PUBLIC SCHOOL SERIES
Article 3
If you're a public-school student, your chances
in life may be largely dependent on where you
live -- not just which country, not just which
state, but which little bureaucratic zone.
In San Jose, Calif., many parents want to get
their kids in Fremont Union schools because
they're so much better than neighboring schools.
So parents sometimes cheat to get their kids
in. At least cheating is what local officials
call it. Steve Rowley, district superintendent,
said, "We have maybe hundreds of kids who
are here illegally, under false pretenses."
Illegally. False pretenses. Sounds like the
kids are criminals. All they're doing is trying
to get a good public-school education. Don't
the public schools' defenders insist all children
have a right to a good public-school education?
Inspector John Lozano goes door to door to
check if kids really live where they say they
do.
At one house, a mother and daughter answer
the door, so Lozano sees that the daughter is
there, but he still tells them that he needs
to look inside the house to make sure. The school
district police can go into your daughter's
bedroom, even go through drawers and closets.
"Well," he said, "we have a computer,
we have some 'Seventeen' magazines. We have
pictures of the student and her friends on the
wall."
So she passed the inspection.
But then he went an address listed by Esterlita
Tapang, whose grandson attends a Fremont Union
high school. He told the man who answered the
door, "She said she lives here and her
grandson is going to live here so he can go
to the high school." The man shook his
head and said she didn't live there. "Caught,"
Lozano told us. "She's definitely caught!"
Granted, Tapang broke the rules. The rules
said her grandson, because of where he lived,
wasn't entitled to the quality education Fremont
Union schools provide. But which is worse: a
system that traps students in bad schools, or
a grandmother who lies to save her grandson
from being denied a decent education? I asked
her, "Isn't it creepy that they force you
to go to the black market to get your kid a
better education?"
She thought it was. "I was crying in front
of this 14-year-old," said the grandmother.
"Why can't they just let parents get in
the school of their choice?"
Why can't they? Changing schools can change
a child's life. In Florida, Patty Bower's kids
were stuck in a school that wasn't teaching
them. But then they got vouchers, which let
them attend a private school that works with
kids who have special needs.
"Joey has been brought up four grade levels
in reading," Bowers said. "He's gone
from C's, and D's to being an honor roll student."
But the Florida Supreme Court this month killed
a similar choice program, and Patty fears her
kids will soon be forced back into public school.
"If they take the McKay scholarship away,
I don't think -- I'm sorry. I don't think Joey
will finish school."
Why can't she choose her child's school? Most
countries that beat America on international
tests give their students that choice. In Belgium,
the government spends less than American schools
do on each student, but the money is attached
to the kids. So they can go wherever they want
-- to a state-run school, a Montessori school,
or even a religious school.
"I wouldn't send my child to an American
public school," said Maria Loth. "Not
even for a million dollars."
Her son lives in Belgium now, but when he was
6, his family lived in America. "In America,
I had to beg, please, please give me good school
for my child. And here in Belgium, they're all
over the place."
That's right. In public education, our land
of the free is now a bunch of local fiefs, where
petty-bureaucrats-turned-lords-of-the-manor
decide whether you can get a decent education,
and parents must go to them, begging for their
children's future. Meanwhile, in Belgium and
much of the rest of the world, students and
their parents have the freedom to choose their
schools -- and the opportunity that comes with
that freedom.
John Stossel is co-anchor of ABC News' "20/20"
and the author of "Give Me a Break."
To find out more about John Stossel and read
features by other Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate
Web page at www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT 2006 BY JFS PRODUCTIONS,
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