Join NPRI
Find out how you can become a member of NPRI and join the fight for freedom in the Silver State.
You can also learn about NPRI's endowment program.
Education
NPRI believes that the way to improve Nevada education is to empower parents and give them more control over the education their children receive. Nevada's monolithic educational apparatus has for too long been impervious to the free-market reforms that are a prerequisite to a quality education system. NPRI's mission on education policy is to inform Nevada's citizens, elected officials and educational leaders of the need to inject free-market principles into this area of public policy.
The century-old scheme to disempower parents
Modern school boards were designed by elitists to be impervious to change.
Why is public K-12 education in the Silver State so resistant to genuine reform? It was designed to be that way.
Are delusional political beliefs really free?
Higher tourism taxes will burden all Nevadans.
While most people practice intellectual self-discipline in their day-to-day lives, they often max out emotionally once they're in the voting booth.
'Baseless charges'
Public school finance in Nevada needs a serious overhaul.
An inspection of school finance around the nation reveals that virtually all the arguments commonly used by unions and districts for ever-higher spending levels are baseless – literally.
The solutions Nevada needs are right next door
Educational choice brings many benefits in its wake.
A comparison between Nevada and neighboring Arizona reveals the solutions the Silver State needs to meet its most pressing challenges in education.
Quality & Quantity
Nevada's Educational Challenges
By embracing school choice, Nevada can duplicate the success of neighboring Arizona in addressing the biggest challenges facing K-12 education.
Aristocracy in Nevada
The educational elites suppress the will of the people.
Increasingly, the actions of those who govern reflect the will of a small but influential group of special interests, rather than the will of the governed. One won't find a more egregious example of this than the public education system, nor a place where the consequences for education have been more disastrous than in Nevada.
Democrats want school choice, too
Support for educational freedom transcends party lines.
Little doubt remains here in the Silver State that the education system is broken and in dire need of significant reform. The lackluster performance of the state's public school system is something Nevadans of all political persuasions recognize, as thousands of students graduate from high school each year without the basic skills needed to be successful either in college or in the work force.
Nevada's education vanguard
We must expand, not restrict, the development of charter schools in Nevada.
It's time to bring public charter schools to the forefront of Nevada education. Battle-worn and born of hardy pioneering stock, many of Nevada's chartered public schools are emerging as successful, avant-garde educational models.
Big Labor's favorite tool
Intimidation is at the heart of unionism.
During and after the Nevada Democratic Party's divisive caucuses last week, both camps — Clinton/teacher union and Obama/Culinary union — accused the other of attempting to intimidate voters.
Significantly, however, the very caucusing system that permitted union members and others to be subjected to threats and intimidation had earlier been approved by the leadership of both unions.
Coming out of the dark
Government transparency would add credibility to both sides of the budget battle.
There's nothing particularly new, or even all that interesting, about the kafuffle taking place over Nevada's public K-12 education budget.





