exclusive prep schools and Mormon madrasas. That’s not what school voucher proponents would like you to think, but that’s what will happen if Utah’s voucher law passes in November’s election.

Voucher proponents would like you to think the bill is designed to give students from economically disadvantaged homes a chance at a better education. If Utah’s voucher bill were really intended to help poor children get a better education, the cap would have been $8,000 for low-income families and nothing for families with income over $100,000. As it is, vouchers start at $3,000 and dwindle to $500 per student for families with an annual income of $200,000.

It’s possible that the bill’s sponsors really think you can get a good education for $3,000 a year. No one’s really tried the ultimate stack ’em-deep and teach ’em-cheap method for the bargain basement price of $3,000. Some private schools (mostly religious) claim to be in that ball park, but they undoubtedly make up some of the difference with religious donations.

The real problem with the voucher bill is the way it spends taxpayer money without any accountability requirements. There are no performance audit requirements for the private schools, so let the buyer beware and damn the tax payer. There are no financial reporting requirements. The unseen hand of the marketplace will insure that the worst schools will fail; but not until they’ve taken our money.

Private schools do not have to meet the state core curriculum requirements. So throw out all those history and math textbooks and bring on the “Teachings of Rulon Allred” and start building the curriculum for Polygamy 101 through Blood Atonement 689. You think I’m kidding? Only a little. These schools do not have to meet school accreditation requirements. Say hello to school libraries that could make the federal prison approved reading list look like the Library of Alexandria. The private schools do not have to adhere to teacher training or licensing requirements. If you’ve got a license to drive you’ve got a license to teach.

Public education is burdened with a blizzard of performance and financial requirements at both the state and federal levels. Voucher funds, on the other hand would have no such burdens. “Not to worry,” they say, because the magic of the marketplace will take care of that. Schools that don’t measure up-to what?-will fail. But how many millions of dollars and how many student years of schooling will be wasted?

Proponents of vouchers claim that public schools will actually end up with additional funds because only a portion of the funds currently allocated to each student would go with the student to a private school. The knife twist in that statement is “currently.” The legislature could change that next year.

What voucher proponents really want is social capitalism, a system where every social policy is calculated to maximize the return on investment. They’re already doing it with the environment, where the benefits of every regulation (lives saved or improved) are weighed (at cents on the dollar) against the costs of compliance to polluting corporations. And you know who’s been coming out on the short end of that stick. By that criteria, it is wisest to invest in the front runners. In the case of the social rat race that just happens to be the children of the already well-to-do.


VOTE NO ON SCHOOL VOUCHERS

Vouchers, continued – paper subtly gives its position

Today’s Deseret News has published a piece on how Utah Governor Jon Huntsman is going to vote on vouchers.  Now why in the world would the paper publish this?  It wouldn’t’ have anything at all to do with the Newspaper Agency Corporation owners’ position on the issue, now would it?

VOTE NO ON SCHOOL VOUCHERS

Utah Voters: Vote NO on school voucher bill

Speaking of tax cuts, conservative groups in Utah are urging voters to support a school voucher bill in this year’s elections – a bill that would benefit mostly the wealthy who want to use public monies for private schools.  Excerpts from an article on today’s Deseret News:

Taxpayers Association backs vouchers

Utah residents can avoid huge property and income tax increases over the next 15 years if voters approve the private school voucher program, according to a report commissioned by the Utah Taxpayers Association.

Critics of the proposed voucher plan, however, say the report commissioned by the Taxpayers Association is biased and wrong. If anything, they say, Referendum 1 will lead to increased taxes.

If approved by voters on Nov. 6, the voucher program would provide families with a private-school tuition voucher, ranging from $500 to $3,000 per student, based on parents’ income. It also would appropriate $9.2 million for mitigation money to ease the impact on public schools for five years after students leave and go to private schools.

Yes, and if a chld of a poor working class family wants to take advantage of that, they can’t because $3,000 doesn’t even touch the cost of tuition for private schools.

According to the Taxpayers Association report, Utah’s public school enrollment will have grown by more than 150,000 students by 2016. The past decade saw growth of about 50,000 students.

The outcry this year over increasing property taxes will pale in comparison to the outcry that will erupt when taxes double to fund an influx of students into public schools over the next 15 years, said association vice president Royce Van Tassell.

Then stop having children for crying out loud!

