Thanks to reader Jon Lubar for bringing this important article by Kern Alexander of the University of Illinois about the dangers of school choice to my attention. It appeared first in the Journal of Education Finance and was reprinted by the Horace Mann League. School choice is bad for society and bad for education, Alexander argues. Those who say that parents should choose assume that parents are making informed choices. We know that many parents choose truly dreadful voucher schools and charter schools. We know that parents will stay in those schools despite the school’s failure to meet the needs of their children. The usual argument against charters and vouchers, which I often make, is that they do not “save poor kids from failing schools” because they do not have higher test scores. Alexander does not even refer to test scores. He makes a principled argument, based on economics, sociology, psychology, and logic.
Here are a few excerpts:
The story goes that tuition voucher schools and charter schools are creatures of the spirit of capitalism1 and that public funding of them will increase competition, making all schools more efficient and academically better, especially public schools. For that theory to work it is hypothesized that parents as “rational people will make choices as to the education of their children in perfect markets.” In the realm of economics, this reasoning is called the “rational expectations hypothesis” or the “efficient markets hypothesis.”
The “efficient markets” notion applied to schools via parental choice means that parents will, in their wisdom, utilize public money to send their children to private schools and that ipso facto the education level of the nation rises commensurate with the level and intensity of competition among parents in choosing private, clerical and/or corporate charter schools. For the education level to rise requires, of course, that parents will make rational decisions relative to quality education. Essential to the concept is that parents have the knowledge necessary to make informed educational choices. In a perfect market, information is presumed to “flow like water–faster than water,”3 and it is necessary that those things irrelevant to quality education, or even detrimental to it, are not present in parental decision making. If parental choice is not based on quality education and instead the school choices are rooted in race, religion, wealth, ethnicity, etc., then you will have “imperfect competition.” Imperfect competition would result in the overall decline in the quality of education…..
Thus, the basic voucher and charter school theory is that the nation will improve its standard of living by having parents use public tax money to make choices of schools based on their own information, knowledge, and perceptions of educational reality. It assumes that parents know what constitutes quality education, and that they have rational expectations as to the quality of science programs, mathematics, reading, political thought, literature, and all the liberal arts.
However, unfortunately, experience indicates that parental choices are ensnared and limited by the parents’ own limited experiences, level of learning, ignorance, biases, and mythology on which they depend to make educational choices for their children and is, thus, in most cases, highly suspect.5 Such problems with rational choices are recognized by a school of economics known as “behavioral economics” that attempts to enter into the economic equation the actual motivations of individuals in the marketplace….
Behaviorists also argue that the summation of individual choices, in totality, cannot be relied upon to ensure the progress of mankind and the enhancement of the public good. The aggregate does not necessarily produce rationality; rather, it is more likely to result in inefficiency and inequality.6 The behaviorists maintain that forces, riding the rationale of the grail of competition, tend to warp the public good causing both inefficiency and inequality. Put simply, the public good is more than the sum of individual preferences and choices. The public good is beyond the exercise of self-interests. It is a great misunderstanding, indeed, a fallacy, to assume that people acting individually in their own self-interest can achieve the public good. We have known this since it was explained to us by Rousseau in 1758, as a cornBeerstone of democratic thought, that “personal interest is always in inverse ratio” to the common interest. Thus, a system where parents take public money and indulge their self-interests is highly problematic for the education policy of a state or nation.
Similar problems of quality and consumer protection exist in education. In education, as in medicine, imperfect information decreases and distorts the “effective degree of competition.”12 With education, the conditions of the marketplace do not exist. Parents are all, to a greater or lesser degree, ill informed about the qualifications of teachers, their expertise, certifications, and are usually poorly informed about the subject matter conveyed and the teaching techniques required. That is why states require public school teachers to follow strict and complex educational processes to be certified. Such, however, is not normally required of private voucher schools or charter schools.13 Therefore, parental choice and market competition in the realm of education, as in medicine, is uniquely suspect, and in the case of tuition vouchers and charter schools, is normally reduced to a condition of state subsidized legal segregation.
