I agree with you on the matter of funding review, both private and public school funding for that matter, given some of your more 'elite' schools in 'nicer' areas both public and private are receiving exuberant amounts of funding in comparison to other government and non-government schools.
Though to stop funding to all private schools is just outrageous, what about parents who work their guts out and pay their taxes to afford their children a private school education, don't you think they deserve to see a little of what they pay in the way of tax find it's way to their own children's schools?
Look, both my children have enjoyed both public and private schools, so I am by no means biased here, and my own mother worked her fingers to the bone to send me to private schools as a child also, and on a single parent salary I will just add. No assistance back then...not like there is now for single working mums wanting to send their kids to private schools.
Why shouldn't all schools, who's students parents pay their taxes be entitled to some public funding, (these kids parents forming a percentage of the public too after all)..something in return for trying to give their kids the best possible start in life.
Private or public, either way it goes, there's no such thing as a free education/lunch these days, and suggesting we cut funding to private schools will only place increasing pressure on government schools.
You like many people are of the misconception that kids who attend private schools are privileged snotty brats....you couldn't be more wrong when it comes to your average local private school.
Many family's are living below the bread line just to afford their kids school fees, and this is/was a sacrifice they chose to make and should not be penalised for.
What do you think it costs the government to educate one public student for a year at the tax payers expense?
Now if these kids are going to private schools, then why shouldn't their own schools receive at least part of what they would have received had they gone to a public school?
There needs to be an incentive/compromise to encourage family's in a position to send their kids to private schools to do so ... or else the public system will buckle under the strain of increasing student numbers and staff shortages.