It wasn't always this way.
The United States was founded, formed and grew to international prominence and prestige without compulsory schooling and
with virtually no government involvement in schooling. Before the
advent of government-controlled schools, literacy was high (91-97% in
the North, 81% in the South), private and community schools
proliferated, and people cared about education and acted on their desire
to learn and have their children learn.
Mr. Matthew J. Brouillette, President of the Commonwealth Foundation in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania and former Director of Education Policy for the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, wrote:
From the outset of the
first settlements in the New World, Americans founded and successfully
maintained a de-centralized network of schools up through the 1850s...
For the first 150
years of America's settlement and the first 50 to 75 years of the
nation's existence, government schooling as it is known today did not
exist.
Today, few people ask how Americans, without
the help of government education, came to tame an unsettled continent
and eventually establish the freest nation in history.
Mr. Brouillette goes on to say:
Early America was
arguably the freest civil society that has ever existed. This freedom
extended to education, which meant that parents were responsible for,
and had complete control of, their children's schooling. There were no
accrediting agencies, no regulatory boards, and no teacher certification
requirements. Parents could choose whatever kind of school or education
they wanted for their children, and no one was forced to pay for
education they did not use or approve of.
Americans were as innovative about education as they were about everything else. They
started private schools, hired tutors, taught their children at home,
taught themselves. As the country grew, private schooling of many
varieties grew and complemented the many other options.
But there were always the reformers, the
people who thought they knew better than everyone else and felt they
had the right to force their views on others — by law, if no one would
cooperate otherwise.
From the PBS web site:
Public education today
is a product of more than a century of reform and revision [mid 1800s to
present]. In each era, visionary individuals have taken the lead and
transformed the system to meet their ideals.
"Visionary individuals" is
an overly nice term for people who consider themselves superior enough
that they should have the right to force "their ideals" on all others.
One of these visionaries
was Horace Mann, a lawyer from Massachusetts. He's often referred to as
the father of public education because he was such a fervent reformer,
but there were others before and after him.
Mr. Mann's hometown of Boston was a city of many private schools in the early and mid 1800s — with attendance reported at 96% by a committee commissioned to study the issue.
But high attendance was
not the goal of school reformers. Horace Mann helped establish a board
of education in 1837, and by 1852, he had his compulsory schools and
state schools from elementary through high school.
Power is tempting and many
reformers and politicians fell to its lure. One state after another
tightened its grip on American education. Parents who refused to comply
sometimes found themselves at the sharp end of state militia bayonets.
Once the state grabs power
in a particular area, it is only natural that unless people fight back
the power will grow and freedom will slowly die. That's where we stand
today.
Albert Shanker, former president of the American Federation of Teachers, said this:
It's time to admit that
public education operates like a planned economy, a bureaucratic system
in which everybody's role is spelled out in advance and there are few
incentives for innovation and productivity. It's no surprise that our
school system doesn't improve: it more resembles the communist economy
than our own market economy.
But Americans have not surrendered their freedom altogether. 27,000
private schools serve over six million students in America. Nearly two
million students are home schooled. Tutoring services and learning
centers number in the thousands. Community groups, churches and
charities offer free tutoring. Parents pool their resources to run
summer schools and special classes for their children.
Much more could be done if
parents and students were not trapped in the web of government
schooling. As it is, many parents are actually afraid to step into
independence. Some are afraid because schools threaten or intimidate
them. Some are afraid of the financial responsibility. Many simply are
unaware of all the opportunities and possibilities available.
It is our goal to not only
explain why government involvement in schooling is detrimental to
students, families, society and liberty, but to provide families with
ideas and resources to aid their path to independence.
SOURCE: http://www.schoolandstate.org/home.htm
Alliance for the Separation of School & State
SOURCE: http://www.schoolandstate.org/home.htm
Alliance for the Separation of School & State
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