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Message
Georgia follows Alabama- governor to sign landmark school choice legislation
Posted on 3/24/24 at 5:15 pm
Posted on 3/24/24 at 5:15 pm
WSJ editorial board praises the bill. Always a good day when teachers unions lose. This year has been the biggest year in American history for school choice movement. For decades, rural politicians funded by teachers unions have killed bill after bill, all over America. These politicians have either retired or lost their primaries to politicians who want to fix the problem.
LINK
Regardless of your thoughts on school choice, you have to love to see special interest groups (teachers unions) fail in their bribery scheme.
quote:
Sixteen Georgia House Republicans dealt school choice a setback a year ago, voting against education savings accounts, or ESAs, for students in poorly performing districts. This month the ESAs came back to life, imperfectly, but at least it’s a start.
The Georgia House voted 91-82 last week to pass the scholarships, which are worth $6,500 each. They can be used toward private school tuition and other education expenses by students in the worst-performing 25% of Georgia public schools. Eight of last year’s Republican “nays” flipped their votes. The Senate, which passed the bill last year, voted for it again on Wednesday, and it heads to Republican Gov. Brian Kemp’s desk.
The success is thanks to Mr. Kemp getting over his seeming ambivalence from a year ago. He gave school choice top billing in his State of the State address, telling lawmakers the state had “run out of ‘next years.’” Last year his tepid public support came too late.
quote:
One of the “yes” votes last year was Democratic Rep. Mesha Mainor. This year she voted yes as a Republican, having switched parties in part out of frustration at Democrats for keeping education options away from parents. “I loved the bill last year, I love it now,” she said, according to the Georgia Recorder. “It meets the needs of so many different families.”
LINK
Regardless of your thoughts on school choice, you have to love to see special interest groups (teachers unions) fail in their bribery scheme.
Posted on 3/24/24 at 5:18 pm to HailHailtoMichigan!
Brian Kemp doing work and continuing to build his legacy as one of the best governers in Georgia history and one of the best current chief execs in the nation
This post was edited on 3/24/24 at 5:28 pm
Posted on 3/24/24 at 5:21 pm to lnomm34
?
Ot lounge is where we talk about k-12
Ot lounge is where we talk about k-12
Posted on 3/24/24 at 5:23 pm to HailHailtoMichigan!
Let the kids from failing schools move to schools that are not failing so they can fail also. Makes sense
Posted on 3/24/24 at 5:39 pm to Quatrepot
quote:
Let the kids from failing schools move to schools that are not failing so they can fail also. Makes sense
While all good private schools magically raise tuition by 6.5k due to inflation so they can keep the same level of exclusivity. New private schools will form, charging exactly $6.5k per student to take advantage of the situation, but 9/10 of them will be at or below bad public school level and run by individuals just trying to make a quick buck. School choice solves nothing and ignores the larger issues in education.
Posted on 3/24/24 at 5:48 pm to SteelerBravesDawg
Counter it with an argument. I know a thing or two about school scores, trust me.
Posted on 3/24/24 at 5:54 pm to OleVaught14
quote:Agree. For the most part, kids who come from homes in which education is important, do well.
School choice solves nothing and ignores the larger issues in education.
Crappy schools end up that way because of the clientele; which leads to no one wanting to teach there; which leads to high percentage of crappy teachers to go along with the crappy clientele.
This post was edited on 3/24/24 at 5:56 pm
Posted on 3/24/24 at 5:55 pm to HailHailtoMichigan!
I’m not sure the specifics elsewhere but when it passes in Texas it’s going to be a disaster for rural districts.
It won’t be fun seeing those tax dollars go to help rich families in Preston Hollow and Highland Park put their kids through elite private schools. But Abbot knows where his bread is buttered and it’s not BFE.
Oh, and excellent public districts like Richardson are now having to close campuses due to lack of funding.
It won’t be fun seeing those tax dollars go to help rich families in Preston Hollow and Highland Park put their kids through elite private schools. But Abbot knows where his bread is buttered and it’s not BFE.
Oh, and excellent public districts like Richardson are now having to close campuses due to lack of funding.
This post was edited on 3/24/24 at 5:57 pm
Posted on 3/24/24 at 6:05 pm to TejasHorn
quote:
Posted byMessageTejasHornGeorgia follows Alabama- governor to sign landmark school choice legislation by TejasHornI’m not sure the specifics elsewhere but when it passes in Texas it’s going to be a disaster for rural districts.
No it isn't.
Posted on 3/24/24 at 6:13 pm to TejasHorn
You are buying the teacher union lies
Honestly just shut your fricking mouth about a subject you know nothing about
Honestly just shut your fricking mouth about a subject you know nothing about
Posted on 3/24/24 at 6:19 pm to HailHailtoMichigan!
quote:
Always a good day when teachers unions lose
Georgia doesn't have teachers unions
Posted on 3/24/24 at 6:20 pm to Quatrepot
quote:
Let the kids from failing schools move to schools that are not failing so they can fail also. Makes sense
They already do that if there's space at the schools.
Posted on 3/24/24 at 6:26 pm to Porter Osborne Jr
The national teachers union spent a lot of money trying to stop this.
Posted on 3/24/24 at 6:29 pm to HailHailtoMichigan!
quote:
love to see special interest groups (teachers unions) fail in their bribery scheme.
I'll be honest, I think this is a big deal because special interest and corporations are the ones who really run this country
Posted on 3/24/24 at 6:37 pm to Quatrepot
Parents that are involved, care enough about their child’s education, and have the transportation to get their kid to the better school are not those of failing kids. I’d love to see the % of students who left a failing district 3-4yrs after this rule came into effect to see exactly how many left. I’d bet it’s less than 5% because most failing kids’ parents don’t give two shits.
Posted on 3/24/24 at 6:42 pm to HailHailtoMichigan!
LA needs this now
Posted on 3/24/24 at 6:56 pm to OleVaught14
quote:
but 9/10 of them will be at or below bad public school level and run by individuals just trying to make a quick buck
There’s a smidgen of truth here, but mostly you’re overstating the problem and you’re missing other benefits.
First of all, I think you don’t realize how abysmal most of these failing public schools are. It’s virtually impossible for 9/10 of the new private schools to be worse. In reality, the majority of the new charter schools in New Orleans are at least marginally better than the regular public schools they replaced, and half are significantly better.
Also, the really bad ones lose their license (charter) and another school company is brought in. That never happened with regular public schools.
Secondly, the new private/charter schools have “choice” as well. If a student is ungovernable and a danger to the other kids, they can actually get expelled.
As far as the Catholic schools and other religious and established private schools, many of them may open their own new schools, but managed by the established schools. They have been a huge improvement over the failing public schools.
Posted on 3/24/24 at 7:20 pm to GCTigahs
quote:
Parents that are involved, care enough about their child’s education, and have the transportation to get their kid to the better school are not those of failing kids. I’d love to see the % of students who left a failing district 3-4yrs after this rule came into effect to see exactly how many left. I’d bet it’s less than 5% because most failing kids’ parents don’t give two shits.
/Thread.
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