Philip O’Carroll, co-founder
Fitzroy North 3068
March 2011
A SUBMISSION
to the
Review of Funding for
Schooling
From Philip O’Carroll, Co-founder,
The opportunity provided by
this Review will be wasted unless it is based squarely on mainstream Australian
hopes for the future. These are
·
a better
standard of education for
·
a better window of opportunity for all Australian
children.
School Funding Policy
directly affects the realisation of these core values.
To achieve these outcomes,
there are three essential conditions:
(1) the performance
of schools in core curriculum must be made public;
(2) parents must be
free
to choose who educates their child;
and
(3) new and better schools must be allowed to exist.
First essential
condition: the performance of schools in core curriculum must be made public.
Public availability of
performance outcomes must be a necessary condition of funding.
Only the publishing of results
such as NAPLAN will stimulate the necessary reforms for schools which are
under-servicing children. High-achieving
schools should co-operate with external assessment schemes for the sake of
children everywhere.
Public results enable parents
to make an informed choice of school for their particular children.
Both
absolute
scores and rates of improvement should be published. Different schools will suit different
children at different times. Some
children need the stimulation of a class operating at A
level. There is no room for
“improvement” here. Others may need a
class that will lift them from say D level to C level.
The publicising of results is
becoming a reality as we speak, thanks to NAPLAN and MY SCHOOL.
________
Second essential condition: parents
must be free to choose who educates their child.
This parental right does not
yet exist for all income levels in
This
is not an attack on state schooling.
There are many splendid state schools.
But if true parental choice were made available, under-performing
schools would raise their standards overnight.
IMPLEMENTATION: let the standard
(state-school) funding follow the child to the school chosen by the parent (portable
student funding).
This
is commonly known as the voucher system.
There are two main objections to the voucher system: (a) the country
cannot afford it, and
(b) the envy factor will not tolerate it.
Re
the cost: the taxpayer already pays
·
full funding for the
2/3 of the population who use state schools,
·
over 7/10 funding
for the 20% who attend Catholic system schools, and
·
a substantial fraction of standard funding for the
remaining 12%.
When
you deduct the administrative savings a simple voucher system would bring, we
are not very far from funding a simple voucher system right now. (Naturally any family
choosing a school that spends more than the standard funding has to pay the
difference from personal income.)
But
let us assume the envy factor is too strong to ignore. Let us also assume that it is politically
impossible to means-test families who choose state schools. What we are left with is portable student
funding with some element of a means-test for higher income families who
choose private schools.
There
is no earthly reason why Catholic-school-system children are receiving less funding
than children who attend state schools.
This discrimination should be ended forthwith.
What
we are left with is the existing practice of means-tested funding for users of
independent schools. Ironically, while
this practice panders to envy politics, it has meant that lower-income children
have been financially barred from this highest performing sector. This bar should be removed immediately.
Since
nearly 90% of children would already be on full funding (in state and Catholic
schools), any family of the lower 75% income sector that gains enrolment in an
independent school should automatically receive its full voucher for paying towards
their independent school fees.
Such
enrolments will often require a financial commitment from the family, but open
a new window of opportunity that was not there before. It will also motivate higher standards all
round – because of the increased potential for social mobility.
The
extra cost to the taxpayer will be small, since any families migrating to an
independent school will mostly be moving from a fully funded school place
anyway.
For
the remaining upper-quarter income sector using independent schools, the
portable student funding should be provided on a sliding scale – so as not
to create sudden gaps or distinct “classes” in education.
The
portable
student funding should be 100% of standard funding for the lower 75%
income families and this funding should then slide gradually. This means 100% funding for the 1st
to 75th income percentile then gradually reducing to say 50% funding (at the
100th percentile).
__________
Third essential
condition: new and better schools must be allowed to exist.
The power of parental choice
is the secret to a high standard of education.
But this power is diminished if there is little diversity amongst schools
– little to choose from. With
overwhelming red tape and a negative attitude, existing school registration
authorities discourage the opening of new schools by capable and innovative
teachers.
New
schools must be allowed so that innovation and evolution can occur. Better ways will be copied. The problem is that the power to permit a new
school to open is at present vested in the state education departments – who
operate their own schools in direct competition to all other schools. There needs to be a second authority for
registration, perhaps federal.
There
is no other industry where one operator can veto the existence of another. Funding
should be extended to schools which are registered and inspected by an
authority independent of the state school bureaucracies. With the advent of publication of school
results, there is less rationale than ever for close interference in school
operations.
Take
our school,
Now
look at our school’s outcomes on the NAPLAN.
If we put our
Conclusions:
1.
Accountability
Public
availability of performance outcomes must be a necessary condition of funding.
2.
Portable Student Funding
Let
standard (state-school) funding follow a child to any registered school chosen
by the parent, gradually reduced for families above the 75th percentile
choosing private schools.
3.
Independent Registration Authority
State
Education Departments operate in direct and fierce competition with other
schools and their inspectors (or “reviewers”) should be replaced by independent
education authorities.
LINK: See the long standing argument
for a fairer funding system for Australia