Digital Social Hour - Why U.S. Education Needs a Massive Overhaul Now | Corey DeAngelis DSH #1298
Episode Date: April 5, 2025🎓 Why does the U.S. education system need a massive overhaul right now? Tune in to this thought-provoking episode of the Digital Social Hour with Sean Kelly as we dive into the shocking reality of ...today’s schools and the growing movement for school choice! 📚 Join Sean and guest Corey DeAngelis as they unpack why parents across the nation are fighting back against a broken system that prioritizes politics over students. From critical race theory to skyrocketing school funding with minimal results, this episode shines a light on the urgent need for educational reform. Corey shares jaw-dropping stats, untold stories about unions, and how school choice is empowering families to take control of their children's future. 🚸✨ Packed with valuable insights, this conversation reveals: ✅ How school choice is reshaping education in 13+ states. ✅ The shocking truth behind administrative bloat and misallocated funding. ✅ Eye-opening stats on public school performance vs. private schools. ✅ Why some politicians oppose reform while sending their kids to private schools. ✅ How parents are sparking a revolution to rescue education! 🎤 Don’t miss out on this explosive discussion! Watch now and subscribe for more insider secrets. 📺 Hit that subscribe button and stay tuned for more eye-opening stories on the Digital Social Hour with Sean Kelly! 🚀 CHAPTERS: 00:00 - School Choice Impact on Education System 01:45 - Public School Funding Overview 07:30 - School Choice and Student Outcomes 10:57 - School Choice Success Trends 13:36 - Political Funding Controversies 19:53 - Teacher Salaries Debate 21:48 - Blue vs Red State Education Disparities 23:10 - Department of Education Abolition 27:28 - Failures of Government Schools 31:55 - Micro Schools Explained 34:08 - Education in Rural Areas 36:55 - Education Savings Accounts Benefits 37:54 - Schooling vs Education Comparison 38:46 - Peer Review Process Overview 43:41 - Corey’s Book Availability APPLY TO BE ON THE PODCAST: https://www.digitalsocialhour.com/application BUSINESS INQUIRIES/SPONSORS: jenna@digitalsocialhour.com GUEST: Corey DeAngelis https://www.instagram.com/coreydeangelis SPONSORS: AIRES TECH: https://airestech.com/ LISTEN ON: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/digital-social-hour/id1676846015 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5Jn7LXarRlI8Hc0GtTn759 Sean Kelly Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/seanmikekelly/ #DigitalSocialHour #SeanKelly #Podcast #EducationReform #SchoolChoice #CoreyDeAngelis #ApplePodcasts #Spotify #news #donaldtrump #trump #reform #departmentofeducation
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The definition of insanity doing the same thing over and over and over again expecting different results.
But now, because the unions mobilized parents to basically create their own union, one for the kids,
they're holding politicians accountable at the ballot box.
And now politicians are voting for school choice like we've never seen before.
school choice like we've never seen before.
All right, guys, we got Corey here today. We're going to talk about the education system.
Thanks for coming on, man.
Hey, thanks so much for having me.
A lot's about to change, right?
Well, a lot is changing already.
I mean, we're winning so much.
I'm almost getting tired of winning.
I mean, the unions really overplayed their hand during the COVID era.
They fought to keep the schools closed.
That showed parents what was happening in the classroom.
And conservatism in particular were pissed off
about the critical race theory in the schools,
the gender ideology, far left indoctrination.
That mobilized parents like we've never seen before.
And they started to push for school choice.
And we've had 13 states now go all in on school choice,
letting the money follow the child to the school
that works the best for them,
whether that's the public school, private school,
charter school, or a home-based education option.
Most recently, Tennessee became the 13th state
to go all in.
It's basically the idea of the money
that's meant for educating your child
that's funded by the taxpayer dollars.
In the current system, the status quo
makes you take that money to your assigned school
based on your address.
It creates a lot of monopoly power.
They have no incentive to spend money wisely.
They get a lot of money and they put it
towards administrative bloat.
Doesn't go to the kids.
But now that money can follow the student.
Creates more competition and the public schools
get better as a result.
That's interesting. I grew up in Jersey. How are the schools over there?
Pretty horrible, and they spend a lot of money. I think they spend between $30,000 and $40,000
per student in Jersey. I know in New York City, they're at $40,000 a kid per year.
I didn't know that.
And if you look nationwide, I mean, it's $20,000 per kid in the US, in the government-run school
system.
We spend more than any other country on the planet.
That amount is about 52% higher than average private school tuition in this country.
So the Catholic schools, the private schools, they're doing a better job at a fraction of
the cost.
I mean, you look at the latest Nations report card scores that just came out on math and
reading.
They found decades of learning loss for the public schools, but for the
Catholic schools, they have a big enough sample to be able to show us, um, what's
going on in that sector, not for private schools overall, but for the Catholic
schools, they show no, uh, statistically significant losses relative to 2019
during, cause they kept their schools open during the COVID years.
The teachers unions, they knew they could leverage those closures for even more money.
They held children's education hostage.
You had places like in Chicago, their union was tweeting, I'm not making this up, they
deleted the tweet, but it said, the push to reopen schools is rooted in sexism, racism,
and misogyny.
