School vouchers work and work very well. The idea is spreading is also comforting. In some Scandinavian countries like Sweden school choice has been in practice for over a decade and the results are as expected. That is not the point of this post.
Betraying ones own people. Especially when they are poor, desperate and especially when it involves saving the future of those poor and desperate people. How does one do that ? Year after year, even in the face overwhelming evidence that what you are supporting is overwhelmingly wrong. Check out..
The Education debacle of the decade by Bob Ewing from Institute for Justice
There is a mention of Washington DC Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton was one of the principal opponents of OSP and was instrumental in ending the program. (Washington DC Opportunity Scholarship Program (OSP). Established in 2004 as a five-year pilot program, OSP is among the most heavily researched federal education programs in history.)
This lady is one of those perennial Black politicians that the media dredges out when they have to discuss something about Blacks. One of those pols who survives year after year, even though she is completely out of sync with her own community. Amazing demonstration of some of the cynical aspects of Public Choice Theory. (Fascinating subject you should research about)
What is sad is that Ms Norton has spent an entire lifetime not just talking about civil rights but even putting her life on the line for it. I guess getting elected and suddenly seeing people lining up to pay obeisance to you changes all that. Also some people, I have observed, get fossilised. Their idea of what is civil rights (or any other cause they fought for) seem to get frozen in time. Times change. What people want, Black parents in this case, change. Unfortunately fossils find it difficult to change with time. They go through all kinds of twisting and turning to convince others why their dead, warped ideas are still in sync. They will play the race card, “what will Dr King do or Jesus do” card, ….. but they are not able to tell you the truth. That they are too comfortable with what they have, too afraid to lose it, too used to the comforts of attention and spotlight. No longer able to stand up to the current special interests, like they used to, to the special interests of the past. So they continue to occupy time and space, unfortunately this time, at the cost of the future of millions of children. Their own. Sad!
But I am hopeful. I am of the opinion that liberals who promote ideas like vouchers have won the war. Yet we may have to continue fighting battles, even lose some, but the future has already been written. Reading history, feeling the historical trends, keeping in mind human nature and historical record of ever expanding circles of individual freedom and autonomy. ….. the Nortons of the old world will be buried in infamy. Along with all quislings and collaborationists of the past who callously or otherwise, betrayed their own.
Revolutions devour its own children. Surely it tries. Makes feeble attempts. But then, when revolutions get fossilsed, the children devour the revolution and excrete it out of the other end. The revolutions children move on to create the next revolution.
Truly proud moment for the School Choice Campaign team and everyone else at Centre for Civil Society.
It is sometimes embarrassing to take credit for things, especially when
it is a good deed. But this time I can’t help but feel proud.
His dream comes true, 8-yr-old will go to school from today in the Indian Express, Delhi Section on July 6, 2007.
A simple Rs 300 per month can do this. I spend more on coffee every
month. Imagine what a private and tax payer funded basket of education,
health and life insurance and food vouchers can do for the poor! The
money is there. Governments spend a zillion times more than Rs 300 per
poor person per month.
Soon…. Soon …. God, give me patience till then.
His dream comes true, 8-yr-old will go to school from today
Courtesy
School Choice scheme of Centre for Civil Society, 400 poor kids will
get education vouchers to study in a school of their choice
Under the School
Choice scheme of the Centre for Civil Society, 400 students would be
given education vouchers. Sharik, a resident of Mulla Colony in Gharoli
village of East Delhi, is the first among them to get admission. Due to
ill health of his father Zulfiqar, the family did not have enough money
to send him to school. Sharik, who is the youngest of four brothers,
has a 14-month-old sister also.His mother
Shabnam Khatun is happy. “He (Sharik) always wanted to study but we had
so many loans to pay off that we could not send him to any school. I am
relieved now that he will be going to school finally,” she said.It was Sharik’s
brother Azam who had got the voucher. Azam studies in Class V in a
government school in Kalyanpuri. He wanted to go to Karan Swaroop
Public School himself but the voucher amount of Rs 300 per month did
not cover his tuition fees and other expenses. So, his parents decided
to transfer the voucher in Sharik’s name. “They do not teach English at
my school properly. I am sure my brother will study well,” said Azam.Shabnam wanted to
send Sharik to Gautam Public School but found the “one-time fee” there
too high. “They demanded Rs 1,700 as one-time fee which we could not
afford. I went to Karan Swaroop school then where this fee is Rs 1,000.