The association’s sister organization, the Utah Taxpayers Foundation, commissioned the study by Aspire Consulting this year to analyze and project student enrollment through 2022.

It may not be a surprise to see the Taxpayers Association come out in favor of vouchers. The association’s president is Utah Sen. Howard Stephenson, R-Draper, who voted for the law and co-chairs the Legislature’s Joint Public Education Appropriations Subcommittee.

Van Tassell is the former spokesman for Parents for Choice in Education, a pro-voucher group.

Of course there are private interests at stake here……
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“Taxpayers have a choice: vouchers or massive tax increases,” Van Tassell said in a news release. “There are just no other ways to pay for the tidal wave of children that are already entering Utah’s public schools.” –>

But voucher critics say the report is wrong. “Their base assumption is wrong,” said Lisa Johnson, spokeswoman for Utahns for Public Schools. “Utah does not spend $7,500 for every student.”

She said some students cost more, some less, but according to state and federal sources, the 2006 per-pupil expenditure in Utah was $5,397.

“The Utah Taxpayers Association is a part of the pro-voucher campaign,” Johnson said. “If voters want unbiased information, they should refer to the voter’s guide that plainly states vouchers will cost Utah hundreds of millions of dollars — claiming that vouchers will ease the enrollment burden is ludicrous.”

According to figures from the legislative fiscal analyst, districts could save anywhere from $95 million to $265 million over 13 years with the voucher program — but it would cost the state around $429 million.

Well there ya go.  The rest of the picture.

Voucher opponents agree with the report’s enrollment projections.

But the legislative fiscal analyst estimates that only 2 percent of students would switch from public schools to voucher schools. That would translate to around 12,000 students.

Critics also said the Taxpayers Association report is wrong in claiming that public schools will receive funds for voucher students for the foreseeable future.

“In five years, those funds disappear and will cut into public school funds just as more and more students are entering public schools,” Johnson said. “Voters should read the fine print — the five-year cap on assistance for public schools included in the referendum may lead to increased taxes.”

This is but one piece of the larger picture in this country to privatize EVERYTHING. 


VOTE NO ON SCHOOL VOUCHERS

The School Voucher Saga

Today I received the announcement below about a pro-school voucher rally called, “Stand Up for  Utah Kids:  School Choice Rally”.  I’m not sure how I got on this list, nonetheless I am and got the announcement.  The state legislators passed a measure this year that would allow parents to obtain vouchers for private schools if they so choose.  Keep in mind that many of those legislators have children who are home schooled (leaving me wondering if a bill in the future will propose that parents be paid to home school their kids…..).

There is a lot that bothers me about this announement, but right off the bat you can see that this rally is in the middle of the day.  It seems that the only folks who might be able to afford to  participate would be those who are bosses and those who don’t have to work, thus reinforcing in my mind that the people who are being most vocal about this are those who can already afford to send their kids to private schools in the first place. (And remember that even if a parent wanted a voucher, it wouldn’t be enough to pay for an entire year’s tuition at a private school, leaving families with low incomes out of the loop entirely). 

Another bothersome point is that these people are actually encouraging folks to take their kids out of school to attend this rally.  That is assuming that the participants even have their children in school (vs. home schooling them).

——————————————————————————–

PLEASE FORWARD THIS TO YOUR FRIENDS & FAMILY

Stand Up for Utah Kids
School Choice Rally

JOIN US in support of Utah moms and dads who want to be able to choose the school that works best for their kids. Together, we can make a difference for the thousands of families who are depending on the voucher program to start THIS fall.

WHEN: Tuesday, May 15, 2007
TIME: 1:30 – 2:30 PM
WHERE: State Capitol, Salt Lake City

(courtyard north of the main capitol building)

 

It’s time to put KIDS before politics
By law, Utah’s new voucher program went into effect last Monday. Unfortunately, the State School Board chose to disregard the law at their recent board meeting by deciding to not implement the voucher program for this fall. We’re holding the rally on May 15th because that is the day by law that the State School Board should make voucher applications available for families.

As many of you know, the referendum/petition against vouchers is only against the first of two bills that were passed during the recent legislative session. The Attorney General issued an official opinion stating that the voucher program should move forward regardless of the referendum.

Please make this rally a priority
Together, our voices will put a human face to this important issue and pressure government officials to uphold the law by implementing the voucher program.