They threw every buzzword at the wall
to see what would stick,
because they knew if they could keep those schools closed
longer, what were they gonna do?
They're gonna say, well, we'll open
if you just give us more money than we already have.
They already have about $30,000 per kid in Chicago.
And so over time as well,
this money has just increased, increased, increased.
It wasn't just a COVID thing.
Since 1970, we have data on this nationwide.
Our per student funding in the U S has increased by about 164% after adjusting for
inflation.
Have our outcomes gotten 164% better?
Obviously they've gotten worse, right?
They've gotten worse and we're throwing more money at the problem.
It's the definition of insanity doing the same thing over and over and over again, expecting
different results.
But now, because the unions mobilized parents to basically create their own union, one for
the kids, they're holding politicians accountable at the ballot box.
And now politicians are voting for school choice like we've never seen before.
Because now you have a new coalition pushing
for this policy.
It used to just be for kids who were in objectively
failing schools based on test scores.
Now families are understanding that their kids
in some cases, even if they're in a neighboring school,
they're being brainwashed with views that are not aligned
with their family's values.
They're being told to hate their country.
And I thought that this, at the beginning, I thought maybe this is just a rare occurrence with views that are not aligned with their family's values. They're being told to hate their country.
And I thought that this, at the beginning,
I thought maybe this is just a rare occurrence
because we see all these viral videos
of Libsatik talk and stuff
where public school teachers are saying just extreme things,
going too far on the left, attacking President Trump.
They have Trump derangement syndrome.
There's actually been a nationwide survey
that came out last month, actually in January of 2025,
by Education Next.
And they asked high school students in the US,
a nationally representative sample,
how many times different kind of critical race theory topics
were mentioned at their school.
One of them that stuck out to me,
and a lot of these things were prevalent,
but one of the big ones that I thought was really detrimental
to have in our public school system
was that 36% of the respondents,
US high school students said that their teachers,
either often or almost daily,
were saying that America is a fundamentally racist country.
36%.
Damn. Now that's not a majority, but that's more than 0%.
And it should be 0%.
You have more than a third of the kids reporting
in the US government run school system
that their teachers are saying often or almost daily
that America is a fundamentally racist nation.
That is unthinkable.
I didn't hear that when I was growing up
and going to public schools.
But that's why so many families are upset.
And they tried to take this to the school board meeting,
right, because we kind of used to hear about this idea
of democratic accountability,
that if you don't like what you're getting
at the public school, they'll listen to you
if you go show up and you complain at school boards.
Yeah.
We saw how well that worked.
They labeled parents as domestic terrorists.
I mean, the National School Boards Association actually sent a letter
to President Biden implying that parents protesting about CRT
at school board meetings should be investigated invoking the Patriot Act
for domestic terrorism.
Holy crap.
Play stupid games, win stupid prizes though, because 26 states have since left the National
School Boards Association. They've imploded, they stepped on a rake, and now the jig is up
because this has all been exposed. The schools are open now, but the problems are still there,
and the parents are hearing about it
and they're not gonna give up the fight.
They remember how powerless they felt in 2020
and they're going to continue fighting
so that they never feel powerless like that ever again.
And school choice, in my view, is the best way
to empower parents to fight back.
Because now if you go to your school board meeting
and let's say you wanna stay in your public school,
if you have the power to take your money somewhere else,
that school board's gonna think twice
about calling you a domestic terrorist.
They're gonna think of you as a customer.
They're gonna think of you as a partner in the relationship.
But when you don't have competition,
they view you as a nuisance, they view you as the enemy.
And we saw that firsthand during the COVID years.
But this revolution is still continuing today.
In my home state of Texas,
the bill for universal school choice
recently came out in both chambers.
It actually passed through the Senate,
but I voted 19 to 12.
All Republicans, except for one, voted against it. All. All Republicans except for one voted against it.
All 11 Democrats in the Texas Senate voted against it. And a majority of them sent their own kids to
private school, those Democrats who voted against school choice. Total hypocrites on the issue.
School choice for me, but not for thee. I mentioned Chicago a second ago. Chicago Teachers Union boss,
her name is Stacey Davis Gates. A couple
of years ago she was posting and saying that school choices racist was her argument. Guess
what we just found out last year. She sends her own kid to private school. So she either
is telling on herself and calling herself racist in some weird way, or she is just trying
to protect the status quo because she's the union boss and that's what she has to do.
She knows they're failure factories.
That's why she doesn't send her own kid there.
She sends him somewhere else.
And I don't blame her for that.
I think, but I think everybody should have those opportunities
and you shouldn't pull the ladder up from behind yourself
and fight against school choice for others.
It should be open to all.
Yeah. I wonder what the statistics are on public school graduates and success.
Well, if you look at the nation's report card that just came out, it's about a
third of students are proficient in reading and about a quarter of students
are proficient in math. So it's horrible, especially given the how we
spend more than any other country. The international assessments just came
out recently too.
They're called the TIMSS.
I forget what that stands for,
but TIMSS, if you want to look it up.
And the US fell on the TIMSS assessment internationally
by more than any other country
except for three of the countries,
Iran, Kazakhstan, and one other country.
We fell by 18 points in fourth grade math scores.
