Education in the UK is far more than a right, it is in fact a legal requirement for parents to ensure their child attend school.
(…and if you really know about UK education then surely you know this)
Add to this that the LEA has is also legally bound to provide the means for that education, and if you abolish the LEA that responsibility will fall in some way to the state which will then have to create and fund organisations to enforce the law.
This is why we end up with the situation that travellers children are sometimes taken to school in taxis cabs funded by the LEA, and why evey expelled child must be found some other means of delivering education.
Once the parents fulfill their legal obligation it is then the responsibility of a state sponsored organisation.
As for the state schools and LEAs being reviled, far from it, parents are known to move house simply to fall within the catchments area of a known good school, and these are exclusively state schools, fee-paying schools make no bones about catchment areas all you need is the money.
Some of those parents could well afford to pay for private schooling but choose not to do so, moving house can cost more than several years of tuition.
It is true that there are bad state schools and utterly terrible ones, and many students don’t have the choice, neither do the parents who are concerned.
Your idea does notheing at all to address the problem of these bad schools and the unfortunate enthusiastic students surrounded by a sea of ignorant urchins whose parents couldn’t be bothered to teach them how to use a knife and fork.
I wonder who is better able to understand the requirements of local schooling in a particular area, some appointed unelected, and publicly unaccountable bunch of civil servants in Whitehall, or maybe local school governors boards comprising representatives of the local community, locally elected council officials, local teachers with input from local companies and local higher education institutions.
We have had a few changes to the law to make it easier for Local Authorities to bring errant parents before the law, and there have been a few widely publicised cases, much more need to be done.
What you are proposing is a voucher system, where any differance in fees will be made up by parents.
Few flaws here,
Most parents have plenty to pay for, they pay vast amounts of tax and they also have the worry that if their offspring are succesful in their studies there might well be University fees to pay.
That is one heck of a commmitment over a long period of time, especially if there are several children of differing ages.
What if you are a good parent and the only good school reasonably near is going to cost more money than the voucher value?
You could try stump up the cash if you could.
Would you as a parent condemn your child to an institution that is just a portal to prison.(yes, my local schools are pretty much that, being rated as lowest in the entire country - Seacroft Middle School)
A scholarship system would be full of massive holes, just what percentage are we talking about, and when a good school is full, it could charge whatever it wanted to limit demand.
Competition is generally a good thing, but how do you sort out the wheat from the chaff, I was almost the last to take the 11 plus exam and I passed.
This is despite my coming from a worse background than almost anyone I know, including the prisoners I work with.
The types of questions were disgraceful, the class bias was simply an affront,
Questions such as:-
What is a decanter for ?
How many blue collar 11 years olds would know that!
Who wrote Ivanhoe ?
Not too many lower working class 11 years olds get that book as a present I’ll bet!
What were “the wooden walls of England”?
How many adults know that!
As it happened I did, but the 11 plus exam was nothing more than a scholarship to grammar school with class biased questions and no obvious school lesson content that would inform prospective 11 year olds - we had no state set curriculum back then.
I’ll leave it there for now, I would be pleased to address this matter in much greater depth.