long time guy wrote:
good dolphin wrote:
long time guy wrote:
conns7901 wrote:
“A State need not subsidize private education. But once a State decides to do so, it cannot disqualify some private schools solely because they are religious," Roberts wrote in the court's opinion."
Well to my knowledge Charter schools are not considered private schools. If they were the flood gates wood open in Chicago.
I doubt it. Most parents in Chicago prefer Selective enrollment public school to either Charters or Catholic Schools. Its the overwhelming choice for them. Once they aren't admitted to a selective enrollment then they look into Catholic Schools and if they cannot afford Catholic then they check for Charters.
take out the cost and I guarantee you the that dynamic flips
If they publicly funded the entire tuition of every child in private schools that would still be the case.
For every St. Ignatius and U of C there are 10 Gordon Techs and Leos
A number of parents run to Private Schools because they want to appear to be "privileged". Once their child is denied entry to a selective enrollment school they seek out private schools. The quality of education isn't particularly great in them but when you have the ability to remove the students that you do not want you in essence create your own environment. That's the one major difference.
In terms of instruction most aren't even certified to teach. They recruit out of work people from the private sector to teach those classes.
I have never worked with an instructor anywhere that was just chomping at the bit to work at a private school.
Just a heads up before I address the point, and Joe will love this, Gordon is going to be the new it school within 5 years. It was the talk of everyone with an 8th grader and had great numbers taking the entrance exam. The only thing holding it back was that people didn't want to be a test class with the new campus.
I don't think people run to Catholic school to look priveleged. I think many, if not most, appreciate a religious education, even those who are religious non-Catholic. Those that are Catholic also understand that formal formation ends at 8th grade if the child does not go to Catholic high school.
I also think people look at Catholic schools as disciplined education, maybe for the reasons you cited, but also because the schools are college preps. High school is not the end game so that there is a deterrent even greater than expulsion.
This discussion is not currently theoretical for me.