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Wyatt’s World By Wyatt Emmerich Where would we be without competition? Both
my grandfather and father were huge supporters of education in
Mississippi. My grandfather, Oliver Emmerich, served for years on the
state board of higher education. My father, John Emmerich, worked
closely with Gov. William Winter to help secure the passage of the
Education Reform Act of 1982. John Emmerich sat by Winter’s side in the
governor’s office as they called every single legislator in for an
individual plea for support. It worked. Rep.
Linda Whittington from Greenwood, one of my dearest friends who for
years lived with my mother during the legislative session, was caught
in the recent crossfire of the education controversy. Speaker Phillip
Gunn removed her from the House education committee because she opposed
some of the reforms. Linda and I had spent many late night debates on
education reform. So it is not lightly that I
take this position, but I wholeheartedly support the Republican efforts
to shake up our educational system and try something new. “Our
public education system is a lie.” Those were the words of James
Meredith as he sat in my office a few months ago. I wanted to talk
about his days at Ole Miss, but he wanted to talk about reforming
public education in Mississippi. It is imperative to the future of our
state, he told me. A tree farmer, Meredith had
been able to send his children to private school where they succeeded
greatly. But with many grandchildren, some entered the public schools.
He has been shocked and disappointed. One thing I
remember about my father, John Emmerich – he was never one to stick to
a losing plan. If something wasn’t working, he was willing to try
something new. Shortly before his death, we discussed the emerging
issue of school choice. His position: “It makes sense. There is no
reason to oppose it.” Things move slowly in
Mississippi. Now 17 years later, we are on the precipice of public
vouchers, school choice and charter schools. There is one common theme
running through all of these innovations – competition. Where
would we be without competition? How good would the Alabama football
team be without competition? How good would the best restaurants in
Mississippi be without competition? Competition is the missing
ingredient in our school system. We are handicapping our children by
perpetuating a huge, bloated, inefficient government monopoly to teach
our children. Our neighboring state Louisiana,
meanwhile, has been a model of innovative ideas. Louisiana has 90
charter schools. In New Orleans, 71 percent of students are in charter
schools. A recent editorial in the New Orleans
Times-Picayune praised the success of these schools, noting that test
scores and graduation rates have improved rapidly with the introduction
of competition. The editorial concluded with this statement: “The
improvement is undeniable. And that could be life-changing for these
students, for their families and for our community.” The
supporters of public education’s existing monopoly mean well. Just like
the Russian communists, they believe having one big system is more
efficient. They believe that central planners can design a better
system and push it down the system. But they are wrong. The
best system comes from the bottom up, not the top down. It is the
parents and children making personal decisions as to their own best
interests that will improve education, not countless education
administrators telling parents what they need. The
initial legislative moves are baby steps that will have minimal impact
on our huge government bureaucracy. Something is better than nothing. But
to truly transform education - and it needs transforming - much more
sweeping changes will be necessary. We need to dismantle the behemoth
and replace it with a diverse and competitive system based on
competition and parental choice. Government’s
role should be to certify schools so that they meet a reasonable
standard. Government should not have a monopoly on the teaching of
students using public funds. With two children in
alternative schools, I know. School choice is not about skimming the
cream off the top. It is about providing alternative, publicly-funded
education environments for the 30 percent of children for whom the
mainstream school does not work. Right now, we
are losing these children. Our dropout rate is 40 percent - a horrible
figure. One size does not fit all. Let’s create some new sizes. Wyatt Emmerich is publisher of the Northside Sun in Jackson and owner of Emmerich Newspapers Inc.
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