And we spend so much money, but we also had our schools closed for a very long
time. If you look at other countries that had their schools open, like Sweden,
they didn't close their schools. What happened to their rankings on the same
assessment, fourth grade math, they improved their scores by about eight points.
So there's been a lot of literature in
the U.S. showing that school districts that closed longer, they had more learning loss and actually
mental health issues among the students too. And again, this is because the teachers unions saw that
they could... Ever thought about how much EMF and radiation your body is exposed to every single day?
From smartphones to Wi-Fi, modern technology never stops emitting invisible stressors
that could disrupt brain function, hormone balance, and cellular health.
That's where ARIES comes in, the only scientifically validated solution designed to help your body
adapt to today's technology. It's trusted by elite athletes used by the UFC,
WWE, Canada basketball, and the Minnesota Timberwolves. It's backed
by science, 100 plus scientists, and 40 plus institutions confirm its effectiveness. Its
patented, peer-reviewed, clinically proven, and publicly traded Wi-Fi is the most tested,
researched, and validated EMF solution on the market. Upgrade your biology to keep up
with modern technology. Protect yourself with Aries today. Click the link below to learn more.
Financially gain by keeping those doors closed.
The private schools are fighting to reopen.
The public schools are fighting to remain closed.
And the same, the main difference there
was one in the incentives that if you know your customers can walk,
I mean, the Catholic schools are saying, I'm going to keep my doors open because they're going to be able to take their money somewhere else.
Yeah.
And this really made it an easy argument for school choice because during COVID, when your grocery store closed, that might've been a horrible thing, but at least you could take your money somewhere else.
When your school closed, they got to keep your money.
And families were scrambling, trying to figure out
how to pay again out of pocket
for a private school that was open,
or trying to figure out homeschooling.
That's another silver lining here,
is that homeschooling has basically doubled or tripled
since pre-pandemic levels,
according to the US Census Bureau.
Families have figured out they can learn more
at a fraction of the time, their kids are less anxious.
And in some of these school choice programs
that are passing, you can use that money
to homeschool your kid too.
And Trump has also argued for a tax credit
for families who homeschool, $10,000.
And he's also promoted school choice
passing out of Congress.
There's a bill right now called
the Educational Choice for Children Act.
Creates a nationwide school choice program.
It's supported by Speaker Johnson.
It's supported by the Senate leader, Thune.
And a majority of the Republicans in both chambers
have signed on to at least one version of that bill.
And it's already passed out of a committee
last year in September.
So there's a lot of momentum happening right now
on the education front.
We haven't seen anything like that.
I mean, we've seen more victories.
We've seen more advancement on the school choice front
in the past four years than in the preceding four decades.
Yeah, that's exciting.
It's a huge deal.
It's thanks to guys like you,
it's thanks to guys like Charlie Kirk,
saying college is a scam.
Yeah, Charlie Kirk's fantastic.
He's a great advocate for education freedom.
A lot of people have said that I've kind of helped
push the fight too, but we should really raise our glass
and give a toast to people like Randy Weingarten,
the president of the teachers unions,
for inadvertently bringing more to advance school choice
and homeschooling than anyone could have ever imagined.
I actually dedicated this book to Randy Weingarten.
And if you want to look at the endorsement on the back
by Ted Cruz, he's a senator from my home state of Texas, he says you can ruin Randy Weingarten. And if you want to look at the endorsement on the back by Ted Cruz, he's a Senator from my home state of Texas.
He says, you can ruin Randy Weingarten's day
by reading this book.
Oh, I love it.
It's really, it's their fault.
I mean, they've been so drunk on power for so long.
They've started, they've injected their politics
into the classroom.
I mean, the radical left figured out a long time ago
that they didn't, they didn't, they almost didn't even have to have their own kids.
They could shape the direction of this country
by using the school system as a way to mold the minds
of other people's children for 13 years of their lives,
for seven hours a day, with 50 million kids or so each year
in the government run school system,
they can churn out Democrat voters using that school system without even having their own kids.
So conservatives and libertarians, if you want to fight back, if you're a limited government
supporter, if you support the free market, if you're against socialism,
you can't win this battle just by having more kids. That helps, obviously,
but you need to take back control of the school system
and also fight for school choice
so that if a low income parent is stuck in this school,
that they're teaching kids all the genders
and teaching more about the LGBTs and the ABCs,
that parent needs to say, you know what,
I wanna focus on the basics for my kids
and maybe I'll talk about that other stuff at home.
Let's have the money follow me to this private school or this charter school
is doing a better job or, Hey, maybe I want to raise my own kids.
Maybe I'll do homeschooling and have some of that funding follow the child.
So I think this is going to shape this direction of our country in a better way.
Now that we have more education freedom and the winds are going to continue
racking up and look, Vodi Bakum said it best.
We cannot continue to send our children to Caesar
for their education and be surprised
when they come home as Romans.
Good news is the parents are not surprised anymore.
Yeah, yeah, this is a deep issue, man.
Cause these kids are the future of our country.
Yeah, exactly.
This is a massive deal just cause people watching this
might not have kids, but this affects you
in a certain degree.
Exactly, if you don't like high taxes This is a massive deal just because people watching this might not have kids, but this affects you in a certain degree. Exactly.
