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Why We Still Need Public Schools

October 16, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

Colleen Conklin, when she was a Flagler County School Board member, reading to children in 2017. (© FlaglerLive)
Colleen Conklin, when she was a Flagler County School Board member, reading to children at Belle Terre Elementary in Palm Coast, Fla., in 2017. (© FlaglerLive)

While the White House’s fight with elite universities such as Columbia and Harvard has recently dominated the headlines, the feud overshadows the broader and more far-reaching assault on K-12 public education by the Trump administration and many states.

The Trump administration has gutted the Department of Education, imperiling efforts to protect students’ civil rights, and proposed billions in public education cuts for fiscal year 2026. Meanwhile, the administration is diverting billions of taxpayer funds into K-12 private schools. These moves build upon similar efforts by conservative states to rein in public education going back decades.

But the consequences of withdrawing from public education could be dire for the U.S. In our 2024 book, “How Government Built America,” we explore the history of public education, from Horace Mann’s “common school movement” in the early 19th century to the GI Bill in the 20th that helped millions of veterans go to college and become homeowners after World War II.

We found that public education has been essential for not only creating an educated workforce but for inculcating the United States’ fundamental values of liberty, equality, fairness and the common good.

In the public good

Opponents of public education often refer to public schools as “government schools,” a pejorative that seems intended to associate public education with “big government” – seemingly at odds with the small government preference of many Americans.

But, as we have previously explored, government has always been a significant partner with the private market system in achieving the country’s fundamental political values. Public education has been an important part of that partnership.

Education is what economists call a public good, which means it not only benefits students but the country as well.

Mann, an education reformer often dubbed the father of the American public school system, argued that universal, publicly funded, nonsectarian public schools would help sustain American political institutions, expand the economy and fend off social disorder.

an old greenish stamp has the face of a man in the center, with the words united states postage, 1 cent and Horace Mann
Horace Mann was a pioneer of free public schools and Massachusetts’ first secretary of education.
traveler1116/iStock via Getty Images

In researching Mann’s common schools and other educational history for our book, two lessons stood out to us.

One is that the U.S. investment in public education over the past 150 years has created a well-educated workforce that has fueled innovation and unparalleled prosperity.

As our book documents, for example, in the late 18th and early 19th centuries the states expanded public education to include high school to meet the increasing demand for a more educated citizenry as a result of the Industrial Revolution. And the GI Bill made it possible for returning veterans to earn college degrees or train for vocations, support young families and buy homes, farms or businesses, and it encouraged them to become more engaged citizens, making “U.S. democracy more vibrant in the middle of the twentieth century.”

The other, equally significant lesson is that the democratic and republican principals that propelled Mann’s vision of the common school have colored many Americans’ assumptions about public schooling ever since. Mann’s goal was a “virtuous republican citizenry” – that is, a citizenry educated in “good citizenship, democratic participation and societal well-being.”

Mann believed there was nothing more important than “the proper training of the rising generation,” calling it the country’s “highest earthly duty.”

Attacking public education

Today, Mann’s vision and all that’s been accomplished by public education is under threat.

Trump’s second term has supercharged efforts by conservatives over the past 75 years to control what is taught in the public schools and to replace public education with private schools.

Most notably, Trump has begun dismantling the Department of Education to devolve more policymaking to the state level. The department is responsible for, among other things, distributing federal funds to public schools, protecting students’ civil rights and supporting high-quality educational research. It has also been responsible for managing over a trillion dollars in student loans – a function that the administration is moving to the Small Business Administration, which has no experience in loan management.

The president’s March 2025 executive order has slashed the department’s staff in half, with especially deep cuts to the Office for Civil Rights, which, as noted, protects student from illegal discrimination.

Trump’s efforts to slash education funding has so far hit roadblocks with Congress and the public. The administration is aiming to cut education funding by US$12 billion for fiscal year 2026, which Congress is currently negotiating.

And contradicting its stance on ceding more control to states and local communities, the administration has also been mandating what can’t and must be taught in public schools. For example, it’s threatened funding for school districts that recognize transgender identities or teach about structural racism, white privilege and similar concepts. On the other hand, the White House is pushing the use of “patriotic” education that depicts the founding of the U.S. as “unifying, inspiring and ennobling.”

A young female teacher monitors students working on a writing lesson.
The Trump administration has been increasingly mandating what teachers can and cannot teach in their classrooms.
adamkaz/E+ via Getty Images

Promoting private education

As Trump and states have cut funding and resources to public education, they’ve been shifting more money to K-12 private schools.

Most recently, the budget bill passed by Congress in July 2025 gives taxpayers a tax credit for donations to organizations that fund private school scholarships. The credit, which unlike a deduction counts directly against how much tax someone owes, is $1,700 for individuals and double for married couples. The total cost could run into the billions, since it’s unclear how many taxpayers will take advantage.

Meanwhile, 33 states direct public money toward private schools by providing vouchers, tax credits or another form of financial assistance to parents. All together, states allocated $8.2 billion to support private school education in 2024.

Government funding of private schools diverts money away from public education and makes it more difficult for public schools to provide the quality of education that would most benefit students and the public at large. In Arizona, for example, many public schools are closing their doors permanently as a result of the state’s support for charter schools, homeschooling and private school vouchers.

That’s because public schools are funded based on how many students they have. As more students switch to private schools, there’s less money to cover teacher salaries and fixed costs such as building maintenance. Ultimately, that means fewer resources to educate the students who remain in the public school system.

Living up to aspirations

We believe the harm to the country of promoting private schools while rolling back support for public education is about more than dollars and cents.

It would mean abandoning the principle of universal, nonsectarian education for America’s children. And in so doing, Mann’s “virtuous citizenry” will be much harder to build and maintain.

