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Charter School Student Numbers Soar To More Than 2 Million

Charter Schools

By CHRISTINE ARMARIO   12/ 7/11 08:09 AM ET   AP

MIAMI -- The number of students attending charter schools has soared to more than 2 million as states pass laws lifting caps and encouraging their expansion, according to figures released Wednesday.

The growth represents the largest increase in enrollment over a single year since charter schools were founded nearly two decades ago. In all, more than 500 new charter schools were opened in the 2011-12 school year. And about 200,000 more students are enrolled now than a year before, an increase of 13 percent nationwide.

"This 2 million student mark is quite significant," said Ursula Wright, interim CEO of the nonprofit National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, which released the study. "It demonstrates increased demand by families who want to see more high quality education options for their children."

Wright and others attribute the boom in large part to the Obama administration's $4.35 billion Race to the Top competition, which rewarded states for taking on ambitious education changes that included expanding charter schools. In order to qualify, many states changed laws to encourage the growth. Sixteen states have lifted caps on the number of them and student enrollment over the last three years, according to the National Council of State Legislatures.

State Sen. Garrett Mason, who sponsored a charter school bill passed in Maine this summer, said after 17 years of attempts by lawmakers to permit the publicly funded, independently run schools in the state, the time was right.

"We had seen a movement for new ideas at the state level and we were able to articulate the message appropriately," Mason said.

The growth comes even as states have severely cut education budgets. They are helped by continued support from private foundations and the U.S. Department of Education, which announced $25 million in grants for high achieving charter schools in September. Still, charter operators said those sources do not come close to compensating for the huge losses they have experienced in state school funding.

James Willcox, CEO of Aspire Public Schools, California's largest charter school operator, said $20 million in state funding has been lost annually since 2007. After school and academic intervention programs have been cut, class sizes expanded and teachers haven't received a cost of living increase in four years.

"We have banded together and done everything we possibly can to keep them on track," Willcox said in an interview Tuesday. "Our results have gotten better even as the situation has gotten worse. But it's not sustainable."

The largest growth in charter schools over the last year was in California, which added 47,000 new students; Florida, with 23,500 new students; Texas, with an extra 22,000; and Ohio, which brought in some 12,000 more.

"Parents have become savvy education consumers," said Lynn Norman-Teck, spokeswoman for the Florida Consortium of Public Charter Schools.

Overall, about 4.5 percent of all public school students now attend a charter school, and about 5 percent of all public schools are charters.

Charter schools are funded by taxpayers but operate independently of many of the laws and regulations that govern traditional public schools. Advocates praise smaller class sizes and the breadth of curricular options.

But their performance so far has been mixed; a 2009 Stanford University study found only 17 percent performed better than regular public schools while more than twice as many – 37 percent – performed worse. Another 46 percent were about the same.

"There's a bell curve, if you will, a mixed bag," Wright said. "We've got some that are just performing out of the park, really educating students at the very, very highest levels, creating gains that not too far in the past people questioned if they were even possible. We've got some, unfortunately, at the other end of the spectrum."

Robin Lake, associate director of the Center on Reinventing Public Education at the University of Washington, said the big expansion has come at the right time: Charter schools have matured and are paying more attention to effectively surveying and addressing the needs of special education, English language learners and other students. At the same time, the traditional public school system seems to have become more accepting of charters, seeing them as part of the fabric of education.

She said there's also an increased focus on quality rather than quantity.

"Early on people defined a strong law as one that was expansive, let new schools open," Lake said. "Now people recognize a strong law as one that creates autonomy to start up and do things differently, but are equally strong on accountability and oversight."

In Florida, for example, a charter school law was passed this spring making it easier for charters deemed as "high performing" to expand. About 57 percent of Florida's charter schools were given an "A" by the state last school year. Six percent were given an "F," including a new KIPP charter school in Jacksonville. KIPP, or the Knowledge is Power Program, has schools nationwide and is frequently cited as an example of a successful charter schools network, highlighting the difficulty of replicating good results.

There are also concerns that charter schools could be exacerbating segregation in public schools. Some charters may not be truly accessible to the most disadvantaged kids, depending on transportation and proximity to the highest need areas, said Peter Weitzel, co-editor of the book "The Charter School Experiment."

Weitzel said charter schools have not lived up to their expectation of being hotbeds for innovation in the classroom either.

"Charter schools are frequently innovative outside the classroom," he said. "But once you get into the classroom, we're not really seeing the extent of innovation that people had hoped to see."

