Giving a nod to public education
UC Law Professor makes an argument for continued support of public schools
Support for public education has waxed and waned since the early 19th century when social reformer Horace Mann argued for a common school that offered education for all children supported by local taxes. He believed that education was essential for political stability and social harmony.
Joseph Tomain, dean emeritus and the Wilbert and Helen Ziegler Professor of Law at the University of Cincinnati, and Sidney Shapiro, a professor at Wake Forest University, cited Mann’s common school movement as they discussed the history of public education in an article for the online publication, The Conversation.
Tomain and Shapiro argue that withdrawing from public education could be dire to the country and note the history of support from Mann’s movement to the GI Bill in the 20th century that made college a reality for millions of American veterans. They warn against prioritizing government support for privately funded schools over public education.
“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,” explains Tomain and Shapiro in the article. “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.”
Read the full article in The Conversation online.
Learn more about Professor Joseph Tomain online.
Featured top image of school students conducting a science experiment is provided by Istock.
Related Stories
TikTok users say anti-ICE videos are being censored
January 27, 2026
CNN turns to University of Cincinnati Professor Jeffrey Blevins to explain why censorship by social media companies paradoxically is permitted under the First Amendment.
Ohio township fails in bid to stop compensation to Ohio Innocence Project exoneree
January 27, 2026
The Columbus Dispatch follows the US Supreme Court's refusal to review a $45 million civil lawsuit award for an Ohio Innocence Project exoneree’s wrongful imprisonment. OIP at UC Law has help exonerate 43 people who served collectively more than 800 years behind bars for crimes they didn't commit.
A non-surgical approach for colorectal cancer
January 27, 2026
The University of Cincinnati Cancer Center's Ian Paquette and patient Patty Goering were featured in a Jacksonville television station News4Jax report on nonsurgical options to treat colorectal cancer.