I borrowed the amount from some people which I will have to pay off in
a few months,” she said.“Because of
Sharik’s father’s illness, we had to withdraw Azam from the private
school where he was studying earlier. We had to raise so many loans for
his treatment and it was difficult for us to afford good education for
all our children. My husband has got back his job now in a cloth
factory but he is still not allowed to do much physical work. But I am
happy that even though my elder sons are studying in a government
school, at least Sharik has got a good platform to start with,” Shabnam
added.As for Sharik, he
looks forward eagerly to the new life waiting for him in the school.
“When I go to school tomorrow, the teacher will give me new uniform and
new books. I will work very hard,” he said.About the concept
A new concept in the country, ‘School Choice’ gives children right to
choose their school by giving them adequate financial freedom.
Education vouchers have been issued under the programme to students
from economically weaker section so that they can choose their school
and are not forced to study in government schools only. In a pilot
project initiated by the Centre for Civil Society, 400 vouchers worth
Rs 300 each will be distributed in July. Five lakh people in 68 wards
of Delhi were informed about the scheme. Of these 1.5 lakh people who
filled the voucher forms, 408 have been selected — six from each ward —
by a draw of lots.
Check out The Business of Education
by Prof. Shantha Sinha, chairperson, National Commission for Protection
of Child Rights. The statements she make are not new. In fact you will
hear them in any elite educationalist circles across the world. It is
amazing how easily people like Prof Sinha are able to insult the
choices made by parents, poor or otherwise, market, etc. etc. If she
had made any attempts to look for evidence, before making blanket
statements, she would have found that vouchers actually work. Even I
could have sent her a big zip file full of facts and data my colleagues
have put together.
Anyway, my quick letter to editor, not sure if the editor published it or not.
Sir, this refers to The business of education (DC, June 13).
Pretty much everyone I know went to private schools. Are they less of a
citizen? In fact they are able to serve their society and the world
precisely because of the better quality education they received in
private schools. Market competition enables citizens to access superior
goods and services, if they pay. Vouchers, cash transfers, tuition
reimbursement, tax credits etc. are being implemented by left-wing and
right-wing governments from Columbia to Sweden and Brazil to
Bangladesh. Prof Sinha misses the point that these schemes are for
empowering the very marginalised she laments about, so they can access
superior services, provided by the private sector hopefully with a
smile and a thank you, today afforded only to the rich and the middle
class. Poor are moving en mass to private schools as soon as they are a
bit less poor. They know something that the elite don’t seem to respect
- English medium private schools provide their children the best way
out of poverty. Empowered with tax payer funded vouchers, let the poor
choose what is best for them. The elite must stop insulting their
choice and stop hiding behind mythical concepts of universalisation and
inclusive democracy of government schools.
Go to any seminar on education. Usually the speakers are
intellectuals, from the upper or middle class, city bred. The
discussion invariably veer towards state of education for the poor.
Soon people start talking about how bad government run schools are. Not
enough teachers, some places there aren’t any building to begin with,
no separate bathrooms for the girl children, so on and so forth. Right
after the wailing they volunteer with their suggestions.
Now instead of a seminar or conference on education if you were to
attend one on roads, hospitals or PDS, you will pretty much hear the
same recommendations.
Imagine if some of us were foolish enough to take these
recommendations seriously. How many of your waking hours will you spend
inspecting road, ration shops, government hospitals and schools?