America’s private market system, in which individuals are free to contract with each other with minimal government interference, has been important to building prosperity and opportunity in the U.S., as our book documents. But, as we also establish, relying on private markets to educate America’s youth makes it harder to create equal opportunity for children to learn and be economically successful, leaving the country less prosperous and more divided.

Sidney Shapiro is Professor of Law at Wake Forest University and Joseph P. Tomain is Professor of Law at the University of Cincinnati.

The Conversation arose out of deep-seated concerns for the fading quality of our public discourse and recognition of the vital role that academic experts could play in the public arena. Information has always been essential to democracy. It’s a societal good, like clean water. But many now find it difficult to put their trust in the media and experts who have spent years researching a topic. Instead, they listen to those who have the loudest voices. Those uninformed views are amplified by social media networks that reward those who spark outrage instead of insight or thoughtful discussion. The Conversation seeks to be part of the solution to this problem, to raise up the voices of true experts and to make their knowledge available to everyone. The Conversation publishes nightly at 9 p.m. on FlaglerLive.
See the Full Conversation Archives
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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. JimboXYZ says

    October 17, 2025 at 3:58 am

    Not sure education or any opportunity in America will ever be equal considering the history of mankind for the cheaters & liars that have become our corrupt leadersip. As noble a cause as it is, we saw #46 pardon the whole lot of his family from investigation & prosecution. with a pardon. The one feigning “nobody above the law used the equivalent of the Monopoly game’s “Get Out of Jail Free” card. That was University of PA (Penn) Ivy League elite University using the pardon mulligan, all because he didn’t want to face the same persecution he put another thru. When the one’s making & interpreting the rules don’t play by the rules ? It’s hollow battle cry to have a noble cause. The imposters calling themselves leaders can’t connect dots that anyone else with a Public K-12 education can clearly see. What did #46 cost is ? Record inflation, he got a raise for it $ 250K/year VP pension, became $ 400K/year.

    We read an article, the local Sheriff’s Office rounds up sex offenders & predators. Then we have an Island that operated for decades, the 2 that started it all, built their little Club Hedonism, there were victims, yet not a single sexual offender/predator ever visited the Island ? The only crime they could find was establishing Epstein Island. And then DOGE uncovers all the NGO’s that are funneling billions of dollars into some debauchery internationally. But there aren’t any fraud & abuse charges for that ? Plenty of money to prosecute the shop lifter, the skip scanner at the grocery store, but the Federal & State Governments can’t build a case for the most heinous of acts. Speed at 100 mph or more and they’re all over that slam dunk. They have so many slam dunks with the money trails of DOGE fraud & abuse and everything else we have for the nothing burgers of investigations ? Just makes no sense to be noble when the self proclaimed elites are as wretched;y corrupt as they are, they just aren’t noble people & we can’t expect nobility from the least noble of society.

    I want the voucher programs/systems to be dismantled. If parents can’t afford private tuition & getting to that private school on their own dime, There’s no reason one shouldn’t attend the public school in the district they live in. That we all are being taxed to provide. The failure of education is an individual thing. How hungry is any student to excel to learn. There’s enough knowledge on the internet these days, who needs a school. One can learn more in several hours online than they can in a classroom. The learning process is more of the discipline & focus to have a plan and learn the objectives of that plan. Teh extra credit has alway been the questions that Google or the AI engine that spews nothing more than what already is on the internet. The funniest part of AI ? Google will take Wikipedia verbatum, even link the Wikipedia it was knowledge theft as a transfer. Go ahead use the Google search Engine, see for yourself. AI is a plagerism of a community that has maintained Wikipedia. Easy example, Google search “Epstein Island”. Wikipedia, NPR & other news articles are linked.

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  2. JW says

    October 17, 2025 at 8:47 am

    Thank you, this is again an article that makes you THINK! It is written in a polite and careful way, as good professors (and not to forget lawyers) do. But I would like to be more specific about the consequences of sacrificing Public Education.
    A couple of months ago I read an article in Politico: Doug Wilson Has Spent Decades Pushing for a Christian Theocracy. In Trump’s DC, the New Right is Listening.
    He has said that life offers a choice between two irreconcilable alternatives: “Christ,” he said, raising his right hand, “or chaos”.
    Pastor Wilson has built a theocratic regime in Moscow, Idaho, where men rule and biblical teachings guide everything. Now he is taking the model national. We may already see the GOP using it in Congress. Just think about it!

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  3. Kennan says

    October 17, 2025 at 9:30 am

    It’s always big government until it’s your government. Government is a very multifaceted and nuanced operation. We need to remember that. We also need to remember how foundational public schools are, because public schools are public service, and public service is essential to the life force of our countries. Youth and our country is a whole. Essential. This back-and-forth between the parties is neither effective or useful. It hurts our kids on every level imaginable. It becomes about the halves and the have Nots. There are far more have Nots. Without public schools, we fail as a country. to demonize, it makes no sense, and will drown our country in failure.
    I have been in public education for 18 years now. These kids need us and we need them.

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  4. Pogo says

    October 17, 2025 at 9:42 am

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    2
  5. Kennan says

    October 17, 2025 at 9:58 am

    Very important to remember that there is nothing patriotic about propaganda.

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    2
  6. Bo Peep says

    October 17, 2025 at 11:44 am

    Then we need politics and agenda removed from the learning environment and instead foster a return to purely academic teaching. No Pride banners, no leftist agenda normalizing non traditional sexual behavior or criticism of western beliefs or culture. Our children should be taught what we want them to learn not what liberals want them to learn. Because that is what is driving people and their children away from public schools.

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  7. Samuel L. Bronkowitz says

    October 18, 2025 at 12:29 pm

    Not having criticism of western ideology sounds like a political agenda to me.

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