As long as people who have the money can opt out of public education and health services they will continue to not care very much if either or both are inadequately funded.
I've opted my children out of state education, and I care deeply about both of those. One of the reasons that I've opted my children out of state education is because I'm disappointed in the standards they achieve.
The story says that Labour want to "integrate" private schools into the state sector, not close them. Good for them.
They want to 'integrate' the facilities - they do not want to integrate any of the various traditions, exceptional extra-curricular suites, nursery through to A-level continuums. It's not integration, it's assimilation.
This could also help to resolve the problem of so-called schools teaching religious dogma and not much else to children whose entire lives are likely to be blighted by it.
No it won't, Free Schools can set their own religious curricula - indeed, one of the factors that's guided me against putting my children into the local education system is the fact that our local state school is an explicitly Christian indoctrination station.
Labour politicians who send their children to private schools (or take advantage of private health care) should have to explain their hypocrisy.
Arguably, yes, although the argument 'if my local school system was well-funded and adequate I'd send my children to it' is pretty persuasive so long as they're passing legislation and budgets to change that fact.
Their children will already have some advantages just because their parents are who they are.
Yes, however wanting a decent education for you children can be wanting it for its own sake; the fact that some children will not get it does not mean that you're necessarily seeking advantage, even though you can't claim that you don't know it's an effect.
Educating children from different backgrounds together is, in my view, a good thing.
Agreed. The problem is that lumping children together in order to aim at mediocrity doesn't do wonders for any of them.
Finland is a good example to try to follow, even if it takes a long time, and integration with other policies, to achieve.
Agreed.
O.