Iterator said:
Children who have richer parents will receive many advantages over their cohorts; why should we add education to this? There will be many points in a person’s life where merit and competition will be significant factors; but no child starts life having earned a better education over others.
On some level doling out an equal amount of money to parents, for each of their children, seems fair and balanced.
But I believe this will lead to many young Canadians attending nothing but Box-Store educational facilities; unable to simply add more money to the government cheque and buy themselves out of the situation.
By making government directly responsible for delivering education, and not hiding behind school boards, vouchers, or private schools, I believe that enough focus can be brought upon this so that we can have a public education system worthy of all our children.
And, though it might not be an especially good argument, I think that many Canadians do see an advantage in having young Canadians being educated with a diverse mix of their peers, as opposed to being overly stratified by economics, religion, or point of origin.
Iterator, have you considered fully why the English call their Private Schools "Public Schools" while their Public Schools are "State Schools"?
At bottom it is because money, like that other great bete-noire of the left the Colt .45 (and before it the longbow - digressing again :-[
) was the great leveller. With money everybody could buy themselves an education. They were not dependent on a hierarchy that hid behind the veil of "merit" to determine who it was safe to entrust with knowledge, and how much knowledge they could be entrusted with, and what knowledge should be released to the public.
Folks talk about access. Quebec and Ireland, and many other places denied their kids, and their adults, unfettered access to knowledge up until the Taschereau Commission in the early '60s. The Church limited access and consequently bolstered the power structure. It was all done by well-meaning individuals with the best of intentions - wishing to maintain societal peace and harmony. But it didn't work. It was a prescription for continuous, intermittent, violent eruptions of rebellion as dissatisfaction built to the point that the lid blew off. The Church controlled the schools, the universities, the kids and the books.
In Scotland "open" lectures at University became the norm in the 18th century. Instead of going to the movies or the theaters local people, common people, would go to lectures and throw a donation in the collection box on the way out. The "lecturers" were used to this system because most of them were Presbyterian ministers, many of them without parishes. The reason they were without parishes was their contracts were not renewed by the local congregations - often because they failed to deliver suitable "Ernest Ainsley" type fire and brimstone sermons on Sunday. They learned the value of being entertainers. And it is easier to "please a crowd" if your subject matter is interesting or useful.
Likewise "Public" Libraries sprang from the same source. A down on his luck poet couldn't get published (Allan Ramsay) so he tried his luck self-publishing his work. That didn't work either. But he discovered a niche with a Blockbuster Video type of business: renting books for a week. The idea caught on just like Blockbusters did and soon dirt poor coal-miners in Lanark and Ayr were organizing their own "subscription" libraries.
Now all information was available to everybody. Because the price was set at what the market would bear.
Just like Blockbusters. I don't know many folks that can't afford to spend a few dollars a week on entertainment at that establishment. And before you go undervaluing the role of entertainment most Americans know what they know of American history from watching John Wayne movies. Most Canadians know what they know about the environment from watching David Suzuki's "The Nature of Things" and Al Gore's "An Inconvenient Truth". Politics are gleaned from Mockumentaries prepared by an ugly, fat f**k. And Victorians learned what they knew about morality and reform from Jane Austen, Walter Scott, Robert Burns and Thomas Hardy.
The Internet has merely improved the accessibility to information.
Those that wish to control information moved to plan B. Since they could no longer justify "merit" based access, or at least prevent general access, they moved to testing, accreditation and pricing folks out of the market. Do you think that James Watt had an Engineering Degree? No his "accreditation" was that he had "studied" at Glasgow but more importantly that his ideas worked more often than the failed. The market place "accredited" him.
Now that we have successfully managed to control access by raising the price of information, and the cost of a ticket to the Guild, the call goes out to make access more universal by reverting to "merit". And how is "merit" to be judged? By "Judges". Superior mortals that understand these things, things that are beyond the ken of us lesser mortals.
The good news is that the Internet has already cut the feet from that argument. And as much as China and Russia and Burma are fighting it, I believe the genie is well and truly out of the bottle.
Now, for peace of mind I still want a reliably "accredited" surgeon slicing me open. But I am not sure that a single source "accreditor", like the CMA or the various Bars (creatures of the original "merit" based Clerical system - they are steeped in the culture of controlled access) is necessarily the best way to go.
Control panels, and electrical equipment, kill people as surely as a poorly wielded surgeon's scalpel. But they aren't licensed by one federal bureaucracy. They are tested by private firms like Underwriter's Laboratories or Canadian Standards Association. Likewise ships are "licensed" by Lloyd's of London or Det Norske Veritas - again private agencies. These companies are hired to test outcomes, not process. They don't care if the engineer is accredited or not. They only care that the panel meets all relevant standards, both their own and any relevant government imposed regulations. Once they have done that the panel may still explode, but if it does it will be because somebody, accredited or not, has found a new way to screw up within the existing rules. The purchaser of the ship or panel gets to choose which accreditor he or she prefers. If the accreditor has a good track-record, ie few catastrophic failures, then the market will tend to favour that accreditor. Likewise for educational accreditation. Have you considered the difference between a University where one attends lectures or one "reads" a subject? One requires that you show up for classes to hear the "Truth" propounded from the pulpit. The other requires that you embark on a course of reading, draw conclusions and then defend your conclusions.
The educational equivalent, I guess, would be the LSAT type tests. Individually purchased from a private administrator and accepted as a reasonable assessment by the merit based law community - who then charge a fortune to become a member of their club.
But the knowledge, the information that education is supposed to supply, that is increasingly available outside of a formal, institutional environment.
I would go further than Edward and state that real "education" ends when individuals are capable of discovering, evaluating and applying information themselves. And I don't think that takes 12 years to accomplish that - much less 16, 18 or 20.
Someplace between Kindergarten and Grade 12 kids learn to read competently and understand what is written. Beyond that they need to be taught "logic" - good old fashioned Aristotelian logic. A schema for organizing your thoughts and available data.
From then on what passes for education can be characterized as:
a) feeding kids "The Truth"
b) teaching them how to become "Good Citizens"
c) keeping them off the labour market as we already have more people than jobs available
d) supplying jobs for teachers, administrators and janitors (see point c).
If information transfer is institutionalized it can be controlled. Societies that control information transfer have not fared well because, if the Great Leader, is a moron then the whole society goes over the cliff with him when he screws up.
Privately financed access to information may be a messy solution but, like democracy, it is better than all the alternatives.
Besides which is more affordable? $40,000 for a Law Degree via a Law School? Or the license fee associated with just writing an accreditation exam - like getting your steam ticket.?