If you don't like high taxes and you have some other political pet project that interests
you, maybe you're really focused on immigration.
Maybe you're focused on you don't want the government taking as much out of your paycheck.
And a lot of people are concerned about that.
You're concerned about the economy.
You should care about education freedom too, because the root of all these problems stems
from the socialist indoctrination in the government school system.
Of course, we have kids, millions of kids, 50 million kids or so each year going through
this system, being brainwashed by the government run school system to like big government and
to see government as the solution to all their problems.
It shouldn't surprise us that at 18 years old they go and vote for more government.
I mean, and Democrat.
And if you look at Randy Weingarten's union, for example, there's something more insidious
going on here with, it's not just the school system churning out Democrat voters.
We have a money laundering operation on the political side with the unions. 99.9% of Randy Weingarten's unions campaign contributions went to Democrats in the 2024
election cycle.
And it's not new.
This has been happening for decades.
You look at the OpenSecrets website, they list this every single election cycle about
98, 99% every single time from AFT, the American Federation of Teachers, it goes to Democrats.
Wash, rinse, repeat. It's a money laundering operation. It ought to be illegal. And hopefully
more and more people start to see this is some BS going on and we need to push back.
And we should ban taxpayer funding of teachers unions. Some states are pushing to do that
like Idaho right now.
They're currently debating this in their state Senate.
And we also need to defund the unions through school choice.
Because if unions actually had to listen to parents and say, well, maybe they're going
to go somewhere else and our unions won't have as much power because of that, maybe
they'll start to rethink things.
Maybe instead of fighting against parental rights and education, they'll
say, I'm going to pick a different battle.
I'm going to just focus on, I don't know, maybe having a better job for teachers
and maybe paying them a little more.
Because if you look at where the money goes today, the unions aren't doing
a good job for the teachers either.
They're doing a horrible job for parents.
They do not think parents should choose their child's own education
and direct the upbringing of their child,
but they're also failing for the teachers.
Since 1970, I mentioned spending has gone up in the public schools by 164%.
Guess how much the teacher salaries have gone up since that time?
Not a lot.
They basically haven't moved.
Only about 3% increase. increase, inflation adjusted since 1970.
And why is that? Well, it's become more of a jobs program for administrators than an education
initiative for kids. We have data on this nationwide since 2000, according to the National
Center for Education Statistics, we've increased
the number of students in the system. Enrollment has increased by about 5% since 2000. It hasn't
really changed much. The number of teachers in the system has increased by twice that
rate, by about 10%. The number of administrators in the system has increased by 95%.
Holy crap.
19 times the rate of student enrollment growth.
Then you zoom into different districts
and it's happening everywhere,
especially in union driven districts in Chicago,
which you mentioned a second ago.
Since 2019, we have data on this in Chicago.
The number of staff employed
by the Chicago public school system
has increased 20% since 2019.
Over the same period, enrollment has dropped.
The students are fleeing by about 10%.
Wow.
In one of the industry, do you bleed customers like that
and then go on a hiring spree?
It makes no sense, but it's because they're a monopoly.
They have no incentive to do the right thing.
They spend it on their political pet projects.
They spend it on more dues paying members,
which means people like Randy Weingarten
can make their $500,000 a year salary
without actually producing results
and actually failing year after year
to provide an adequate education to kids.
And I think the only way we get out of this mess
through freedom as opposed to force is from the bottom up.
Give them an incentive to do, let them exist,
but give them an incentive to listen to parents
instead of treating them as horrible people.
Right, so that being said,
do you feel like teachers should make more money?
I think there's not a one size fits all answer
to our school system, but there's also not a one size fits all
answer to that question,
because some teachers are doing a horrible job, but
some teachers are doing a fantastic job. And so when I argue for school choice
similarly, it's not a public versus private debate. I think there are some
public schools that are knocking it out of the park. There are some public
schools that are horrible. In Chicago, they have about 33 public schools that
have 0% math proficiency rate. Damn. Zero.
Not a single kid proficient in math.
And 33 of their government run public schools,
Baltimore, you go look over there,
40% of their high schools have 0% math proficiency rate.
Why?
And so, you know, not all private schools
are beating all the public schools though,
but that's why parents who know their kids
better than anybody else, they should be the ones determining,
hey, maybe I like the public school for one of my kids
because of whatever programs they have
over there, a specialized mission.
Maybe the mission of the private school
is better for another kid,
or maybe you want two different public schools.
But that decision shouldn't be up to me,
it shouldn't be up to a government official,
it should be up to the parent for their own child.
And so I like to say, if you like your public school,
you can keep your public school.
For real this time, unlike with your doctor
and Obama's false promise of that.
But for real, and the public schools we've seen
in places like Florida, they have gotten a lot better
as they've expanded school choice.
A couple of decades ago, they were at the bottom of the pack on the nation's report
card for math and reading.
Now as they've expanded school choice to all families, Florida is ranked number one by
US News and World Report on education.
Wow.
It's not because they pumped more money out into the system.
They spend 27% less than the national average per student in Florida.
So it's not a money issue, it's an incentive issue,
and it's a great place to be right now, but we're not done yet. The blue states are really far away.
Why? It's because of that problem I just brought up where the Democrat voters support school choice.