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MIAMI -- The number of students attending charter schools has soared to more than 2 million as states pass laws lifting caps and encouraging their expansion, according to figures released Wednesday. ...
MIAMI -- The number of students attending charter schools has soared to more than 2 million as states pass laws lifting caps and encouraging their expansion, according to figures released Wednesday. ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
10YearTeacher
10:46 AM on 12/11/2011
I am all for expanding charter schools with this caveat:
Everyone who is involved in teaching and administration over those involved in teaching must have an education degree, or two, or three, and have been a classroom teacher for at least 5 years. Ok, so the records secretary, the Title 1 coordinator, the accountant, etc...don't need to have been teachers. In fact I would like them to be well educated in their fields instead.
But the principal, the other administrators, at least one of the members of the board, etc...have to have been teachers. I am so tired of rich business people putting their noses where they do not belong. They ought to get back to what they SHOULD be doing-creating jobs.
I have taught in charter schools run by non-educators, and now I teach in one that is run by educators. The difference is night and day.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
trinity
09:07 PM on 12/09/2011
Probably because the monies siphoning from traditional public schools (who have to accept everyone) to charter schools (who can be selective) has soared. Our governor has made huge cuts to public education ($300million) yet allowed vouchers for religious schools and increased charter schools (his wife in on the board of several charter schools)....charter schools are popping up on every street corner, yet the 20 of the 25 worst schools in the state are all charters....
03:13 PM on 12/09/2011
If charters are so great, then why did they score lower on the state tests than the public schools in Los Angeles? How did the "Aspire" schools do, compared to the public schools?
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10:30 AM on 12/09/2011
Some charters work well, some not so much. Hmm, sounds a lot like public schools.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Marx Twain
America's homespun Marxist
08:58 PM on 12/08/2011
Just like the idea that upper class taxes results in job creation, the myth that charter schools boost achievement is one of those canards that the media and politicians refuse to let go of. No matter how much evidence is presented over and over that charters don't work, the reformers refuse to face reality.
06:30 PM on 12/08/2011
There's no smoke without fire. Just taking New York City. Good inner-city schools such as Bronx Science, Brooklyn Tech, Hunter College School, Stuyvescent can have oversubscription by students from all over the city just to take the entry exams while some other high schools are shunned. This shows that both the parents and students are aware of how to separate the "wheat from the chaff". Charter schools offer another choice in addition to the others of parochial/private schools and home schooling.
In my world, choice is good. If the critics say charters are no better then the children are no worse off and if they are then the children gain. When it's a choice then the parents/students become stakeholders. It's that simple.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Conuly
10:52 AM on 12/10/2011
Stuy isn't exactly "inner city".
05:45 PM on 12/08/2011
so 2 million students will not be educated. keep an eye out eventually done the road many more students will not be college ready...... but these for profits keep getting paid??/ Question.. keep a parent sue a non for profit if their child is not college ready? just asking
04:37 PM on 12/08/2011
I am not using a charter or a private school for my kids now as the suburb I live in has excellent schools, but I did have my kids in Montessori when I lived in Salinas. After my experience at a junior high in DC, I would home school before subjecting my kids to such an experience - at least I got out of it without broken bones or holes in my hide, not all did.

As a parent I am looking for several things in a school:
an atmosphere conducive to learning
Excellent to adequate teachers (I can and do drive study at home and will add my own material and assignments if the teachers do not do enough)
Courses that are appropriate for my children (If the school isn't doing it and I have to do it myself, why do I need the school?).
Other students with appropriate values, intelligence, and academic interests (so that they can support one another)

If the student body of the public school is too disaffected, the learning atmosphere will not be there and I have to consider other alternatives, including charter and home/on-line schooling.
01:27 PM on 12/08/2011
We can have eternal arguments about kids in schools but can't put together a National Recommended Reading List for them. Would a truly great list help kids find out they can learn a lot of important information without the schools? Are the schools really intended to direct their thinking in certain ways and those are the kinds of people who want to become teachers.

