A Deserved ‘Moment of Truth’ for Public Schools as a Record Number of Parents Opt Out

The public school system in America is in crisis — the worst crisis since the forced bussing and integration issues of the 1970s.

Simply put, parents and students have lost faith in the school system to educate. They doubt whether the schools have the best interests of their students at heart. And this poisonous doubt is having a tangible effect on enrollment. Despite the fact that public education is free (taxes, yes) , parents are sending their children to private schools with more reliable, more predictable policies.

One school district in Brooklyn, New York, has seen its rosters fall from 345 students in 2018–19 to a projected 225 this September, with kindergarten enrollment collapsing from 76 to 37. Because school funding is attached to enrollment, that school stands to lose a sizable chunk of its funding — funds to pay teachers and other support staff.

And yes, it’s not the pandemic itself that’s causing the collapse in enrollment. It’s the policies put in place to assuage the desires of teachers.

The Answer:

A joint Stanford Graduate School of Education/New York Times study of 70,000 public schools in 33 states three weeks ago showed that those offering remote-only learning at the beginning of 2020–21 experienced a 3.7 percent decline, while those with in-person schooling went down 2.6 percent. “In other words,” Stanford education professor Thomas S. Dee told the university’s publicity department, “going remote-only actually increased the enrollment decline by about 40 percent.”

The super-entitlement of teachers’ unions and how firmly they control the public school system in America.

Related:

IL Governor Pritzker Renegs on Promise to Give School Districts Control Over COVID Policy

The Future:

All of which would be another reason to view 2020–21 to be the apex of teachers union power, to be followed by inexorable descent. They got their work-at-home carveouts, their school closures, their preferred party running the federal government, their vaccine fast-tracking, their fingerprints all over the “science,” and their hundreds of billions in federal largesse. And as a result of all that influence, they created a product that’s literally repellant to millions of parents, even at the cost of free. Their ranks will almost certainly thin.

It will be extremely difficult to dislodge the teachers’ unions from their perch at the top of the food chain.

Their political power is awesome, given the $30 million they pour into the war chests of democrat state politicians. They also hold the fate of big-city mayors in the palms of their hands as they can easily blackmail even the most powerful mayor by threatening a walkout. Voters become enraged when their lives are turned upside down because they can’t send their kids to school so they can work.

The teachers’ unions won’t go quietly. But we may have seen the apex of their power, as the article suggests. Change for the better may be on the horizon. And all because parents let their feet do the talking.