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A+ on Public Charter Schools
• A+ views public charter schools as a tool to help improve Alabama’s public education system.
• Public charter schools are not for everyone.
• There is no silver bullet to solving every problem in Alabama’s educational system.
January 26, 2012 Baldwin County League of Women Voters 2
Overview
• Public Charter School Basics
• Public Charter Schools By the Numbers• Locations• Students served
• Opening and Operating Public Charter Schools
• Effectiveness
• Public Charter School Myths vs. Facts
January 26, 2012 Baldwin County League of Women Voters 3
Public Charter Schools1
• Charter schools are public schools that are free to be more innovative and are held accountable for improved student achievement.
• Charter schools cannot charge tuition, teach religion, or have admission requirements.
1Information and data from the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools and state departments of education, unless otherwise noted.
January 26, 2012 Baldwin County League of Women Voters 4
Public Charter Schools
January 26, 2012 Baldwin County League of Women Voters 5
Flexibility: Charter schools are free to make timely decisions about things like curricula development, school-day structure, and teacher hiring to meet students needs.
Accountability: Charter schools operate with multi-tiered accountability – to parents, to authorizers, and to the state – that leads to quality schools and achievement.
Public Charter Schools
Choice: Parents select the charter school their child attends. Teachers choose to work in the school, most often for the professional satisfaction and the opportunity to shape school policy.
Partnerships with Parents and Communities: Parents and community members are welcomed in charter schools and involved in the day-to-day operation of them.
January 26, 2012 Baldwin County League of Women Voters 6
Public Charter Schools
Innovation: Charter schools’ flexibility to adapt to the educational needs of children often leads to innovative methods of teaching and of operating schools.
• Common charter school “themes” include:
January 26, 2012 Baldwin County League of Women Voters 7
Flexibility Accountability Choice
Community Partnerships
Charter Schools By the Numbers
• 41 states and DC have enacted charter laws• States without charters: AL, KY, MT, ND, NE, SD, VT,
WA, WV• Minnesota was the first in 1991• Maine was the most recent in June 2011
• More than 5,200 charter schools nationwide• 400-500 new charter schools open each year
• Over 1.8 million students (4% of students)• 150,000-200,000 new students enroll each year
• Nearly 400,000 students on waiting lists
January 26, 2012 Baldwin County League of Women Voters 8
Charter Schools by the Numbers
• Locations of the 5,200 public charters nationwide:
January 26, 2012 Baldwin County League of Women Voters 9
Who Do Public Charters Serve?• 63% of charter school students are non-white
• (43% in traditional public schools)
• 52% quality for free- and reduced-price lunch • (45% in traditional public schools)
• 12% have Individualized Education Plans• (12% in traditional public schools)
• 17% have limited English proficiency• (11% in traditional public schools)
January 26, 2012 Baldwin County League of Women Voters 10
Who Do Public Charters Serve?
• Research overwhelmingly shows that charters typically serve students who are academically behind their traditional public school peers or at the same academic level.
January 26, 2012 Baldwin County League of Women Voters 11
How Are Charters Created?
• Alabama’s public charter law should:• Allow conversions and start-up charter schools• Create statewide opportunity, with a preference to
students and applicants in low-performing areas• Create multiple paths to approval for applicants• Allow maximum autonomy, coupled with strong
accountability• Enforce equitable funding
• Applicants are generally: • Groups of teachers and parents• Non-profit charter management organizations (CMOs)
January 26, 2012 Baldwin County League of Women Voters 12
How Effective are Public Charters?• 2009 Stanford Study by CREDO
• Studied 16 states (of the 40 with charters at the time)• Mixed results by state: States with strong laws saw
public charters outperform traditional schools.• Overall, students in poverty perform better in charter
schools.• (58% of Alabama students qualify for free and
reduced-price lunches.)2
• 2011 Univ. of Washington meta-study of all charter research show higher gains in charter elementary and middle schools.
January 26, 2012 Baldwin County League of Women Voters 13
2 Alabama State Department of Education data for 2011-12 school year
Myth vs. Fact
Myth #1: Charter schools aren’t public schools.
Fact: Charters cannot teach religion, charge tuition, or have admission requirements.
Fact: Charters must be open to all students who want to attend; if more students enroll than there are seats available, schools must conduct lotteries to fill seats.
January 26, 2012 Baldwin County League of Women Voters 14
Myth vs. Fact
Myth #2: Charter schools cherry pick students.
Fact: Charters cannot have admission requirements.
Fact: Charters must be open to all students who want to attend; if more students enroll than there are seats available, schools must conduct lotteries to fill seats.
Fact: Research shows that students who choose charters are often further behind academically than their peers who stay in traditional public schools.
January 26, 2012 Baldwin County League of Women Voters 15
Myth vs. Fact
Myth #3: Charters drain money from the public schools.
Fact: The dollars are moving from one public school to another.
Fact: Charters tend to bring new resources into public education.
Fact: Can have an immediate, positive fiscal impact on the broader community – as well as a long-term, positive fiscal impact if they are successful.
January 26, 2012 Baldwin County League of Women Voters 16
Myth vs. Fact
Myth #4: Charters aren’t accountable.
Fact: Charters must meet the same state standards, take state tests, and participate in state accountability systems
Fact: Charters must enter into a charter contract with authorizer that outlines performance measures that charters must meet in order to stay open (academic, financial, and operational)
January 26, 2012 Baldwin County League of Women Voters 17
Myth vs. Fact
Myth #5: Charters undermine local control.
Fact: By empowering parents, teachers, and principals to run schools to best meet student needs, charter schools represent the strongest form of local control in public education.
Fact: In most states, local school boards have the ability to authorize charter schools (most often in addition to other entities like postsecondary institutions).
January 26, 2012 Baldwin County League of Women Voters 18