A lot of Democrats send their kids to charter schools, they send their kids to private schools,
they use the voucher programs,
they use the scholarships to go to a better school. And the thing is the Democrat politicians
almost in lockstep vote against school choice because they're controlled by the teachers unions.
Damn. So these unions are powerful.
Yep. So they have hundreds of millions of dollars that they can use to lobby against any change
to the status quo.
They fight against any form of accountability whatsoever.
Why do you think our schools were closed so long?
Randy Weingarten's union lobbied the CDC
to make it more difficult to reopen schools.
The NEA did the same thing,
the National Education Association.
They're the largest labor union in the country.
And they have a federal charter, which makes zero sense to me. They've had it for over a hundred years.
They're federally chartered by the federal government, by Congress. Republicans have
a trifecta this session. They should revoke that federal charter from the NEA. We shouldn't
give them special privileges. They're the only labor union that has a federal charter. It just makes zero sense why they have one to begin with.
But Republicans in Congress should also pass school choice.
They should also abolish the Department of Education.
I'm glad Trump has been campaigned on that issue like every rally.
And look, that department started in 1979 as a payoff to the NEA,
the largest teachers union in the country.
Jimmy Carter wanted their endorsement
and gave them the teachers union,
gave them the Department of Education, started in 1979.
We spent about $2 trillion at the federal level
since that time.
The stated goal was to close achievement gaps.
That hasn't happened.
They've widened, if anything, they've gotten worse.
And it's a violation of the 10th Amendment.
I'd say it's unconstitutional.
It should be up to the states.
The word education is not in the constitution.
Thankfully, we do have a bill in Congress right now
by Senator Mike Rounds out of South Dakota, Republican.
And it's called the Returning Education to the States Act.
It's pretty dang simple and it's not as scary as what the Democrats will have you believe.
It block grants the current funding at the federal level back to the states.
It's literally returning education to the states.
And Texas, for example, has 10% of the students in the nation at the K through 12 level.
So they'd get about 10% of the funding based on your enrollment is how much of the funding you'd get.
And any vital programs according to that bill
would move under different departments.
So for example, special needs students,
they may have some programs that benefit them
under the Department of Education right now.
That would move under the Department
of Health and Human Services.
The Pell Grant scholarships for college, those would move under the Department of Health and Human Services. The Pell Grant scholarships for college,
those would move under the Department of the Treasury.
The, any civil rights protections for students
that would move on under the Department of Justice.
So it's not really as groundbreaking
as what the Democrats are,
the lines that they're repeating, they're saying,
oh, we're gonna defund education.
It's gonna cause all these problems.
What about the special needs students?
I've just addressed all those things.
The money's going back.
You'll actually have more money for education
if you abolish the department.
Each individual state already has a department of education.
Why do we need another one in DC to employ 4,400 people
who are pushing paper, not really doing much of anything?
If you don't have those people in place anymore, that means you have
more money to give back to the State Department of Education to spend as they
see fit. You increase local control, you have more, they know their constituents
better than people in DC, and you should end up having more funding for education.
So contrary to the the myth that's being pushed
by the Democrats that abolishing the department will defund education actually makes education
more well-resourced than before.
They need to increase funding on the lunch programs, man. That is garbage that they're
feeding the kids. And I think that's impacting the scores, to be honest.
Yeah, and it could be. But at the same time, I don't want the government to kind of take over the role of the parent.
And I guess I see the argument that if you're going to force the kids under compulsory education
laws to be at school, you might as well feed them.
If we're spending all this money anyway on administrators, might as well spend some of
it on lunch.
So I don't really see it have a huge problem with it.
But I am a little weird, I don't have like a hard stance
one way or the other on the issue,
because I do think parents should be involved
in these processes, it's their kids.
But I do understand, you know, for lower income families
that that's not a fight I'm gonna pick
as far as the first thing that we should cut.
I remember Randy Weingarten was on
a left-leaning news source,
I don't remember which one it was, recently where she said,
you know, the Department of Education,
we just need to give,
we need it so that we can give kids a good lunch.
Well, they don't even administer the federal lunch program.
It's administered by another department anyway.
So she doesn't know what she's talking about.
And at the end of the day, if you still have that money
and it's going back to the states,
why can't the individual states do that?
Right. Right.
So, and I think they could do a better job
at providing the meals that best fits their constituents.
And I think more local control would be a good thing.
Yeah. I got a lot of friends.
I'd say 80% of them send their kids to either private or homeschool.
80% of my successful friends.
Myself? So maybe this is why I'm not so successful.
I went to government schools.
And if you want to check out, I wrote you a note at the beginning, Sean,
and for the listeners if you want to see it too.
Handwriting is horrible. I tried real, Sean, for the listeners, if you want to see it too. Handwriting's horrible.
I tried real, I was in the hotel before this,
slowly scribbling.
And, you know, I can't blame it on being a doctor either,
because I'm not a real doctor.
I'm more like a Jill Biden doctor.
A PhD in education policy.
But no, I went to government schools.
That's the reason I have all these problems.
I went too. I got bullied. I got made fun of.
Yeah. So did you go to your entire K through 12?
K through 12. And I went to Rutgers, which is a public university.
Oh, okay. Cool. Yeah. So I went to public. I, I don't like,
I don't like really call them.
