 The school closures are a big threat to the power of public schools, by Ryan MacMacon, an audio-mesus wire narrated by Million Quinteros. 2020 is likely to be a watershed year in the history of public schooling, and things aren't looking good for the public schools. For decades, we've been fed a nearly daily diet of claims that public schooling is one of the most important, if not the most important, institutions in America. We're also told that there's not nearly enough of it. And this leads to demands for longer school hours, longer school years, and even larger amounts of money spent on more facilities and more tech. And then, all of a sudden, with the panic over COVID-19, it was gone. It turns out that public schooling wasn't actually all that important after all, and that extending the lives of the over-70 demographic takes precedence. Yes, the schools have tried to keep up the ruse that students are all diligently doing their schoolwork at home, but by late April it was already apparent that the old model of doing public school via internet isn't working. In some places, class participation has collapsed by 60%, as students simply aren't showing up for the virtual lessons. The political repercussions of all this will be sizable. Changing attitudes among the middle classes. Ironically, public schools have essentially ditched lower income families almost completely, even though school district bureaucrats have long-based the political legitimacy of public schools on the idea that they are an essential resource for low-income students. So as long as the physical schools remain closed, this claim will become increasingly unconvincing. After all, virtual public schooling simply doesn't work for these families, since lower income households are more likely to depend on both parents' incomes, and parents may have less flexible job schedules. This means less time for parents to make sure little Sally logs on to her virtual classes. Many lower income households don't even have internet access or computing equipment beyond their smartphones. Only 56% of households with incomes under 30,000 have access to broadband internet. Nonetheless, working class and lower income parents are likely to return their children to the schools when they open again. Many believe they have no other choice. Attitudes among the middle classes will be a little different, however, and may be more politically damaging to the future of the public schools. Like their lower income counterparts, middle-class parents have long been happy to take advantage of the schools as a child care service. But the non-educational amenities didn't stop there. Middle-class parents especially have long embraced the idea that billions of dollars spent on school music programs, school sports, and other extracurriculars were all absolutely essential to student success. Sports provided an important social function for both the students and the larger community. But as the list of amenities we once associated with schooling gets shorter and shorter, households at all income levels will start to wonder what exactly they're paying for. Stripped of the non-academic side of things, public schools now must sell themselves only as providers of academic skills. Many parents are likely to be left unimpressed, and this will be all the more true for middle-class families, where the parents are able to readily adopt homeschooling as a real substitute. The households that do have the infrastructure to do this are now far more likely to concede that they simply don't need the public schools much of the time. There are now so many resources provided for free outside the schools, such as Khan Academy to just name one, that those who are already savvy with online informational resources will quickly understand that the schools are an essential. In addition to this, many parents who were on autopilot in terms of assuming they were getting their money's worth may suddenly be realizing that public schools, even when they were physically open, weren't that much of a bargain after all. As Gary North recently observed, for the first time parents can see exactly what is being taught to their children. They can see the quality of the teachers. They can learn about the content of the educational materials. Many parents may not like what they see, and as many increasingly take on the job of providing in-person instruction, school teachers won't look quite like the highly trained heroes they have long claimed to be. Budget cuts. With the image of schools as indispensable social institutions quickly fading, the political advantage they have long enjoyed will rapidly disappear as well. It wasn't long ago that schools could go back to the taxpayers again and again with demands for more money, more resources, and higher salaries. Teacher unions endlessly lectured the taxpayers about how getting your child into a classroom with one of their teachers was of the utmost importance. Voters, regardless of political ideology or party, were often amendable to the idea. That narrative is already greatly in danger, and the longer the COVID-19 panic ensures that schools remain closed, the more distant the memory of the old narrative will become. As school budgets contract, school districts from Las Vegas to Denver and across the nation are bracing for furloughs and layoffs. With smaller staff, fewer teachers, and smaller budgets, expect virtual public learning to become even more bare bones and less rewarding and engaging for students. What will things look like this fall? Even if schools open this fall, the reforms currently being pushed will ensure that schools continue to lack many of the amenities many have come to expect. If these reforms are adopted, students can forget about social events. They can expect shorter school days and an ongoing role for online schooling. Team sports will be gone. Old notions of universal mandatory attendance and long days will seem increasingly quaint and old-fashioned, or possibly even dangerous. For many parents, this will just reinforce their growing suspicions that public schools just aren't worth it anymore. Maybe they never were. For more content like this, visit Mises.org.