The death of Steve Jobs last week captured the attention of people not only around the nation but around the globe.
While Jobs and his products are known worldwide, less well known, as Lori Drummer of the Independent Women’s Forum writes, was this innovator’s “passion” for educational opportunity via school choice.
As Jobs noted in a 1995 interview with the Smithsonian Institution: “Equal opportunity to me more than anything means a great education.” He added that “the customers of education” are ultimately “the parents” and that “what we need to do in education is go to the full voucher system.”
He stated:
I believe very strongly that if the country gave each parent a voucher…several things would happen. Number one[,] schools would start marketing themselves like crazy to get students. Secondly, I think you’d see a lot of new schools starting…. I believe that they would do far better than any of our public schools would. The third thing you’d see is…the quality of schools again, just in a competitive marketplace, start to rise.
Jobs reported that, if his own educational experience hadn’t been positive, “if it hadn’t been for Mrs. Hill in fourth grade and a few others, I would have absolutely ended up in jail.”
Unfortunately, far too many students today are not so lucky. Stuck in underperforming and all too frequently violent schools, students are left with little hope for a promising future.
And it isn’t just students in the inner cities who are affected by underperforming schools. A study released just two weeks ago by Jay P. Greene and Josh McGee reveals that many schools in even the most affluent districts perform at only an average level compared with students around the world.
However, school children who have had the opportunity to receive a voucher and leave their underperforming neighborhood schools say that school choice has made a big difference in their lives. For example, Ronald Holassie, a recipient of the D.C. Opportunity Scholarship—a voucher program for low-income children in Washington, D.C.—testified in 2009:
The D.C. Opportunity Scholarship Program has changed my life and has made me the successful young man standing before you now.… The program gave me a chance to…be in a different high quality learning environment…. My study habits increased, I had better grades, I began to know my high expectations academically and I began to soar to success.
More state leaders are catching the school choice vision shared by not only Steve Jobs but education reformers and families around the country. These leaders understand that solving the nation’s education problems is not impossible, but as Jobs noted in 1995, although “we fall far short,” currently, “we do know how to provide a great education.”
Americans mourn the loss of a great innovator whose creativity and ingenuity impacted millions around the world. Let’s not be left to mourn the loss of the unfulfilled potentials and dreams of children around the nation who are so in need of educational opportunity.
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6 commentsAs a contemporary of Mr. Jobs, I knew little about his life story and beliefs. Good to hear he fully supported school choice. My sincere condolences to his family and friends.
Jobs is dead. Stop trying to make him a God.
Jobs supported vouchers but also the Democrat party. Go figure.
Be verwy verwy quiet. The left didn't know he was a capitalist, but support of school vouchers! That's just pouring salt into their wounds. A job well done Mr. Jobs. Well done in deed.
Why the taxpaying public hasn't been in a uproar due to their hard earned money being poured down the rat hole of failing public schools for so long boggles the mind. Jobs had the right idea; vouchers for all parents to send their kids to schools of their choice. It would have a resounding success improving all schools and break the stranglehold the unions have on education. The result of their being in charge has been a woeful failure. Where they were successful was in feathering the nests of union leaders and the teachers at the expense of our kids.
The brilliant genius of Steve Jobs will be sorely missed in the world marketplace, but leaves an especially big void here in the United States. At a time when our ideas and entrepreneurial spirits have been tempered by a flagging economy, we need role models like Steve Jobs to inspire today's young people. He did a tremendous job of opening our eyes to the possibilities and potential of a wireless world. It's no surprise that he was inspired to achieve by his own teachers. I'm only surprised that he was concerned that young people today who don't have engaged teachers don't have options to improve their circumstances. Why shouldn't schools compete?
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