I catch myself sometimes calling them public schools,
but they're not really public schools.
I like to call them government schools because they're not open to the public.
If you live on the wrong side of the district line, if you're not, you can't go there. It's not a public schools. I like to call them government schools because they're not open to the public. If you live on the wrong side of the district line,
if you're not, you can't go there.
It's not a public go.
Oh, wow.
It's rival or it's, it's, it's excludable.
They do exclude kids based on where you live.
Really?
So like in San Antonio, Texas, where I live,
there's a neighboring district to mine called Alma Heights.
And in fact, if you want to transfer your kid in there,
you could theoretically do it, but they charge you
in addition to what you're already paying in property taxes, they charge
you $10,000 or so per child per year.
A public school charging tuition as if it's a private school.
So they do exclude kids.
They expel kids.
That's a way to exclude them.
They're not accountable to the public.
We've seen what's happened with the school board meetings and how they just turn off mics.
They label you as an evil person if you disagree with them.
They don't want any transparency.
They don't want any sunlight,
which is usually the best disinfectant
because they live in a bubble,
they're in this closed system
where they're not accountable to anybody right now.
And so one, that's why we need school choice. But yeah, I mean, it's just, I actually went to a public, oh yeah, so they're not accountable to the public, they're not open to the public, they're not public goods as an economics basic definition of being rivalrous and excludable. You can't exclude people, they do exclude people.
They're run by the government.
They are compelled by the government
through compulsory education laws.
They are assigned by the government
and they are funded by the government,
at least the taxpayer, which is the government
takes your money and then sends it to the schools.
So they're more accurately described
as government schools than public schools.
But in high school, I had the opportunity
to go to something called magnet school.
Maga?
Magnet.
A maga school would be awesome.
Yeah, it would be teach you to love your country,
not to hate your country.
And it'll be the best school, it'll be the best.
And they'll be in the top percentiles
in all their academics.
But it was a magnet school.
So they're kind of like charter schools in that they can have specialized mission and
you're not assigned to a magnet school.
They're run by the district, but they have to attract their customers because they don't just get people assigned to them.
And so they usually have specialized missions.
Mine was a communications school.
And I felt like that had a good positive impact
on my life trajectory.
I think other families should have those opportunities too.
And it shouldn't be limited to schools
that are run by the government.
You should be able to go somewhere else.
I have a daughter.
Actually, I just joined the parent revolution.
She was actually at the hotel with mama
and she's about, she's almost seven months old.
And before we had our first child, her name's Angelina,
we, Miranda and I, my wife had planned to homeschool.
That's one of the first conversations that we had
kind of when we were dating and stuff.
And we were aligned there so that we were aligned everywhere,
but that was a really important part of the conversation too.
And after having our child and seeing her for the first time,
there's like no way that we're not gonna homeschool.
I don't wanna send you anywhere else.
I don't wanna send you to the private school.
I don't wanna send you to the public school. I don't want to send you to the public school.
Maybe things change over time,
but I think we're going to try to make
the homeschool thing happen.
And there's a lot of other cool things
that are going on recently,
and this isn't a new phenomenon at all,
but have you heard of micro schools?
No.
So it's kind of like homeschooling
and how about the pandemic pods?
They were calling them pandemic pods
during the COVID era.
I didn't see that.
So when the government schools closed,
a lot of parents, they were trying to figure things out.
Right?
If they couldn't, they were trying to find the private
schools that were open and a lot of them were.
A lot of them tried to do homeschooling,
but they're also trying to work at the same time.
They found this kind of middle ground called pandemic pods.
So that's where you had five to 10 children getting together in one household.
And so the parents could basically band together and economize on the process of homeschooling.
And so it's not like a one-on-one situation, but it's, it's almost there.
You have, you get some of the benefits of socialization with the other kids.
And you could even hire a private tutor
and pay them to help in your household.
And you can basically create your own miniature school,
hence the term micro school.
And they've been doing this for a long time.
A lot of people like to say it's this kind of re-envisioning
of the one room school house.
And in Arizona where they've had school choice
for a long time, they're one of the best states
on school choice. They were actually the first state to go all in in Arizona, where they've had school choice for a long time, they're one of the best states on school choice.
They were actually the first state to go all in in 2022,
allowing all families, regardless of income,
to be able to take their scholarship money
to the school that works for them.
The union got really upset, though,
because parents were using the scholarships
to go to these micro schools.
And one of the very famous ones
or ones that's doing a good job in Arizona,
at least is called Prenda Microschools.
The founder's name's Kelly Smith.
And the union actually put out a political hit piece
against their founder and the organization,
the NEA, the largest teachers union,
put out an opposition research sheet
on Kelly Smith and Prenda Microschools
because they were so afraid
of them shaking up the education status quo.
It's not the factory model government run school system
anymore and families like it.
They're using the ESA funds to access those schools.
And during COVID in particular, they were seeing
a just a phenomenal increase in their enrollment in students in their micro schools.
So, in some states, like in my home state of Texas,
you hear from some of the people on the fence
in the legislature who might not wanna vote for it,
usually because they're already endorsed
by the teachers unions and they're already controlled
by them, but some of them live in rural areas.
And so, and some of them are Republicans.
