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Public Schools Vs Charter Schools Essay

543 Words3 Pages

In 1825, Ohio General Assembly established “common schools” (public) and funded the schools with a half-mil property tax (“Public Education”). Using property tax dollars to fund public schools in Ohio has been a controversial issue for decades. However, even more contentious is the use of public tax money to fund for-profit community or charter schools. In the last 10 years, legislators have decimated funding for public education at the same time increasing mandates that are unfunded. This puts tremendous pressure on public school districts to meet state standards, retain qualified teachers, and educate 21st century students. (Strauss, What taxpayers should know about the cost of school choice) Pilfering public tax dollars from public institutions and handing it over to for profit schools is destroying our public education system. Charter schools were theoretically to be the fix for failing traditional public schools; to give parents a choice in the educational environment of their children. Unfortunately, instead of being an answer to a problem, charter schools became the problem. When the government instituted charter schools, they did not put any safety nets in place to stop corruption, nor did they implement sufficient oversight to measure success. With no oversight, charter schools make their own rules and do not …show more content…

However, the number of failing charters that run poorly is climbing. States like North Carolina, Michigan, California, Ohio, Indiana, Arizona, and Tennessee just to name a few, are forfeiting millions of taxpayer dollars on failing charters (Strauss, What taxpayers should know about the cost of school choice). Meanwhile, public schools are drowning in regulations and mandates, costing them billions of dollars implementing and snatching money away from educating their

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