This Week's Suggested Book from the Ashbrook Center (Monday, March 27, 2000)
 | | Choosing Equality: School Choice, the Constitution, and Civil Society
by Joseph P. Viteritti |
Brookings Institution Press 284 pages, January 1999 Hardcover, 29.95 ISBN: 0815790465
A percentage of the proceeds from your purchase of this book from Amazon.com will benefit the Ashbrook Center.
America is now in the second generation of debate on school choice. The first was prompted
by the provocative voucher proposal conceived by Milton Friedman in 1955 and brought into
the mainstream by Chubb and Moe's seminal book Politics, Markets, and American Schools (Brookings, 1990). It introduced
a pure market model in which schools would be publicly financed but privately operated. While opponents continue to contend
that choice will lead to the demise of public education, the weakening of civil society, and the fostering of separate and unequal
systems of education, Joseph P. Viteritti argues that these long-held assertions must give way to present realities. The rich and
diverse experience we have had with magnet schools, controlled choice, inter-district choice, charter schools, privately funded
vouchers, and public vouchers in Milwaukee and Cleveland provides a solid basis for crafting a choice policy that enhances the
educational opportunities of children whose needs are not being met by the present system of public education.
Drawing on his background as a political scientist, legal scholar, and education practitioner, Viteritti starts his book with the
promise articulated in the landmark Brown decision of 1954. After reviewing a variety of policy initiatives enacted to promote
educational opportunity, he finds that the nation has fallen short of providing decent schooling for its most disadvantaged
children, and in so doing has delayed the movement toward social and political equality. Viteritti does not contend that choice in
the form of charter schools or vouchers for the poor is a solution to racial inequality, but he believes that these forms of choice
can move the country in the proper direction. He insists that the nation cannot pretend to have a serious commitment to the goal
of educational equality as long as choice is available only to those with the private means to afford it.
Acknowledging the serious legal and civic concerns registered by choice opponents, Viteritti turns their arguments on their
heads. He proposes that providing poor people with public support to attend religious schools is consistent with the pluralist
constitutional model envisioned by Madison and the practices common to contemporary democratic societies. He explains how
denying choice to the poor undermines the redistributive social agenda of the modern liberal state, and how a strict standard of
church-state separation is out of touch with the culture of poor minority communities where the church is the most viable
institution for social progress. Viteritti warns that by failing to appreciate the crucial role that religious congregations play in
inner-city neighborhoods, liberal social analysts have compromised the civic vitality of poor communities. He also admonishes
conservatives to abandon the pure market approach to education reform in favor of a choice policy designed specifically to
benefit the poor. He concludes that choice merits support from all sides of the political spectrum, because a sound education is
an essential foundation for any policy strategy designed to promote a healthy democratic society.
Table of Contents
- 1. Debating Choice
- 2. Defining Equality
- 3. The Salience of Choice
- 4. Public Schools and Private Schools
- 5. Equality as Religious Freedom
- 6. Religion and the Common School
- 7. Education, Choice, and Civil Society
- 8. Choosing Equality
- Notes
- Index
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