View source for AFT School Vouchers index
From Critiques Of Libertarianism
Jump to:
navigation
,
search
<!-- you can have any number of categories here --> [[Category:American Federation Of Teachers]] [[Category:Vouchers]] <!-- 1 URL must be followed by >= 0 Other URL and Old URL and 1 End URL.--> {{URL | url = http://www.aft.org/issues/schoolchoice/vouchers/}} <!-- {{Other URL | url = }} --> <!-- {{Old URL | url = }} --> {{End URL}} {{DES | des = The American Federation Of Teachers has good summaries of the issues surrounding vouchers. | show=}} <!-- insert wiki page text here --> <!-- DPL has problems with categories that have a single quote in them. Use these explicit workarounds. --> <!-- otherwise, we would use {{Links}} and {{Quotes}} --> {{List|title=AFT School Vouchers index|links=true}} {{Quotations|title=AFT School Vouchers index|quotes=true}} {{Text | Since the early 1990s, school vouchers and other schemes have used taxpayers’ money to pay for all or part of the costs of tuition to private schools. Despite some supporters’ claims, research shows that vouchers don’t improve outcomes for kids who receive them or drive improvements in nearby neighborhood schools. Vouchers divert funding from schools that serve the vast majority of students. They also become a distraction from the more serious discussions we need to have about school policies and practices that actually work. When politicians push vouchers, less attention is paid to reducing class sizes, offering high-quality early childhood education, improving curriculum, supporting teachers, engaging parents, and building community support—all of which, evidence shows, can help students and schools. Although much of the pro-voucher rhetoric uses the word “choice,” in practice it is the private schools that choose the kids, not the other way around. In areas where voucher programs exist, private school operators decide whether they want taxpayers to subsidize their schools. They also decide how many, if any, voucher students they will admit. Vouchers are unpopular with the public, having been rejected—resoundingly and repeatedly—when they are on the ballot. To deceive the public, proponents have created “stealth voucher” programs with more appealing names, such as tuition tax credits or opportunity scholarships. But the outcome is the same—public money subsidizing private school tuition, less accountability for taxpayers’ dollars, a false hope for a handful of kids, and fewer resources for school reforms that actually work. }}
Template:DES
(
view source
)
Template:End URL
(
view source
)
Template:Extension DPL
(
view source
)
Template:List
(
view source
)
Template:Quotations
(
view source
)
Template:Red
(
view source
)
Template:Text
(
view source
)
Template:URL
(
view source
)
Return to
AFT School Vouchers index
.
Navigation menu
Views
Page
Discussion
View source
History
Personal tools
3.145.6.249
Talk for this IP address
Log in
Search
Search For Page Title
in Wikipedia
with Google
Translate This Page
Google Translate
Navigation
Main Page (fast)
Main Page (long)
Blog
Original Critiques site
What's new
Current events
Recent changes
Bibliography
List of all indexes
All indexed pages
All unindexed pages
All external links
Random page
Under Construction
To Be Added
Site Information
About This Site
About The Author
How You Can Help
Support us at Patreon!
Site Features
Site Status
Credits
Notes
Help
Toolbox
What links here
Related changes
Special pages
Page information
Guidelines To Create
Indexable Page/Quote
Indexable Book/Quote
Indexable Quote
Unindexed
Templates
Edit Sidebar
Purge cache this page