HTC Flyer Full Review
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EE7pKmlhOKU

A Short History of the World by H. G. Wells (not sci-fi but with a sci-fi writer's perspective)
http://www.bartleby.com/86/

All Day September by Roger Kuykendall
http://www.feedbooks.com/book/2295/all-day-september

The Fourth R by George O. Smith
http://www.onread.com/book/The-Fourth-R-17950/

Eight Keys to Eden by Mark Clifton
http://www.mysterious-strange-weird.com/index-sensational-mysteries.html
http://www.onread.com/book/Eight-Keys-to-Eden-6514/

There Will Be School Tomorrow, by V. E. Thiessen
www.feedbooks.com/userbook/11643.pdf

THE YEAR WHEN STARDUST FELL by Raymond F. Jones
http://www.amazon.com/Year-When-Stardust-Fell/dp/1935774409
http://www.readcentral.com/book/Raymond-F-Jones/Read-The-Year-When-Stardust-Fell-Online

Black Man's Burden by Mack Reynolds
http://sfgospel.typepad.com/sf_gospel/2008/08/mack-reynolds-on-africa-islam-utopia-and-progress.html
http://www.feedbooks.com/book/4826/black-man-s-burden
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
11:13 AM on 12/08/2011
I'm surprised at the number of comments opposed to charter schools. Heaven forbid we actually offer parents some sort of choice in order to get their kids out of LA Unified.
10:54 AM on 12/08/2011
I truly wish charters actually worked. They don’t. What most parents don’t know is that charters have existed for almost 40 years. Depending who is doing the counting the number of charters they could be above 30 thousand schools. What is important about the above facts is that hundreds of very high quality studies have been conducted into the effectiveness of charters. The sad fact is less than 1% do better than the public school they were created to replace. Of the remainder so 10% equal the performance of the public school and the remainder fall below public schools.
As long as we kid ourselves about things like charters we will continue to remain 24th academically in the world. Tell it like it is and offer charters as an option not a solution.
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01:30 AM on 12/08/2011
http://www.newschools.org/board

Read the names of the greedy capitalists who are privatizing your child's school.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
10YearTeacher
10:34 AM on 12/11/2011
Not a one of them who has walked a mile in my moccasins as a classroom teacher.
I teach at one of those highly innovative, progressive, and successful charter schools. One of the main reasons for our success is that top to bottom it is all educators running the show, with the exception of the business-heads (CPA, etc) and people like the Title 1 coordinator and records secretary (for lack of a better word). The founder was an educator, the principal was a teacher, everyone who has anything to say about how the school is run has spent time in a classroom as a teacher in one way or another.
We are what charter schools are supposed to have been-laboratories for innovation. None of this could happen if we were run by business people and worried about test scores as a way to measure teachers.
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01:28 AM on 12/08/2011
DIG people behind the Boards of Directors of the charter schools. Look up WHO is investing in these "entrepreneurial education" privatization schemes. I tried to print a list of some of their names and was blocked. Very RICH and very much motivated by GREED.
Ted Mitchell, CEO, NewSchools Venture Fund--Brook Byers, Partner, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers--John Doerr, Partner, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers--Chris Gabrieli, Co-Founder and Chairman, Massachusetts 2020--Laurene Powell Jobs, Founder and Chair of the Board, Emerson Collective--Joanna Rees, Founder and Managing Partner, VSP Capital--Kim Smith, Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Bellwether Education Partners--Dave Whorton, Managing Director, Tugboat Ventures

These people represent some of the most avaricious venture funds on earth. They are motivated BY GREED, not by altruism.
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01:16 AM on 12/08/2011
In marketing they call this type of advertising, "Join the bandwagon."

Ever notice how the corporate MSM report only negative news about public schools but only positive about charters?

Your public education commons are being privatized, people, by some of the most aggressive capitalists on earth and this will benefit the richest people in the United States. They don't privatize our schools for your child's benefits unless they benefit more first. Check out the owners of the charter school companies (Aspire, Green Dot etc.) invariably there is a venture capitalist and money changer somewhere in the mix.
09:19 PM on 12/07/2011
Take your children out of the public schools that are run by rich idiots and put them into the charter schools which are run by richer idiots.
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01:23 AM on 12/08/2011
Here's a list of the rich capitalists behind one big charter corporation Green Dot.:

Ted Mitchell, CEO, NewSchools Venture Fund
Brook Byers, Partner, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers
John Doerr, Partner, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers
Chris Gabrieli, Co-Founder and Chairman, Massachusetts 2020
Laurene Powell Jobs, Founder and Chair of the Board, Emerson Collective
Joanna Rees, Founder and Managing Partner, VSP Capital
Kim Smith, Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Bellwether Education Partners
Dave Whorton, Managing Director, Tugboat Ventures
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01:24 AM on 12/08/2011
I just tried to list the names of the rich capitalist money changers behind Green Dot charter schools and the Huf Po blocked it.