It doesn't seem strange to me, since it's always been this way.
Michiganistan has moved to make it less dependent upon local
financing, thereby setting a minimum standard of education.
(It should be raised, IMO.)
Should local districts (if able) fund schooling above this standard?
Yes.
Cool, thanks for the clarity. I'm gonna ramble on here a bit, so feel free to ignore it if you're not interested. Just a topic that interests me a LOT, partly because I studied various education models professionally, partly cos...I dunno...we all have our quirky interests.
Politically, I'm not particularly left, but neither am I libertarian. For me, social cohesion is important, so I tend to measure some things (education and health are prime examples) by the long term societal impacts, as much as anything.
Long story short, I'm not getting overly stressed about every poor kid who is disadvantaged, but I am concerned with the long term impact of poor kids being disadvantaged.
We can argue the toss on what constitutes 'disadvantage' of course. In general terms, take the same baby (same aptitude to learn, same attitude) and put one in a wealthy situation and one in a poor situation, and the outcomes will be quite different. Pretty obvious, I guess. But effectively, the poor kid would need to work harder to overcome natural disadvantages and get ahead, and would still be working at a disadvantage to the rich kid.
So, what do we do about that and why?
My view (and I know we differ...that's fine) is that society as a whole is stronger if the hardworking poor kid has a good chance of social mobility. I don't want to give handouts, or make society some sort of crutch for the weak. But I do want that smart, hardworking kid to have access to education and health care, as a minimum. Give him or her the tools to make something of themselves.
If funding models for schooling...as in actual funding provided by governmental bodies...is skewed towards the richer kids, it's just another thing which is making the smart, hardworking poor kids ability to be socially mobile that much poorer.
I can site specific studies for this if you like, but you probably won't find any of this controversial;
Children of wealthy parents (top 25% income)
- read to their children more
- have more books in the house
- sees their father more regularly
- get out of the house more often
- eat with their parents more
- model positive educational behaviours more (eg. reading in front of children, discussing issues, etc)
- are at public schools with drastically better access to add-on funding (fundraising, business access, etc)
That's all without addressing less direct behaviours which impact, such as abusive household situations, crime, etc.
Let's say we don't want to try and do
any sort of social engineering, in terms of everything listed above. Shouldn't we at least provide all children the same governmental money towards their education? Isn't it better for society to get a little closer to a meritocracy? Isn't a meritocracy what libertarians would prefer, assuming it doesn't involved undue government interference to achieve it?
It just seems like if poorer schools were provided additional money (the way they are in most countries) to try and offset the natural disadvantages that poor, smart, hardworking kid faces, you'd find that problematic. But the rich kids are provided more (from the government...not from fundraising, parents, etc) and it's no problem at all?
It's very hard for me to understand, and seems somewhat disastrous if you're goal is to allow the best and brightest to achieve to their potential, based on their own efforts.