Let us step back a bit. These government “services” are funded by
our taxes. We pay taxes for pretty much anything we buy or sell. On
pretty much on any income (especially if you are unlucky like me to be
drawing a salary and left with no avenue to evade taxes). Now my
employer pays my salary for doing work. That too in the employer’s
organisation. Not for inspecting other people’s work. So if I spend my
waking hours inspecting government work, filing RTI, etc. I don’t get
paid. If I don’t get paid, I don’t pay taxes. No taxes, no government
“services”.
Also, what about the people who get paid to do their job? And the
people who get paid to inspect, poke and probe the various government
“services”? Aren’t they getting paid to do all the things we are being
asked to duplicate?
Interestingly, no inspection is required for the goods and services
the speaker, i.e., for people like us – the middle, upper and rich
classer – enjoys. I hardly inspect my children’s school, give the
teacher and the principal a pep talk, inspect their accounting system
or pay scale. I visit it, yes. During one of my rare visits, if I find
one or more of the problems listed above, in my child’s school, what do
I do? I may talk to the manager/principal/headmaster once.
Since I am a patient man, I may explain things to them a second time. “Fix it or else”.
A third time? I take my children and find another school. My money
follows me. Whose lose is it? Mine or the school’s? Finding a new
school may not be easy. Sure. Nothing good in life is easy. But will my
children go uneducated? No!
I don’t have the time or the inclination for rasta roko. I like Mr
Kalam, our President. But I don’t have the time to write to him. Same
goes for the minister, bureaucrats, Supreme Court, PIL lawyers, well
wishers, do-gooders. I like you all. But I can take care of my family.
If I need your help I will ask. But don’t wait for me. Don’t hold your
breath.
Why is that so? Why don’t I need all these powerful, noble well
wishers? Because I have the resources to pay the tuition and rest of
the expenses. So the simple question is: if a poor dalit parent had the
money in her hand, would she need all these patrons and patronising
elite? No!
Why are there plenty of schools where I live. Because there are
plenty of people like me who can pay. Which means there are plenty of
people who have started schools to serve me and people like me.
What is news to a lot of people is that there are plenty of schools,
and increasingly so, around where poor live. Because, as the poor grow
less poor, in fact, the moment the poor is a little bit less poor, they
opt for private services, including private schools.
If the poor have access to the money that the tax payers set aside
to help the poor, they can use that money to access far better services
that the private sector is able to provide. Instead of funding
government services with taxes, empower the poor with it.
(What if the tax payer could give the money directly to the poor
person and get a tax credit? No need to send it to the government and
then redirecting it to the poor with all the leaks in the system. Pay
government for the services like defence that government is supposed to
do.)
Today, I have choice. You, if you are poor, have none. Soon, thanks
to the growing school choice movement in India, this will not be the
case.
For the first time in the history of our society, the poor will be
able to tell both the government and the private service providers,
“You dance to my tune I will give you this money that I have in my
hand. I will tell you how you should dance, when you should, and
quality of your dance. You also have to do it with a smile and a thank
you. If you cannot do that please move on. Next!”
Now wouldn’t that be real empowerment, real liberation for a change?
School Choice Campaign
Fund Students, Not Schools
On
29 January 2007 the Centre for Civil Society launched its School Choice
Campaign. It is a one-year campaign with concrete, measurable goals.
Our nation has given each child the right to education; we must now
make it meaningful by taking it a step further: The Right to education of Choice! Each child and her parent must be empowered so they can truthfully say: My Right, My Choice!
This
is also your opportunity to join the education revolution. Put in your
one year to assure quality education to the poor and secure their and
India’s future. Log on to www.schoolchoice.in and play your part.
Can
poor women (urban, rural or tribal), armed with funds—corporate, bank
or micro-finance—own the school where their children study? Can we
attract entrepreneurs of the calibre like Narayana Murthy to open 200,
may be 2000, schools and replicate the IT revolution in education? Can
venture capital—for profit or philanthropic—help improve the
infrastructure and quality of existing budget private schools around
slums and in villages? Can good teachers of government schools be given
an opportunity to manage schools and improve the quality and reach
millions?
