Send your kids to public school, even if you can afford private.
Future generations will thank you.
Photo by BananaStock/Thinkstock
Photo by BananaStock/Thinkstock
You are a bad person if you send your children to private school. Not
bad like murderer bad—but bad like ruining-one-of-our-nation’s-most-essential-institutions-in-order-to-get-what’s-best-for-your-kid
bad. So, pretty bad.
I am not an education policy wonk: I’m just judgmental. But it seems
to me that if every single parent sent every single child to public
school, public schools would improve. This would not happen immediately.
It could take generations. Your children and grandchildren might get
mediocre educations in the meantime, but it will be worth it, for the
eventual common good. (Yes, rich people might cluster. But rich people
will always find a way to game the system: That shouldn’t be an argument
against an all-in approach to public education any more than it is a
case against single-payer health care.)
So, how would this work exactly? It’s simple! Everyone needs to be
invested in our public schools in order for them to get better. Not just
lip-service investment, or property tax investment, but real
flesh-and-blood-offspring investment. Your local school stinks but you
don’t send your child there? Then its badness is just something you
deplore in the abstract. Your local school stinks and you do send your
child there? I bet you are going to do everything within your power to
make it better.
And parents have a lot of power. In many underresourced schools, it’s
the aggressive PTAs that raise the money for enrichment programs and
willful parents who get in the administration’s face when a teacher is
falling down on the job. Everyone, all in. (By the way: Banning
private schools isn’t the answer. We need a moral adjustment, not a
legislative one.)
There are a lot of reasons why bad people send their kids to private
school. Yes, some do it for prestige or out of loyalty to a
long-standing family tradition or because they want their children to
eventually work at Slate. But many others go
private for religious reasons, or because their kids have behavioral or
learning issues, or simply because the public school in their district
is not so hot. None of these are compelling reasons. Or, rather, the
compelling ones (behavioral or learning issues, wanting a not-subpar
school for your child) are exactly why we should all opt in, not out.
I believe in public education, but my district school really
isn’t good! you might say. I understand. You want the best for your
child, but your
child doesn’t need it. If you can afford private school (even if
affording means scrimping and saving, or taking out loans), chances are
that your spawn will be perfectly fine at a crappy public school. She
will have support at home (that’s you!) and all the advantages that go
along with being a person whose family can pay for and cares about
superior education—the exact kind of family that can help your crappy
public school become less crappy. She may not learn as much or be as
challenged, but take a deep breath and live with that. Oh, but she’s
gifted? Well, then, she’ll really be fine.
I went K–12 to a terrible public school. My high school didn’t offer
AP classes, and in four years, I only had to read one
book. There wasn’t even soccer. This is not a humblebrag! I
left home woefully unprepared for college, and without that
preparation, I left college without having learned much there either.
You know all those important novels that everyone’s read? I haven’t. I
know nothing about poetry, very little about art, and please don’t quiz
me on the dates of the Civil War. I’m not proud of my ignorance. But
guess what the horrible result is? I’m doing fine. I’m not saying it’s a
good thing that I got a lame education. I’m saying that I survived it,
and so will your child, who must endure having no AP calculus so that in
25 years there will be AP calculus for all.
By the way: My parents didn’t send me to this shoddy school because
they believed in public ed. They sent me there because that’s where we
lived, and they weren’t too worried about it. (Can you imagine?) Take
two things from this on your quest to become a better person: 1) Your
child will probably do just fine without “the best,” so don’t freak out too
much, but 2) do freak out a little more than my parents did—enough to
get involved.
Also remember that there’s more to education than what’s taught. As
rotten as my school’s English, history, science, social studies, math,
art, music, and language programs were, going to school with poor kids
and rich kids, black kids and brown kids, smart kids and not-so-smart
ones, kids with superconservative Christian parents and other
upper-middle-class Jews like me was its own education and life
preparation. Reading Walt Whitman in ninth grade changed the way you see
the world? Well, getting drunk before basketball games with kids who
lived at the trailer park near my house did the same for me. In fact
it’s part of the reason I feel so strongly about public schools.
Many of my (morally bankrupt) colleagues send their children to
private schools. I asked them to tell me why. Here is the response that
most stuck with me: “In our upper-middle-class world, it is hard not to
pay for something if you can and you think it will be good for your
kid.” I get it: You want an exceptional arts program and computer
animation and maybe even Mandarin. You want a cohesive educational
philosophy. You want creativity, not teaching to the test. You want
great outdoor space and small
classrooms and personal attention. You know who else wants those
things? Everyone.
Whatever you think your children need—deserve—from their school
experience, assume that the parents at the nearby public housing complex
want the same. No, don’t just assume it. Do something about it. Send
your kids to school with their kids. Use the energy you have otherwise
directed at fighting to get your daughter a slot at the competitive
private school to fight for more computers at the public school. Use
your connections to power and money and innovation to make your local
school—the one you are now sending your child to—better. Don’t just
acknowledge your liberal guilt—listen to it.
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