Government funding of vouchers and charter schools would, if widespread, contribute to social disunity and inequality. The Wall Street desire to make significant privatization incursions into the areas of public goods, human needs, health, education and welfare, and to correspondingly avoid government regulation is a strong laissez faire profit motivation. To deregulate these normally governmental functions leaves Wall Street in the enviable position of near total discretion in raising “transaction costs” that assure profit maximization…..
[Joseph] Stiglitz quotes Alexis de Tocqueville who said that the main element of the “peculiar genius of American society” is “self-interest properly understood.” The last two words, “properly understood,” are the key, says Stiglitz. According to Stiglitz, everyone possesses self-interest in the “narrow sense.” This “narrow sense” with regard to educational choice is usually exercised for reasons other than educational quality, the chief reasons being race, religion, economic and social status, and similarity with persons with comparable information, biases and prejudices. But Stiglitz interprets Tocqueville’s “properly understood” to mean a much broader and more desirable and moral objective, that of “appreciating” and paying attention to everyone else’s self-interest. In other words, the common welfare is, in fact, “a precondition for one’s own ultimate well being.”17 Such commonality in the advancement of the public good is lost by the narrow self-interest. School tuition vouchers and charter schools are the operational models for implementation of the “narrow self-interest.” It is easy to recognize, but difficult to justify.

So school choice for the well-off is OK then, but not for the ignorant masses. This is so patronizing. Amazingly, some parents actually like the “no excuses” approach, and don’t really care what is taught, or how. This whole article is a “They don’t think like I do, therefore they are dumb” exercise.
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Are you advocating for private schools?
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No. I am commenting on the author’s attitude. The state (public) school system is democratically the way things should be. They are screing it all up in the UK as well now.
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Howardat58,
I didn’t get that “feeling” “attitude” and/or “tone” at all in my reading of the article and not just what Diane has pulled out to entice others to read the whole thing.
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Yes, it is a bit blunt about parents. Free markets can only function with transparency and a moral foundation.
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It appears that you’ve completely misunderstood the positions of the article, whether willfully or not I don’t know. It claims, and rightfully so IMHO, that no one of any demographic makes exclusively rational decisions. While a higher level of education may facilitate better access to information and a higher degree of agency, that is not the same as using those capabilities in a purely rational way to make decisions based only on questions of fact vs. the social/emotional/cultural components associated with the decision at hand. For example, liking no excuses is in no way an acceptable substitute for knowledge of the inevitable harms that no excuses causes, and the absence of that knowledge or the choice of no excuses in spite of it shows that the empty promise of a well designed sales pitch is more persuasive than the truth the sales pitch seeks to divert ones gaze from. What rational person would choose a school whose discipline and behavior policies amount to “The beatings will continue until moral improves?
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I am generally in agreement with Duane Swacker, MathVale and Jon Lubar.
As I see it, the article is not anti-parent but pro-student and pro-teacher.
😎
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A must read for all!
I’ve been in the middle of a long distance email discussion/argument about what a free market is and whether one actually exists (I claim it doesn’t) and whether that free market can actually do something like determine the price of oil (I claim the free market, being a description and not an actor can do no such thing). Am awaiting a response to this article from the gentleman with whom I am corresponding.
Thanks for the link, Diane!
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I think you will find free marketers will always claim “just wait, it will get better if we just have less government”. Free markets are a thought exercise, but fail miserably in practice. Too much imbalance between the participants, too many wild swings, and prone to self destruction. It is pretty clear what have now operating in the U.S. is a disaster and not functioning. Yet, economists can’t develop any new ideas. We can do better.
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Google “Gresham’s dynamic” for a discussion of how unscrupulous entities can drive scrupulous ones out of the marketplace. It is not possible for a free market to exist without some type of policing authority to insure that the assumed level playing field is not tilted in one direction or another. Quite obviously, we don’t have that now.
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“The public good is beyond the exercise of self-interests.”
This brings to mine “My Mental Model of Why Atlanta Public Schools Works the Way It Works,” which expresses a vicious cycle that, on slides 9 and 10, reads:
1. The more Self-Interests (Selfishness), the more Charter Schools (Segregation) and the less Community Quality.
2. The more Charter Schools (Segregation), the less Community Quality.
3. The less Community Quality, the more Poverty and the less Public Engagement & Dialogue.
4. The more Poverty, the less Student Learning.
5. The less Student Learning, after a while, the less Public Wisdom.
6. The less Public Wisdom, the more Plutocracy and Corporatocracy and the less Democracy and Citizenship.
7. The less Democracy and Citizenship, the more Self-Interests (Selfishness).
Go to 1.
