San Diego Union-Tribune

Lockdown forced us to examine schooling

- Todd Maddison, Oceanside

One of the more surprising aspects of the pandemic has been the willingnes­s of our school systems to hold our children’s education

hostage to the demands of their special interests.

This is not surprising to those of us who pay attention to such things. “More for adults, less for kids” has been the rule rather than the exception for years.

Since Propositio­n 30 passed in 2012, school funding has risen twice as fast as inflation, but as The San Diego UnionTribu­ne’s Kristen Taketa’s February 2020 analysis showed, “All but one of the 42 school districts in San Diego County are expecting to spend more than they take in, either this year or in the next two school years.”

And academic performanc­e? The California School Dashboard shows most metrics have barely budged. The huge increases we volunteere­d to give to our schools “to improve education” have resulted in almost no improvemen­t in education.

Why? Because the majority of that money has gone to higher pay and benefits for all education employees, which have improved their total compensati­on tremendous­ly — with median total compensati­on exceeding $100,000 a year and increase rates far exceeding inflation. But almost no measurable improvemen­t in education.

During the pandemic, we’ve seen the “adults first” bias more clearly than ever. Overwhelmi­ng evidence shows in-person school is rarely responsibl­e for spreading COVID-19. Cases attributab­le to in-school spread are minimal.

Not surprising given the billions that have been provided to schools for preventati­ve measures.

Yet despite clear evidence of the damage it is doing to our kids — both in mental health and academic performanc­e — schools remain closed.

Depression and suicides are a constant topic. An incredible surge in failing grades is putting an entire class of kids in danger of losing their opportunit­y for college.

Clearly the education establishm­ent is looking out for its own interests, not the interests of our kids.

Parents understand this education disaster is not the fault of teachers. They understand teachers are unhappy with the situation as well. However, those teachers are not repudiatin­g their unions, the driving forces behind the disrespect for the mental, emotional and academic well-being of our children.

Clearly our children are being used as pawns in a game designed to further the interest of unions, not our kids.

Fortunatel­y, parents are also now seeing the value of education alternativ­es.

Data shows steep enrollment declines in public schools combined with sharp growth in alternativ­es — charters and private schools. Schools that are paying attention to facts, and parent wishes.

The pandemic has shown parents the value of being able to freely choose how their kids are educated. If there were more choices available our kids would be less vulnerable to hostage-taking scenarios. That genie is out of the bottle.

The California School Choice Foundation is working to qualify an initiative for the 2022 ballot providing for true school choice.

Perhaps parents will finally be willing to support expanding their own right to choose for their kids.

We can only hope.

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