And so they'll try to have their cake and eat it too.
They'll try to say, on the one hand, I'm a conservative,
I'm a Republican, but on the other hand,
I got to vote against this thing
that's on the party platform, school choice,
even though Trump supports it,
Governor Abbott supports it,
basically every other Republican supports it,
but I am gonna make an exception for myself because
I'm in a rural area and because I'm in a rural area, my constituents don't want to, we don't have a
lot of private schools and, and, but at the same time in the next breath, they'll try to say, this
is going to defund their fantastic rural public school. Hold on a second. If it's so fantastic
in your public school,
you should not be afraid of any competition at all. Then no one's gonna go anywhere else.
And especially if it's true,
you don't have any private schools,
then people can't, if people don't leave,
the public school is not gonna lose any money
because public schools are funded
based on the number of students,
based on their enrollment.
If it's true that you don't have any options there,
then you're not gonna lose any money.
So they try to, it's like the two button meme
on social media where the guy's sweating
and he's trying to figure out which button to press.
On the one button is, it's a way to say two things
are logically incompatible.
On the one hand, they'll say,
my constituents can't use it.
The public school is the only option.
And the other button is basically them saying
that school choice will defund my rural school.
The reality is actually some of the oldest voucher, the oldest voucher program, scholarship programs in the country started over 150 years ago in the late 1800s in Maine and Vermont of all places.
Some of those rural states in the country. And guess why they were created?
Back in the 1800s, and in some cases now as well, they have some districts in their state
where they don't even have a public school.
They're so rural, they don't have a public school.
And so they figured out over 150 years ago,
not having a lot of options is an argument actually
to expand opportunities, not to restrict them.
So our oldest scholarship school choice programs were because they were rural.
So let's give you more choices so that you can have an opportunity.
And so like with these micro schools in rural areas, that's an option that can pop up too.
Maybe you don't have a brick and mortar private school that pops up, or maybe you just have
one, but in a rural area, you might be able to have some type of homeschool
co-op or micro school pop up.
Right.
Supply will meet demand and now you actually have more options than you had before.
And what's really important about the legislation that they're pushing now, as
opposed to a long time ago, we've gone from the voucher or the scholarship to
an education savings account.
Savings accounts you can use on things beyond private school tuition, whereas the voucher
is basically a ticket you can use to get to a private school.
But now you can use the savings account directed by the parent, kind of like a health savings
account.
I don't know if you've used one of those before, but you can only use it for health expenses.
With the education savings account, it's that money that would have went to your government school.
You can still choose that if you want, but if you don't,
that's a portion of that goes into that savings account
directed by the parent,
can be used for private school tuition if you want,
but you could also use it for homeschool curriculum,
micro schools, private tutors, or guides.
And so it really is the gold standard
of school choice policy.
It really takes us from school choice to education choice, because as we know,
schooling is just one way to achieve an education and in some ways, schooling is
antithetical to education.
These days, yeah.
I mean, I don't know about your experience in the public school system.
It's not good.
Yeah.
So like when I was in the public school system before the magnet school, at
least there was, there was a lot of drugs, gangs, violence,
people getting into fights.
That was the cool thing to do to get into a fight.
And so like we had this thing I wrote about in the book
called getting rolled into a gang.
And the way that they would do it at my middle school
is if you got beat up in the bathroom
by fellow gang members, then all of a sudden
that means that you were initiated into the gang too.
It's like a prison.
I actually had a friend and I've still talked to him to this day,
and he's mentioned in the book but not by name.
At the time in middle school, he would actually teach,
he was teaching me on the weekends how to walk because I was walking to,
I wasn't walking gangster enough for him.
So that was kind of like the culture in the school system.
And actually how I got into the school choice movement,
I actually started as a researcher until I figured out
how many lunatics are in the university system.
I still published about 40 peer reviewed studies.
I don't know how I did it.
I mean, one of the peers in that process, it's blind.
So they don't know who you are, but they usually do
because you usually publish your paper online first
and then you submit it to a journal.
But you don't know who's reviewing your study.
So there's no accountability there.
They can do whatever they want.
They can reject it, accept it,
regardless of how good or bad the study is.
And it's usually if they agree with the result,
they'll accept it.
If they disagree with the result, they'll reject it.
And I had this study where I found,
it was in my first study,
it's peer reviewed now in Social Science Quarterly.
There's actually another iteration
in the Journal of Private Enterprise.
So it's two studies on this topic,
finding that the voucher program in Milwaukee,
it started in 1990.
We use student level data
from the state mandated evaluation of that program,
my co-author and I.
And we found that by the time those students
were 25 to 30 years of age, they were substantially less likely to commit
crimes as adults than their similarly matched peers in the public school
system. So lo and behold, you get a better education experience, you're more likely
to graduate, you're more likely to get a job, you're less likely to be involved in the
criminal justice system too. It's another one of these side benefits that are, I
would argue, even more powerful than the academic benefits of school choice. justice system too. It's another one of these side benefits that are, I would
argue, even more powerful than the academic benefits of school choice. But
one of the first journals we sent this to was called the Journal of
Urban Education, I think. And we had written, you know, the study and saying
like, you know, it benefits urban students. The editor got back to us, or I think it was one of the peers in the peer review process, and they said, you know, this benefits urban students. The editor got back to us where I think it was one of the peers in the peer
review process and they said, you can't refer to them as urban students.
