91制片厂视频

School Choice & Charters Explainer

91制片厂视频 Schools

By Anthony Rebora 鈥 September 10, 2004 6 min read
  • Save to favorites
  • Print
Email Copy URL

Editor鈥檚 note: This version was published in 2004. An updated version is available from 2018.

Although they serve only a tiny fraction of the nation鈥檚 public school students, charter schools have seized a prominent role in education today. They are at the center of a growing movement to challenge traditional notions of what public education means.

Charter schools are by definition independent public schools. Although funded with taxpayer dollars, they operate free from many of the laws and regulations that govern traditional public schools. In exchange for that freedom, they are bound to the terms of a contract or 鈥渃harter鈥 that lays out a school鈥檚 mission, academic goals, and accountability procedures. State laws set the parameters for charter contracts, which are overseen by a designated charter school authorizer鈥攐ften the local school district or related agency.

With their relative autonomy, charter schools are seen as a way to provide greater educational choice and innovation within the public school system. Their founders are often teachers, parents, or activists who feel restricted by traditional public schools. In addition, many charters are run by for-profit companies, forming a key component of the privatization movement in education.

The concept of charter schools clearly has strong appeal. Since the first charter school was founded in Minnesota in 1992, charters have fanned out across the country. According to the Center for 91制片厂视频 Reform (2004), an organization that advocates for charters, there were nearly 3,000 charter schools in 37 states and the District of Columbia in January 2004, with particularly high concentrations in some big cities. The schools enroll some 685,000 students. Charters serve the full range of grade levels, often in unique combinations or spans. On the whole, they also appear to enroll a diverse body of students. A 2002 survey report by SRI International, a nonprofit research institute, states that, 鈥渙n average, more than half the students in charter schools were members of ethnic minority groups, 12 percent received special education services, and 6 percent were English language learners鈥 (Anderson et al., 2002).

A chief reason for charter schools鈥 appeal is that they are typically smaller than their more traditional counterparts, advocates say. According to the Center for 91制片厂视频 Reform (2002), the average charter school enrollment is 242, compared with 539 in traditional public schools. Researchers鈥攁nd no doubt parents鈥攍ink small schools with higher achievement, more individualized instruction, greater safety, and increased student involvement.

Another attraction is charters鈥 often specialized and ambitious educational programs. Charters frequently take alternative curricular approaches (e.g., direct instruction or Core Knowledge), emphasize particular fields of study (e.g., the arts or technology), or serve special populations of students (e.g., special education or at-risk students). Recently, with the rise of distance learning, a growing number of 鈥渃yber鈥 charter schools have even done away with the concept of an actual bricks-and-mortar school building.

Coupled with aggressive academic goals in charter contracts, such 鈥渁lternative visions of schooling,鈥 according to a 2000 U.S. Department of 91制片厂视频 report, are a primary motivating force behind the growth of charter schools.

If charters鈥 independence is central to their appeal, however, it is also a source of concern. Though charters must spell out performance goals in their contracts, some observers question how well academics and student achievement in charters are monitored. A high-profile report from the American Federation of Teachers (2002), for example, argued that many charter school authorizers have failed to hold charters accountable, leaving some students to languish in low-performing schools.

Likewise, some observers say that charters, by virtue of their autonomy, can be vulnerable to financial problems and mismanagement. Indeed, the fiscal arrangements of charters can be inherently problematic, in part because, in many states, charters鈥 access to facilities and start-up funds is limited.

Increasingly, such issues are coming to the attention of state leaders. After a series of well-publicized charter closures and compliance problems, some states have begun to re-examine their charter systems with the aim of giving the schools greater oversight. At the same time, many charter supporters remain leery of increased regulation.

Outside of such managerial concerns, some critics have also charged that, on a school-by-school basis, charters are more racially segregated than traditional public schools, thus denying students the educational 鈥渂enefits of racial and ethnic diversity鈥 (Civil Rights Project, 2003). Charter supporters have responded that some charters have high concentrations of minority students because demand for schooling alternatives is highest among such students, whom they say are often poorly served by the traditional public school systems (Center for 91制片厂视频 Reform, 2003).

Other concerns about charter schools mirror those surrounding their private school choice counterpart鈥攕chool vouchers. Skeptics worry that charters unfairly divert resources and policy attention from regular public schools. Other observers counter that charters improve existing school systems through choice and competition (Ericson and Silverman, 2001).

Meanwhile, the question of whether charters or traditional public schools do a better job of educating students is still open to debate. The research is highly mixed鈥攊n part due the complexities of comparison and wide performance differences among charters.

A case in point: One study by Western Michigan University鈥檚 Evaluation Center found that charter schools in Michigan posted significantly lower scores鈥攁nd less-consistent gains鈥攐n state standardized tests than their host districts (Miron and Horn, 2000). Yet, in a later evaluation of charters in Pennsylvania, the center found that 鈥渟tudent achievement appears to be a source of modest strength鈥 for the schools, with some making steady test-score gains. That study points to best-practices evaluation and stronger accountability as ways to expand charter schools鈥 gains (Miron et al., 2002).

