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Parental Responsibility
School choice will eliminate some of the bloated bureaucracy
in education by placing more emphasis on parents "customer" decisions
and granting increased local operation by each school. Education bureaucrats
and political lobbyists will lose some of their sway in the public funding
and policy debates, while the attention is refocused on families and students.
FEATURED ARTICLE:
“The First and Fundamental
School”
by Rev. Robert A. Sirico
As I sat in the audience during Pope John Paul IIs final Mass in Cuba
in January of last year, I was impressed by the explosion of exaltation from
the crowd when he spoke firmly to the question of education. He told all parents
in Cuba that they, not the state, are entrusted by God to make decisions about
their childrens education.
Cubas educational system, of course, is the most conspicuous sign of
that regimes omnipresent state control. Before the revolution, there were
250 private Roman Catholic schools in Cuba; all were nationalized by the Communist
Party. For the past thirty-five years, the Party has stolen children from their
parents at the youngest ages and has subjected them to a long and rigorous political
indoctrination by a school curriculum so politicized that no subject escapes
a political spin. The Holy Fathers recent words to the Cuban people raised
hopes that someday Cuban parents could realize their dream of raising their
children according to their own family values.
In truth, John Pauls thoughts on education in his encyclicals, as well
as the traditional teaching of the Catholic Church, remind us of the dangers
associated with politicizing education and robbing parents of their right to
be their childrens first educators. For example, in Familiaris Consortio,
an apostolic exhortation, John Paul calls the family "the first
and fundamental
school." And he continues with unqualified frankness: "Those in society who
are in charge of schools must never forget that the parents have been appointed
by God himself as the first and principal educators of their children and that
their right is completely inalienable."
The word inalienable here is startling and unequivocal. John Paul rejects in
no uncertain terms the secularization, centralization, and state monopolization
that has tended to displace the family, to deny inalienable rights of parents,
and to absorb education into the political nexus.
I do not believe that John Pauls words are meant to apply only to countries
such as Cuba, however. The tendency toward centralization has afflicted developed
societies as well; in some ways, especially considering some of the subject
matter now discussed in American classrooms, the West has been just as aggressive
in making schools the exclusive domain of government.
Again in Familiaris Consortio, the Holy Father instructs us about our moral
duties with regard to political and institutional settings that contradict the
Churchs teaching on education. "If ideologies opposed to the Christian
faith are taught in the schools," he writes, "the family must join with other
families, if possible through family associations, and with all its strength
and with wisdom help the young not to depart from the faith."
For us in the West, returning to the primacy of parents in education will entail
educational reform. We must remember that the issue is not whether radical overhaul
is needed; the issue is, rather, what should be done and how.
I suggest that the best way to begin the process of education reform is by
asking: What has worked in the past? A great example of success is the parish
school. Most parish schools are selective in admission policies, firm in discipline,
publicly accountable in their curricula, and economically efficient in their
delivery of education services. Insofar as educators are willing to look to
this model, they should. Insofar as legislators wish to aid reform, viable options
might include school choice and charter schools.
Such reform will call for both boldness and prudence, because legislators will
be dealing with the future of real people and real minds. So long as we can
put aside selfish concerns and remember that education is not to be the exclusive
property of the state but, rather, should be subjected to the principle of subsidiarity
that must animate all social concerns, we cannot go too far off the mark.
Rev. Robert A. Sirico is President and co-founder of the Acton Institute
 
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