We
feel the answer to these exciting questions is a resounding YES! It is
time to think bold, outside the box of the current education system.
What is School Choice?
As
you know, we at CCS have done considerable amount of research and
advocacy work in the area of education. We have collected a wealth of
data and analysis from around India and the rest of the world. And we
are convinced that quality education for all can be achieved only by
adopting a different strategy: School Choice!
School
choice, particularly for the poor, can be achieved through education
vouchers, cash transfers (like in Bangladesh), or tuition fee
reimbursement schemes (like in Delhi), basically by schemes where funds
follow students and not schools. Let the child’s parent choose the
school. It can be enhanced through broader measures like deregulation
and delicensing of private schools, legalizing for-profit schools, and
microfinance and venture capital for budget private schools. (Today it
is virtually impossible to start a legally recognised school. Also,
since many of the schools for the poor are unrecognised, they cannot
get a bank loan to improve their infrastructure like any other
enterprise).
School
choice can be taken to government schools through decentralization of
decision making and transfer of accountability to local governments, by
tying state grants to enrolment and learning achievements, through
management contracts, and charter schools. The funding for education in
general can be increased by tuition tax credits to individuals and
corporate scholarship tax credit programs.
Goals of the School Choice Campaign
We have set five measurable goals. They
would give you a good idea of the scale and scope of our efforts. By
the end of the campaign, 29 January 2008, we intend to achieve the
following:
1. At least 50% of parents with children in state schools should know the ideas of school choice.
2. All state education ministers and secretaries should be briefed about school choice individually or in groups.
3. All elected representatives
across all levels of the government (Members of Parliament, Legislative
Assemblies, Corporations, and Village Panchayats) should receive
persuasive material on the ideas of school choice and specific ways to
implement them.
4. At least 1912 of the elected representatives should receive a delegation of citizens demanding school choice.
5. Establish or help establish at least 5 projects
(including changes in education policies) that demonstrate the power of
choice in school education. One of the projects would be a private school choice fund that would support at least 9400 students.
Looking Ahead
The
task ahead is not an easy one. But we firmly believe that all of us, by
implementing school choice, can make a serious positive impact in the
lives of millions of children, for generations to come. That thought
and the tremendous encouragement and partnership we have received from
all quarters—dalit and tribal activists, government officials,
politicians, entrepreneurs, and parents and well wishers of poor
children—in the short span of our campaign energise us to march ahead.
All
good campaigns depend on good people, planning and execution. We have
assembled a team of dedicated and competent women and men in New Delhi
and in many states. We have partnered with enthusiastic organisations
and individuals who are now the foot soldiers of the campaign. Our mass
campaign and political outreach is in full swing in many states across
the nation. It is especially heartening to receive overwhelming support
from leaders and organisations representing the marginalised women and
men of our society. Dalit and tribal activists, for example, are
becoming the key leaders of this campaign. They are taking the powerful
message of parental empowerment and choice to communities and elected
representatives.
Our
mass campaign has attracted hundreds of thousands of parents. In New
Delhi we will be providing 400 vouchers to poor children to demonstrate
the power of choice and empowerment. We will unveil similar schemes in
other states. Encouragingly, many government officials have shown
interest in implementing choice based schemes in their states and
cities.
It
has been a discovery process for us too. We have sensed a change in the
thought process of philanthropic organisations and donors. Instead of
charity for the sake of charity, they envision funding projects that
empower people in a scalable and self sustaining manner. Many have
found school choice, with its parent empowering message at its core,
very appealing. Many have or intend to join us in our pilot projects
and mass campaigns.
While
we rejoice our achievements, we are fully aware that this is just the
end of the beginning of the campaign. We have a long and hard, yet
exciting, road ahead. Join our campaign. Together let us create an
education system that puts Students First! Together let us make quality education and a good future a reality for millions of our children.
Join the School Choice Campaign!