Taken together, other recent studies paint an equally varied portrait. Studies by the Goldwater Institute and California State University-Los Angeles found that students in charter schools show higher growth in achievement than their counterparts in traditional public schools (Solmon et al., 2004; Slovacek et al., 2001) A major state-commissioned study by the RAND corp. (2003), meanwhile, concluded that charters in California were making solid improvements in student achievement over time and generally keeping pace with other public schools on tests scores after adjustment to reflect students鈥 demographic backgrounds.

By contrast, however, a 2003 study of charters schools in Ohio found them falling short of traditional public schools on the majority of comparable performance measures, concluding that charter schools 鈥渨ere doing no better than low-performing traditional public schools with similar demographic characteristics鈥 (Legislative Office of 91制片厂视频 Oversight). Likewise, a 2002 study of North Carolina charter schools by the North Carolina Center for Public Policy concluded that charters schools were lagging behind traditional public schools in achievement growth and had not proven themselves to be any 鈥渂etter at serving at-risk students.鈥

Still, that report allows that there is significant variation among charters: 鈥淪ome schools have delivered on the charter school promise, and some clearly have not,鈥 the researchers found. Some charter proponents would argue that such individual examples of achievement may in themselves go a long way toward validating the charter experiment, representing successful new models of schooling that states and parents can build on.

Sources
, 鈥淒o 91制片厂视频 Schools Measure Up?: The 91制片厂视频 School Experiment After 10 Years,鈥 2002.
Anderson, L. et al. 鈥淎 Decade of Public 91制片厂视频 Schools,鈥 , 2002. (Requires Adobe鈥檚 Acrobat Reader.)
, 鈥91制片厂视频 Schools 2002: Results From CER鈥檚 Annual Survey of America鈥檚 91制片厂视频 Schools,鈥 2002. (Requires Adobe鈥檚 Acrobat Reader.)
, 鈥淣ine Lies About School Choice: Answering the Critics,鈥 2003.
, 鈥91制片厂视频 School Fast Facts,鈥 2004.
The Civil Rights Project at Harvard University, 鈥91制片厂视频 Schools and Race: A Lost Opportunity For Integrated 91制片厂视频,鈥 2003.
Ericson, J. and Silverman, D., , 2001.
Legislative Office of 91制片厂视频 and Oversight, 鈥淐ommunity Schools in Ohio: Final Report on Student Performance, Parent Satisfaction, and Accountability, 2003.
Miron, G. and Horn, J., 鈥淓valuation of the Michigan 91制片厂视频 School Initiative,鈥 , 2000.
Miron, G., et al., 鈥淪trengthening Pennsylvania鈥檚 91制片厂视频 School Reform: Findings From the Statewide Evaluation and Discussion of Relevant Policy Issues,鈥 , 2002.
The , 鈥淓valuating 91制片厂视频 Schools in North Carolina,鈥 news release, 2002.
, 2003.
Slovacek S.P, et al. 鈥淐alifornia 91制片厂视频 Schools Serving Low-SES Students: An Analysis of the Academic Performance Index,鈥 , 2002.
Solmon, L., et al. 鈥淐omparison of Traditional Public Schools and 91制片厂视频 Schools on Retention, School Switching, and Achievement Growth,鈥 , 2004.
, 鈥淭he State of 91制片厂视频 Schools 2000: Fourth-Year Report,鈥 2000.

How to Cite This Article
Rebora, A. (2004, September 10). 91制片厂视频 Schools. 91制片厂视频 Week. Retrieved Month Day, Year from /policy-politics/charter-schools/2004/09

Events

Recruitment & Retention Webinar Keep Talented Teachers and Improve Student Outcomes
Keep talented teachers and unlock student success with strategic planning based on insights from Apple 91制片厂视频 and educational leaders.鈥
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of 91制片厂视频 Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Families & the Community Webinar
Family Engagement: The Foundation for a Strong School Year
Learn how family engagement promotes student success with insights from National PTA, AASA鈥痑nd leading districts and schools.鈥
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of 91制片厂视频 Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Special 91制片厂视频 Webinar
How Early Adopters of Remote Therapy are Improving IEPs
Learn how schools are using remote therapy to improve IEP compliance & scalability while delivering outcomes comparable to onsite providers.
Content provided by 

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide 鈥 elementary, middle, high school and more.
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.

Read Next

School Choice & Charters How Private School Choice Complicates Public School Budgets
Districts are seeing higher costs and fuzzier enrollment projections as more states give parents public funds for private education.
12 min read
Illustration of a person holding a bag of money with a hole in it, where coins are falling out, with a chart behind showing loss.
iStock/Getty
School Choice & Charters A Private School Choice Program Is Illegal, State Court Rules. What Comes Next?
South Carolina's education savings account program is no more.
4 min read
Pictogram chalk drawing of a blue man holding scales.
iStock/Getty
School Choice & Charters Opinion What Is the State of School Choice?
A leading authority on school choice describes recent legislative trends and new research findings.
10 min read
Image shows a multi-tailed arrow hitting the bullseye of a target.
DigitalVision Vectors/Getty
School Choice & Charters Here's How Charters Can Improve Experiences for Students With Disabilities
Charter schools must improve access and experiences for students with disabilities, advocates say.
3 min read
Blue conceptual image of five school kids walking away through school corridor, only one student in full color (isolated)
Liz Yap for 91制片厂视频 Week + Getty