>Maybe parents of children who perform good,
>should pay less for education, and parents of children who perform bad
>should pay more ? Again ethical problems arise..
Isn't that similar in principle to scholarships? A student who has an
established record of achievement is encouraged to realise their
potential by subsidising their costs. I don't see why the same mechanism
couldn't be applied more broadly.
-- Martz martz@martz.demon.co.ukFor my public key, <mailto:m.traynor@ic.ac.uk> with 'Send public key' as subject an automated reply will follow.
No more random quotes.