Friday, September 21, 2007

Microcosm of the voucher arguments

There were two interesting letters to the editor in the Standard Examiner on Thursday.

The first one, in opposition to vouchers, cited a recent article by Paul Mero and systematically refuted claims made by Mero, citing specific studies done by researchers comparing performance of students in private and public schools, specifically in regards to African Americans. This writer included the following in his letter: "Despite diligent effort, researchers have found little evidence that school vouchers increase student learning. It is time that those who would improve education through vouchers reassess their position and consider new possibilities...The goal is real learning, not hypothetical learning."

The second, in support of vouchers, contained the following statements:

"Why have we entrusted the education of our children to the faceless names of the Utah Education Association?"

"Why, then, should we, who claim to want the best education for our children, reject state referendum 1?"

"(Vouchers) would give parents, who would not otherwise be able to obtain a good education for their children, the opportunity to provide them with the education they deserve."

"Those who oppose this bill also oppose the right all of us hold dear: the right to provide our children with a better education than what the public schools could ever hope to provide."

Hmm. Logical, reasoned argument, supported by research and data, versus emotional, ideological claims unsupported by evidence, accompanied by name calling, including the obligatory castigation of the evil teacher's union.

Pretty good microcosm of the whole debate, isn't it?

3 comments:

Jesse Harris said...

That kind of cherry-picks the arguments, doesn't it? I've seen both seasoned, rational arguments and hyperbolic, reactionary emotion from both sides throughout this debate. Trying to cast all of the bad behavior on "the other side" doesn't help matters.

Alienated Wannabe said...

Jesse,

Not by choice, I fear that I have come across as supplying more of the "hyperbolic, reactionary emotion." If so, I sincerely apologize. I am actually more balanced than what I can convey in a short blog comment.

In a nutshell, what are your arguments in favor of vouchers?

In answering, please do not hesitate to distance yourself from me. What I have written represents only the reasons why I support the concept of vouchers. I do not claim to speak for anyone else. I have just written what I honestly believe in my heart to be true, based upon what I have personally witnessed or experienced.

Thanks,
A.W.

Anonymous said...

Steve, what do we do when two persons citing the same studies come to different conclusions? Mr. Jacobsen, both in his initial op-ed and in his follow up letter to the editor, in my opinion, is a glass half empty sort of guy on the voucher issue.

I know he stands by what he wrote; so do I.

Maybe both sides ought to have the originators of these studies come to UT and tell us what they concluded?

Best, PTM