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Should school vouchers be allowed for parochial schools?

Results so far:

Yes
60% 259 votes Total: 430 votes
No
40% 171 votes

by pilgrimboy

Created on: December 10, 2007

Teachers, those who should be most adamant about improving the education system, lead the charge against vouchers (National Education Association, "Vouchers"). For the sake of religious freedom and failing inner-city schools, teachers and other citizens should reconsider the school voucher issue.

Vouchers provide inner-city schools the option to receive a better education than the public education system currently can provide them. Even with the growing school of choice programs, many inner-city students do not have the means to take advantage of the ability to go to a better neighboring school district if one exists. These students would benefit from vouchers because private schools would be able to open up in the inner-city to provide a valid alternative within their community to the public schools that are failing them.

Vouchers, despite being argued against as a violation of separation of church and state, are in actuality a liberating program that provides religious freedom. This is the reason publicly financed private schools are popular in the Netherlands (Ravitch, "The Right Thing"). In a private school, the government does not need to decide what religious holidays will be celebrated or ignored, whether the science classes will teach intelligent design along with evolution or not, or make any decision in regard to any other religious topic. Vouchers provide an actual separation of church and state in that the state would not have to make religious or anti-religious decisions in regards to a student's education while allowing parents to educate their children with the religious or secular convictions they hold.

The evidence shows that the United States is doing something wrong with their education policies; public funding of private education might be the improvement the educational system needs. "Of the thirty nations that are part of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, only seven do not permit any government funding of K-12 private schools; in addition to the United States, they include Greece, Ireland, Japan, Mexico, Portugal, and Turkey" (Ravitch, "The Right Thing"). Of these thirty nations in the Programme for International Student Assessment's (PISA), five of the bottom six in mathematics were from the group of seven that do not permit any government funding for private schools (PISA 53). Of the same thirty nations, the bottom four in science were from the same group of seven (PISA 22). The United States also did not fare

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