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Charter School Segregation Target Of New Report

Charter School Segregation Brief

First Posted: 02/22/2012 8:09 pm Updated: 02/24/2012 2:31 pm

Charter schools often promise to bring greater equity to education, but a new brief starts with the assumption that they fall short in delivery -- and provides recommendations to fix the alleged injustice.

"Charter schools tend to be more racially segregated than traditional public schools," said author and Penn State law professor Preston Green III, who sat on a board that considered charter-school applications in Pennsylvania. "What we tried to do is write ways to enable charter schools to promote desegregation rather exacerbate segregation."

The brief, "Chartering Equity: Using Charter School Legislation and Policy to Advance Educational Opportunity," from the University of Colorado's National Education Policy Center features recommendations from both Green and University of Wisconsin, Madison education professor Julie Mead on how states and school districts can ensure that charters are integrated and helpful to disadvantaged populations. It also includes statutes that states can use to help reach those goals.

Charter schools are publicly funded, but can be privately run, and often admit students via lottery. Charter schools advocates argue that educational opportunity should not depend on zip code, and that charter schools allow for educational innovation that eventually can trickle back into the traditional system.

Detractors, however, often assert that charters siphon resources from traditional public schools without equal compensation and that they don’t serve specific populations, such as special-education students, in proportion with their existence.

Either way, charter schools, championed by both the Obama administration and free-market entrepreneurs, are growing: This year, as they edge into their third decade of existence, charter schools serve a total of 5 percent of American public school students -- an increase of 200,000, or 13 percent, from the year before.

According to research released in 2010 by professor Gary Orfield of the Civil Rights Project at the University of California, Los Angeles, 70 percent of black charter school students attend a school where the bulk of their peers are also minorities -- compared to 40 percent in traditional public schools.

Orfield's brother, Myron Orfield, a professor at the University of Minnesota who directs the Institute on Race & Poverty, studies charter segregation at a local level.

"I think that charters are an engine of racial segregation. They are more segregated than public schools and cause public schools to be more segregated than they otherwise would be," he said. According to a report he plans to release Friday, from 2010-2011 almost 90 percent of black charter-school students in the Twin Cities are in segregated schools -- a number that actually increased by 8 percentage points over the last decade.

A common problem, Green said, is that charter schools often do not comply with federal civil-rights statutes. According to Orfield, they are legally responsible to do so, but are rarely challenged. For example, previous Supreme Court cases found "single-race schools were intentional segregation," Orfield said. "But charter schools haven't been challenged in this way, because people don't have a picture of how big a part of urban education they are."

But Ursula Wright, interim president of the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, rejects the premise of the brief. "I believe that charter schools have had the type of success that we currently have, serving 2 million kids across the country with hundreds of thousands on waiting lists, because people do see that we offer in many instances a better alternative," she said. "I can't agree with their starting point. The demand speaks for itself."

She added that she's heard Orfield's studies aren't "gold standard."

The brief includes recommendations for charter authorizers -- groups that approve and deny applications to start charter schools -- as well as state legislatures and the federal government.

One suggestion is that charter school authorizers require that in addition to academic qualifications, charter-school applicants show how "the school will broaden, not replicate, existing opportunities for struggling populations." Applicants should provide evidence that their approaches address environmental circumstances such as local achievement gaps, the brief said, and charter authorizers should factor "equal educational opportunity" concerns into renewal standards.

The brief's authors said they hoped its publication would influence the debate. Connecticut is deciding whether to increase charter-school funding. Alabama and Mississippi are considering their first charter-school laws.

Mead and Green recommend that state legislatures explicitly state in their laws that charter schools aim to "enhance equitable educational outcomes for all students, particularly those who have historically struggled," and that "charter schools must comply with all federal laws."

They also proposed new federal regulations, to be considered in the reauthorization of No Child Left Behind: that federal charter-school funding be tied to advancing equal opportunity, and that states are required to collect data on recruitment, retention and discipline in charter schools.

But those recommendations, said Wright, might not be feasible. "To push a federal statute down assuming states are set up to get that level of data is a bit of an oversimplication," she said.

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Charter schools often promise to bring greater equity to education, but a new brief starts with the assumption that they fall short in delivery -- and provides recommendations to fix the alleged injus...
Charter schools often promise to bring greater equity to education, but a new brief starts with the assumption that they fall short in delivery -- and provides recommendations to fix the alleged injus...
 