“My Mental Model of Why Atlanta Public Schools Works the Way It Works” here…
https://files.acrobat.com/a/preview/8de9f3ac-34dd-4f5f-8648-c34869792f0b
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Sad but true.
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Here’s an article about Gresham’s dynamic. http://scholarfp.blogspot.com/2014/10/greshams-dynamic-why-bad-actors.html
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This is a more general examination. http://www.theresilientfamily.com/2012/02/greshams-dynamic/
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From the Time-Kill-Central part of the Internet rabbit hole, some articles by William Black tagged with Gresham’s Dynamic. http://neweconomicperspectives.org/tag/greshams-dynamic
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Market is just that…about marketing. We’ve all probably seen products or companies that are successful not because the product was the best but because of their marketing. Good marketing sells and the same would apply to schools. Schools will market and promote what they believe will get “customers”. Whether it be price, quality, or quantity of opportunities. If the reformers get their way I believe we’ll see some type of tier system in education. Something like this:
Tier 1: This level of education will be the high end private schools that we see for example the school that Gates sends his kids to. Of course the price is currently very high and the government isn’t going to pay that much. Let’s say the government pays $5000 per student per year. (I’m pretty sure the amount the government will allocate will be less than what the average is currently. That will help politicians to claim how this will balance the budget as a plus for privatization) But the more expensive schools charge let’s say $29000.00. That means that the parents would have to supply the rest. Meaning that those wanting to go to that school would have to be very well off like the Gates family.
Tier 2: Schools in this tier will be quite a bit cheaper than tier 1 and have less to offer in some manor. They might still be able to offer some sports and other extracurricular activities but not to the extent of the Tier 1 schools. These schools might cost some where in the $10k to $15k so the family would still have to come up with a large sum of money. Thus these schools will still cater to the upper middle class families.
Tier 3: This tier might still have some left over “public” schools but will also include the online schools, home schooling, and computerized schools. For this tier the cost will be the market value for the schools. These schools will totally compete based in their cost. This will vary from the exact amount the government will give for each student (let’s say $5k) or just a little above it if the school can get a “profit” from the family of the student. These schools will not have any extracurricular activities as these will be bare bones.
The reformers like to claim that their reforms will help every child to have a quality education, but the opposite will be true. It will vary even more that the wealthy will have an advantage for their children and the poor will get a left over education. Market education will lead to a greater disparity of education quality.
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You are correct. A market is just a market. It should not determine policy, particularly for public schools. The notion that the market should rule is naive as markets reflect people’s bias. This is one reason why charters are more segregated than public schools.
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Let’s rephrase a little.
School choice should include the choice for a well-supported neighborhood public school that has whatever resources it needs to ensure genuine learning and teaching for all. The sky’s the limit. Period. No skimming. No creaming. No excuses.
School choice as defined by the heavyweights of the self-proclaimed “education reform” movement lets a few ensure that the choices of learning and teaching environments they make for THEIR OWN CHILDREN are vastly superior to those they mandate for OTHER PEOPLE’S CHILDREN. Translation: no fools they, because why would any “striver” not ensure that THEIR OWN CHILDREN enjoy every advantage over OTHER PEOPLE’S CHILDREN? As they see it, in a zero-sum winner-take-all world, what sense (and ₵ent₵) would it make for them to disadvantage THEIR OWN CHILDREN while at the same time giving a huge competitive advantage to OTHER PEOPLE’S CHILDREN?
That’s how I see it…
😎
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There were once two places to get a hamburger. One was run by a guy named joe. One was a giant corporation. Every morning Joe went by the local butcher and got a few bags of fresh beef for his burgers. He kneaded them up with a recipe that he found favorable and cooked them to perfection. They were delicious. Every morning, the giant corporation came on the TV with adds about their burgers. Soon, everybody went to the burger giant. It was trendy.