They are students in urban areas.
And I was like, okay, fair.
Okay.
Well, we can change that.
That's not a big problem, right?
Just flip the words around.
But the reason we wrote it that way is because we looked at the journal's website.
They're about the journal many times referred to urban students. So it's okay if they talked about
urban students, but we couldn't talk about urban students. And that same reviewer said something
along the lines of, you know, I buy your methodology. I think it's like a causal relationship. It's a
rigorous study. But you didn't talk about how this relates to whiteness
and structural oppression and all these, you know,
buzzword, DEI buzzwords.
And it's like, well, that wasn't the point of the study.
I'm just, here's the results, here's what happened.
I'm not gonna put any extra flavor on it
and get on all this equity stuff.
I'm just doing a, I thought an unbiased study.
Here's the data, here's what it says.
But no, I had to talk about how it relates to whiteness.
I mean, it didn't even make any sense to me.
And so we went to a different journal
and it ultimately got published.
But just goes to show you, I mean, when they say peer reviewed
that doesn't actually mean all that much.
And it could actually mean,
it could actually be a negative indicator,
not a positive indicator.
Depending on who's reviewing it.
I mean, I had someone I was arguing with
who's a professor in a college of education
at the University of Texas, Austin today,
or recently on X.
And he was basically saying,
you know, there's some studies that show
that if you use a scholarship that,
and they lemon pick the evidence,
they choose the few negative studies in credit,
they use that to hang their hat on it.
And they say, well, sometimes when students use scholarships,
their test scores go down a little bit
in this and that study.
And it's a peer-reviewed study.
One of those studies in their working paper version
found positive effects.
They went through the peer review process
and all of a sudden found school choice somehow
that had negative effects. And you know as
professors you're gonna do whatever the peers say because you're trying to get
published right? That's kind of like, that's kind of like your, I mean even if
no one reads the study, if you have a journal article that's in a high-
It's a resonating register.
Yeah, it's like, that's kind of their status there.
Outside of their echo chambers, nobody really cares about it.
No one reads it.
And the peers don't even read the studies.
I mean, you and I don't read the studies.
I've never read a single-
So, I mean, they're like 50 pages, nobody reads it.
You're more likely to get people paying attention
to a tweet than a 50 page article.
Yeah, 100%.
And that's another reason why I said,
the hell with this university stuff.
I still do studies from time to time.
My most recent one found that the school closures hurt
parents' mental health as well.
Oh, wow.
Not just the kids' mental health.
I could see that.
And that just got peer reviewed in a journal.
I don't even remember the name of it, because I don't really,
that's not as important to me.
And the most recent study I got peer reviewed before that
was finding that the teachers unions were linked to the closures.
That places that had stronger teachers unions were more likely to keep their schools closed longer.
That wasn't really a surprising finding, but a lot of people, you know, in their echo chambers would say,
Oh, no, you can't just read the news headlines to put data behind it.
And so we did. But yeah, it's loony tunes in the university system.
And I think that's why we have so many problems at K through 12 too.
The teachers are going through these colleges of education and learning to be Marxist and
then that trickles down to the public school system.
And it's a huge problem.
But this person I was arguing with on X earlier, professor at the University of Texas Austin
in their college of education, he was pointing to these studies saying, well, this actually
hurts the kids. And my response was, you know what? The parents know their kids
needs more than you, professor, and they shouldn't need your permission to choose
the school that works best for their kid. Because maybe they're not choosing based
on the test score getting 1% better. Maybe they're choosing because they're getting bullied.
Maybe their kid is involved in a gang at the public school and maybe, hey,
maybe they're published, their test score went down a little bit in the private
school, which could be because they switched schools.
And that is known to have negative effects on test scores,
regardless of whether you're, what type of school you're switching to. It's,
it's, it's a shock, right? It's something that you have to deal with.
It's a, it is a transition cost associated with that,
but things get better over time, right?
And the parents know their kid's situation,
which is not gonna be captured by a standardized test score.
There's multiple dimensions to school quality.
It's safety, it's the culture of the school,
it's the specialized mission of the school.
And the parent knows that better than any bureaucrat
sitting in the office hundreds of miles away.
And they certainly know it better than some PhD
who doesn't even have their own kids,
and some PhD who likes to call themselves doctor,
even though they're more like a Jill Biden doctor.
100%.
Corey, it's been awesome, man.
Where can people find your book and keep up with you?
You can find it on Amazon.
It's actually a national bestseller,
ranked by USA Today.
Those New York Times people, they didn't put it on the list,
but Trump endorsed the book as well.
But on Amazon, it's The Parent Revolution,
Rescuing Your Kids from the Radicals Ruining Our Schools.
And it's actually 45% off right now.
So take advantage of that.
It's almost half off.
And yeah, check it out. You
can follow me on X it's at D'Angeles Corey. And again, if you want to take Ted Cruz's
advice center from Texas, he says on the back, you can ruin Randy Winegarden's day by reading
this book. I love it. We'll link it below. Thanks for coming on Corey. Thanks so much
for having us. Thanks for watching guys. Check out his stuff below. See you next time.