@tango As I indicated, I agree. As with ALL grants, there need to be regulations. And yes, that can be problematic.
Yes, I think we're mostly on a similar page, I'm curious to see how you'd see regulation working so the system works, rather than falling one way where it just hands out endless money to anyone who asks, or falling the other way where there are so many hoops to jump through it might as well not exist.
But I don't think this has to be difficult. Again, the GI bill has provided very generous grants for education for some 80 years, literally millions have taken advantage of this (including a lot of clergy who went to seminary on the GI bill). My dad used this for his college degree. This money is for the PERSON, not the school... thus it is not locked to the school but for the person. It's a good model for "school choice" or what sometimes is called "the voucher system." There are regulations and limitations with the education benefit in the GI bill but (sorry) I don't know what they are. But the program is extremely popular among both Democrats and Republicans. And millions have taken advantage of it for decades.
If someone is willing to put their life on the line for the country it doesn't seem unreasonable to give something in return, and an education is always useful even after a military career has finished. Whatever regulations might exist within the GI bill, what sort of regulations do you think would provide a well balanced approach to giving those who are intelligent enough to benefit but poor enough to struggle to fund it the chance to access a higher education without swamping universities with people who really aren't up to that level of academic education?
IMO, we should extend this to non-veterans and implement something similar for K-12, replacing the enormous funding for public schools. PARENTS (for those under 18) and STUDENTS (for those 18 and over) are empowered... THEY choose their school and curriculum, and society (yes, through taxes) empowers it - with regulations and limitations. This would place the control in the hands of the receivers rather than the providers, it would end the very socialistic approach to education in the USA. But while this idea has been floated since the early 1800's, it is opposed by government that wants to control this rather than parents and students, and more recently by teacher unions that passionately fight against every such proposal.
I remember someone I loosely know was very vocally opposed to the concept of vouchers. Her view (and she leans left politically, although I'm not sure to what extent) was that the problem wasn't so much with taking away the cost of educating the child because that would more or less match off against the reduction in incurred cost of education, but the splintering of all the associated costs. Her view was that the cost of educating the child is only one part of the picture and also considered the costs of things like administering the staff, providing a canteen etc. Although I could see her point I couldn't help thinking that if a school can't offer an education good enough for parents to choose it, whether or not you have a canteen for the kids becomes secondary.
That said, considering issues of trying to get kids from one side of town across town to the school their parents choose because it's best can provide logistical issues, and of course the best schools with be oversubscribed so there has to be some way to deciding which of the people who wants a place actually gets a place. And that, in turn, will lead to cries of indirect discrimination because the kids from the trailer park haven't got a chance to match the scores of the kids from wealthy families when it comes to academic testing.
In the UK some years ago there was talk of "patient choice" when it came to hospitals. One commentator noted that it's better to just be told which hospital you're being taken to for treatment and knowing it's a good clean hospital, than being given the choice between a hospital 150 miles away, a hospital half a mile away with a horrendous MRSA problem, or a hospital two miles away with a track record of patients having post-treatment complications.
How to raise the standards of the failing schools, with teachers unions apparently having vested interests in actively opposing such improvements, is probably a key question in all of this.