HOW YOU CAN HELP

1. Attend the Rally
Take a late lunch. Bring your whole family and your neighbors, too

2. Spread the Word
Email this to everyone you know or Print this flyer and post it in your community

3. Volunteer at the Rally
Call us at 532-1448 or reply to this email if you’d like to help.

If you will be attending the rally, please let us know so that we can plan appropriately. Just call (801) 532-1448 or reply to this email.

REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED.

_______________________________

Parents for Choice in Education
8 East Broadway, Ste 730
Salt Lake City, UT 84111

801.532.1448
www.choiceineducation.org

I looked at the very fancy website that the advocates of school vouchers have put together (see above link).  I believe this organization (Parents for Choice in Education) are advocated by/linked to Utah’s Eagle Forum, a right wing organization touting support of  “family values” and “conservative principles”.

The PEC site also has a page on “supporters of choice in education”.  Get this list:

Gov. Jon Huntsman, Ronald Reagan, Chester Finn Jr. (Assistant Secretary of Education under Ronald Reagan), Senator John McCain, Mitt Romney, Rudy Giuliani, Newt Gingrich,  Rep. Rob Bishop,  Utah Sen. Howard Stephenson, Richard Moss (Utah State School Board), Bill Colbert (Utah State School Board)

Notice that the above mentioned “supporters of school choice” are all rich, and some dead, white guys.

‘Nuff said.

My school in the news today

Healthier lunches from the ground up:  City Academy students operate their own garden and food store

By Tiffany Erickson
Deseret Morning News

      Before this year, healthy eating didn’t mean much to Melissa Powell, a junior at City Academy in Salt Lake City.

Porter England, left, and Garrett Atkinson decide on lunch. (Michael Brandy, Deseret Morning News)

Michael Brandy, Deseret Morning News
Porter England, left, and Garrett Atkinson decide on lunch.

      She ate where it was convenient — the nearby McDonald’s or chips and soda from the gas station.
      But now you will find her eating sushi made with organic vegetables, fresh fruit smoothies and other healthy items available to students at the school through a student-run lunch “store” dubbed City Academy Creations.
      Schools all over the nation are making efforts to become healthier through vending choices and healthy breakfast and lunch options. And when City Academy, a charter school, moved to its new building downtown, it chose to ditch the vending machines altogether and provide its own healthy affordable goods.
      The school recently received a $1,350 Community Garden Grant from the state health department to establish what the school calls a “full circle garden” that will contribute to the school’s store.
      Spearheaded by Shea Wickelson, the school’s food science teacher, the garden is run by students who cultivate tomatoes, cucumbers, carrots and strawberries to sell in the school store for lunch.
      And the students are the chefs, farmers and marketers — hence the name “full circle.”
     

Aside from serving and selling the vegetables fresh, students at the school take cooking into their own hands. Each week students from the food science class, who all have their food handler permits, whip up a batch of hummus and create hummus platters with pita chips. They also make fresh smoothies, served alongside sushi rolls made daily.
      When the store first opened, it sold out. Since then, about 20 to 30 students visit the store at lunchtime each day.
      “Not all kids really understand the importance of healthy eating, but they get lunch from the store because it’s right there, it’s good and it’s affordable,” said Nirvana Huntington, a junior at the school who also helped create the store.

Tomato seeds are planted during a food science class at City Academy in Salt Lake City. (Michael Brandy, Deseret Morning News)

Michael Brandy, Deseret Morning News
Tomato seeds are planted during a food science class at City Academy in Salt Lake City.

      Wickelson said the key to success is price and convenience. A sushi roll goes for a mere $1.50, and a fruit smoothie is only a buck. The store also sells things like squash and lentil soup, fresh fruits and apple pie. What students don’t grow themselves, they buy with the proceeds.
      “It’s so much fun to be in (the kitchen) and working,” said Toni Albam, a seventh-grader. “It gives you some responsibility and job experience — it’s pretty cool.”
      “I just think it’s a really great opportunity to have kids think about where food is coming from — to think about what’s in their food and be on another side of those choices and have them be faced with that sort of decisionmaking,” Wickelson said.
      Students also have learned how to run cost analyses, nutritional analyses and create food business models. The students decide what to sell, what to charge and how much profit they make — which also covers supplies needed for the food science classes.
      “For me it’s about the kids doing authentic work — where they learn not just about something but by actually doing something — it is deeper kind of learning,” Wickelson said.


E-mail: terickson@desnews.com