Saturday, September 8, 2007

James Laxer on John Tory's Education Policy

This is a good critique of Tory's push for funding of faith-based schools. As Laxer notes it is a bit odd and rather risky that Tory should push this issue so hard. Of course some groups will be in strong support but perhaps there will be a majority backlash in defence of the public school system.

On Education: John Tory Starts a Culture War

John Tory, Ontario’s Conservative leader, has enjoyed a reputation for moderation and judgment. In light of this, it has come as an unwelcome surprise that Tory has embarked on a radical strategy, no less disruptive than Mike Harris' Common Sense Revolution, in his bid to lead his party to power in the upcoming provincial election. The traditional approach for a moderate opposition politician, as Tory was presumed to be, is to campaign on the defects of the sitting government, showing how it has failed to keep its promises, and capitalizing on scandals and administrative lapses.

Tory and his handlers have obviously decided that this timeworn method will not succeed in toppling Dalton McGuinty’s Liberals. Instead Tory has started a culture war. He hopes to win by injecting highly divisive hot-button issues into the campaign. The tactics are borrowed from the playbook of the American hard right.

At first glance, Tory’s proposal to provide public funding to faith based schools can be seen as nothing more than an attempt to extend to other religious denominations what Roman Catholics already enjoy.

In fact, his goal is not to engage in a debate about the rights and wrongs of public support for Catholic schools, a policy that is rooted in the Constitution of 1867. His goal is to launch a 21st campaign to stress the fault lines in Ontario society and to win power in the process.

If the Ontario government were to fund faith based primary and secondary schools, two consequences would be highly likely. First, public funding for Jewish, Muslim, Orthodox Christian and other faith-based schools would inevitably open the door to legal challenges from still other faiths and sects for the funding of their schools as well.

Analogies with the Catholic case for funding are misleading because the existence of Catholic schools, whatever one thinks of this, is constitutionally based. This means that the presence of publicly funded Catholic schools cannot be used as the basis for court challenges on behalf of other faiths. Once some other faith’s schools are funded, though, this situation would be completely altered. Tory’s proposal, if implemented, would throw the courts open to plaintiffs arguing for the support of all manner of sectarian schools.

Second, assurances from advocates for the public funding of faith based schools that this would not lead to a massive exodus of students from public schools provide cold comfort. In a rapidly evolving multi-cultural society such as Ontario’s, against the backdrop of rising assaults on secular norms in many countries, it is foolhardy to suggest that the availability of publicly funded sectarian schools would not lead to a flight from public schools.

At present, public schools are a meeting ground for people from diverse backgrounds, a key to Ontario’s success as a society that has done better than most others in realizing the benefits of diversity, and avoiding the pitfalls. Public funding of sectarian schools is bound to generate campaigns to win parents over to the idea that to be true to their faith they should send their children to a school whose students are members of their faith alone.

That Tory has his sights set on a radical debate about public education can be grasped from his flirtation with the idea of introducing creationism into the school curriculum. The Conservative leader threw this stink-bomb into the debate and then appeared to back off a little.

His mention of creationism sent a coded message to those whose religious convictions motivate them to launch a wide-ranging attack on what they see as today’s Godless, secular society.

Creationism, the idea that the earth was created by a divine-being a few thousand years ago and that humans once walked with dinosaurs, is bogus science. It has no more place in a school curriculum than the notion that the earth is flat or that the sun revolves around the earth---ideas that were once held by powerful religions whose leaders were prepared to execute those with different views on the nature of the universe.

What Tory was doing was letting religious fundamentalists know that he is not unsympathetic to their aspirations.

Beyond the fundamentalists, there are other interests at play. Look at the coalition Tory has supporting him on the funding issue. In addition to those who support public funding for faith based schools there are the advocates of public funding for private schools. It is not accidental that private schools that draw their students largely from upper middle class families see the current election campaign as a golden opportunity for their own cause.

And they are not the only ones. A campaign is in full swing in the United States to establish a new multi-billion dollar market for the private sector through the privatization of much of the public school system. Education is seen as a lucrative field in which private companies can move into the designing, managing and supplying of schools. The neo-cons and business interests who support the establishment of charter schools (some public, some private) and other privatization initiatives make the case that the public school system is an unproductive monopoly dominated by teachers and teachers’ unions. They look forward to the day when this public monopoly will be dismantled and parents will be free to “choose” the types of schools their children attend.

In the process, the public school system will be reduced to a last resort option for the poorest and least powerful segments of society. Out of this will come billions of dollars in profits for those who have had the foresight to spot a golden opportunity.

The Ontario Conservatives are not telling the electorate where the path they have chosen will lead. But we were not born yesterday, Mr. Tory. We have seen this motion picture before.

3 comments:

Skinny Dipper said...

James Laxer wrote a convincing article on where public funding for private religious schools could lead us.

John Tory likes to tell us that these schools will become public schools if they follow the Ontario curriculum. No, these schools will still be privately operated and be able to charge tuition. For every dollar a private religious school receives from the Ontario taxpayer, the schools can charge 50 cents less in tuition but receive 50 cents more in revenue.

If private religious schools receive public funding, why not private secular schools? If not the secular schools, can anyone place a cross in front of a school building and call it an "independent Christian" school?

Essentially, poor families will be subsidizing the education of richer families under John Tory's proposal.

Anonymous said...

I read it twice and am still unsure if you support Inclusive Public Education, or not! My kids go to Associated Hebrew Schools which is a network of schools - the original one was founded in 1907 - yes we are now 100 years old and still paying our education taxes on top of tuition. We teach the full Ontario curriculum in addition to all Judaic studies (Hebrew language, religion, history, holidays) by having a half day with a General Studies and the other half with a Hebrew Studies teacher. So, your argument that somehow the religious studies would suffer if we covered the full Ontario curriculum doesn't wash. If our kids went to public school the money would be found, so this is not a money issue. Please tell me what exactly is the issue? 93% of faith-based students in this province attend fully funded Catholic schools; why are the remaining 7% shut out? Any tolerant fair-minded person would support inviting all faith-based schools to join the public school system!

Anonymous said...

Do catholic schools charge tuition?!? Nope! Why would other faith-based schools who are already operating at equal or less than the cost of public and public catholic schools? Are you that intolerant of other faiths, who pay their taxes, that you would not welcome them in the public school system as long as they followed all the rules - just like the 650,000 in Catholic schools? McGuinty and Wynne are both on record with support for equal funding of faith-based schools. Like, the rest of the Liberal record, they are now showing their dishonesty by flip-flopping on this issue. The Catholic Bishops issued a statement yesterday supporting the right of parents to choose a faith-based public school education for their children - and education that McGuinty had, his siblings had, his dad and kids had, and lets not forget his wife who teaches at a Catholic public school - Premier McHypocrite! Ontario has private and public Catholic schools, why can't we support for other faiths? I respect those who are against equal funding and call for no funding for any religions which is the Green platform; at least they aren't hypocrites like the Liberals and NDP.