There were once many schools. In our county in rural Tennessee alone there were 95 of them in 32 school districts in 1895. People sent their children to the places where they had heard they could get a good education. Maybe you studied with Professor Billy Thompson in Unionvile. You could go to Wartrace where Brandon Training School had a good reputation or maybe Webb School in Bell Buckle. All still have the reputation of being good schools in their day. Today, all three places are grandparents of modern institutions. Webb still exists and prospers as a private school. The other two places are public schools. There are still people who inherited a positive image of these places from generations before us.
This is the positive side of the self-fulfilling prophecy. If everyone says that schools are better in a certain district, the parents who have kids that care about education will send their kids there. Surrounded by kids who want to learn because they have support for that at home, the kids will learn more. But they might have done well anywhere. And long after the teachers who made people like the schools are gone, the reputation remains, perpetuating the reputation. Sometimes it is deserved. Sometimes not.
Like the burgers, the information might not get out the right way.
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Diane, did Kern Alexander pick that critique straight out of the Communist Manifesto? Parents (and all consumers) don’t know what it’s their best interest so the government must choose for them with public funds? Are you really sure you want to align with these radicals?
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This is a condescending and arrogantly written view of the ignorant masses that cannot think for themselves.
This view of the potential of the human person will relegate those educators and schools who hold it to a perpetual state of decline.
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JDHollowell,
We could be like Chile with vouchers. Hyper segregated, students riots over inequity. I would rather be America, where communities take care of each other.
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As you may have noticed, we are not like Chile in the ways you suggest.
I am not sure the sarcastic response represents a thoughtful reply to my comment. The attitude conveyed by Alexander is reminiscent of the attitudes of those who did not think women had enough sense or knowledge to vote.
I am sticking with my original comment – “This view of the potential of the human person will relegate those educators and schools who hold it to a perpetual state of decline.”
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JDHollowell,
Always glad to add a new troll to the blog. Vouchers have never been approved by voters in any state. Vouchers have not shown any academic gains in any district. That is not sarcasm. That’s fact.
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I am not sure what a troll is. Is that a person who would like to enter into an honest discussion about an important issue without being stereotyped?
Your “fact” hardly qualifies as such. Many researchers are finding academic improvement as a result of vouchers.
Here’s one for you:
Witte, J. F., Wolf, P. J., Cowen, J. M., Carlson, D. E., & Fleming, D. J. (2014). High-Stakes Choice: Achievement and Accountability in the Nation’s Oldest Urban Voucher Program. Educational Evaluation And Policy Analysis, 36(4), 437-456.
Here’s the abstract of their paper if you have time to read it:
This article considers the impact of a high-stakes testing and reporting requirement on students using publicly funded vouchers to attend private schools. We describe how such a policy was implemented during the course of a previously authorized multi-year evaluation of the Milwaukee Parental Choice Program, which provided us with data on voucher students before and after the reform, as well as on public school students who received no new policy treatment. Our results indicate substantial growth for voucher students in the first high-stakes testing year, particularly in mathematics, and for students with higher levels of earlier academic achievement. We discuss these results in the context of both the school choice and accountability literatures.
Too many other researchers have found similar results which makes me think you are not really open to what others are discovering. Or perhaps you have been too busy categorizing those who disagree with you as uninformed to keep up with current research.
This blog and the service you provide to our country (which is admirable) could be improved by an actual search for the truth and avoiding the temptation to reduce a complex subject to political sloganeering.
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The independent evaluation of vouchers in Milwaukee, conducted by Patrick Wolf of the University if Arkansas, who supports school choice, found no academic gains for Milwaukee students in voucher schools. He found a higher graduation rate, but extraordinary attrition. 56% of those who started in the voucher schools left before graduation.
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You seem to have forsaken your roots and principles as an objective researcher and have reduced all research that does not validate your assumptions to science that is politically motivated.
Is it possible that Wolf is an advocate of choice because the research is pointing him to be one? He was not even listed as the primary researcher. Have you researched the political persuasions of the other 4 researchers of record?
Did you neglect the primary findings of the research as detailed in the abstract? Did you not realize that the abstract points to a finding of increased academic performance of students on vouchers?
You do not strike me as being interested in an objective review and discussion of research at this point in your life. Otherwise you would not so blithely dismiss these findings of respected researchers publishing in a peer-reviewed journal. Am I wrong here?
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