freediver
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Posts: 48862
At my desk.
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Back to the government funding issue:
Muso, p4:
Taxpayers should have freedom of choice - freedom not to contribute to the growing division and alienation of other sectors of society by religious extremists.
People never have freedom to decide how their tax funds are spent, on an individual basis. That would defeat the purpose of communal funds. Your money goes into the same pool as Christians, atheists, whatever, and the government has to come up with a fair way to distribute it.
OK the taxpayer may not be paying for the whole service, but if the tax payer were not subsiding the schools, fewer parents would be able to afford this kind of 'elitist' religious education, and society would benefit as a result.
The tax payer is effectively making it possible for these schools to exist in a lot of cases.
See the figures below. The schools would still exist to a similar level if funding was cut entirely - they spend many times more per student but only get about half the government funding. Yes the funding does make some of these schools possible, or at least allow some borderline students to attend. But each student represents a $4000 saving to the government. Not only are they exercising their freedom to choose, they are also saving the government money. If you are going to tax the parents of these students just as much as everyone else, then they should get a fair cut of the education budget. It's not like atheists are propping up religious education - it's the opposite.
The alternative - government making it impossible for a school to exist by treating the parents unfairly or discriminating on the basis of religion, would undermine people's rights.
It should be fair and equal treatment for all, regardless of religious affiliation. The government's role is not to decide whether religion is good or bad, then set about propping it up or dismantling it. A religious school should be considered the same as an unaffiliated private school. The fact that it is religious is a matter between the school and the parents and students who choose to attend. The level of funding should be judged on issues like cost (economics) and fairness to taxpayers, but not used as an opportunity to discriminate against religious groups.
Public school funding short by $8.4bn
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,24897,23869281-12332,00.html
GOVERNMENT investment in public school facilities is about one-third the amount spent by the private school system, representing a shortfall of $8.4 billion, equivalent to $1.2 million for every public school, a report commissioned by the Australian Education Union has found.
The report estimates $22billion on top of current levels of state and territory investment would be required over the next 12 years to enable public schools to match the average expenditure in the private sector.
Federal and state governments allocate more than $10,000 a year for each public school student, compared with $6000 for each private school student.
However, in a comprehensive look at national capital expenditure in both public and private schools, Mr Rorris found that while private sector investment grew substantially in that period, government spending was static.
Over the three years the report's authors studied the issue, the average amount spent by private schools rose from $1380 to $1560 per student in 2008 dollars, while spending by the states and territories only increased from $537 to $542 per student.
In 2005, the NSW Government spent $426 per public student on capital works, while private schools in the state spent $1492 per student.
The report's findings also highlight research in the US and Britain that found school facilities had a significant impact on the performance of students and teachers, and noted that both countries had embarked on significant programs for school building.
Mr Rorris called for a rethink on the way Australian schools operate, pointing to trends in the US and Britain where schools are becoming hubs for a range of community services.
"Schools need to be redefined and repositioned as more than just 9am-to-3pm school facilities," he said.
"There's a historic opportunity to extend the role and position of the local public school."
He said British schools would offer a core set of extended services by 2010, including childcare, parenting support and community access to IT, sports and arts facilities.
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