 
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03:26 PM on 01/27/2013
If Obama is a fan of Charters, I wish he'd speak of them MORE, so the Republicans in my state will do away with this lame idea!
11:40 AM on 05/17/2012
On the anniversary of Brown vs. Board of Ed, Williamsburg, Brooklyn is facing precisely this phenomenon of segregation through charter schools.

http://nycpublicschoolparents.blogspot.com/2012/05/citizens-of-world-charter-parent-choice.html

Sign our petition and STOP segregation in our district! We want our kids in class together.
08:01 PM on 02/26/2012
Or better still. People will be able to trust the public schools when politicians and educational authorities place their own children in the standard public schools and in particular inner-city ones like in Philidelphia. It should not be acceptable for the powers that control public education to cop out and place their children in private schools or the public magnet schools and leave other children to rot.
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10:55 PM on 02/25/2012
Not all public schools are made equal. Look at this from a geographical perspective: public schools in the rich suburbs of Westchester are going to be incredibly different from public schools in the Bronx. Many charter schools are specifically designed to be built in impoverished neighborhoods with a disproportionate number of minority groups to lift those minority groups out of poverty — they're a form of affirmative action.

Whereas white people in more affluent school districts can afford to supplement their students traditional education, minority groups in poor neighborhoods simply don't have the same resources to help their children navigate around the ineffective factory-model school. So why is it wrong that a charter school in an all-black neighborhood should have an all-black student body? It's providing the same services that white families purchase for their children to black families free of charge.

Examine the statistics — it makes no sense to compare national levels of racial diversity in public schools to national levels of racial diversity in charter schools and criticize charter schools for being "segregated" if a larger proportion of charter schools than public schools are dedicated to locations that already have a disproportionate number of minorities. Obviously there will be more charter schools with all-minority student bodies.
07:53 PM on 02/26/2012
I totally agree. And many of the critics of charters also fail to look at the public magnet schools and the gifted-and-talented programs where there is very little diversity. Perhaps, if there were more of these good public schools for all the students then charters would not seem like such an attractive alternative. At the time, if I couldn't afford the inexpensive good Catholic school that my child attended, I would have selected a charter. Less dangerous, more discipline, better education, a no brainer.
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maceandemma
Judge a man's mind by the shadow it casts
11:59 AM on 03/11/2012
Wow, you just ignore the facts don't you?
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David Hundley
Deep In The Heart of Taxes
03:52 PM on 02/24/2012
This article will disturb you, especially if you have austistic children.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/jan/09/texas-police-schools
There is no room for forgiveness in our world anymore, but destroying people's lives seem to be the norm. Get the Government out of our schools now. States lose 20 cents on the dollar keeping up with Department of Education mandates on "One Size Fits All" policies. Impossible to do,losing money like crazy and teacher's get the blame.
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Ashok Hegde
04:44 PM on 02/24/2012
What is disturbing is that these children should receive this discipline at home, not school. But, since home life has decayed into Television and negligent parenting, the schools are forced to do this. Children cursing at teachers, or causing disturbances which affect other children should be cited, and punished.
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David Hundley
Deep In The Heart of Taxes
05:51 PM on 02/24/2012
Mental Illness, is no joke. No one want's to take responsibility for them and they are left to grow up alone and sometimes violent.
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stopnlisten
Simplify, simplify!
12:21 PM on 02/25/2012
We need to fix the federal Governments programs but if you eliminate the DE you will have some lunatic governors slashing programs right and left to help out business buddies since education is a big piece of the financial pie.
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David Hundley
Deep In The Heart of Taxes
07:41 PM on 02/26/2012
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/09/29/shrinking-texas-school-pa_0_n_986909.html
More Lay-Offs and More Lay-Offs. Who is paying taxes anymore?
http://www.statesman.com/news/statesman-investigates/fort-hood-soldiers-fight-to-make-ends-meet-2199994.html
This is what we are dealing with in Texas, No matter what the National news tells You.
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David Hundley
Deep In The Heart of Taxes
03:47 PM on 02/24/2012
Immigrant children get separate but, equal? That is just they way to scoot off the un-disirable children, so the real schools can make better scores. I hate to even say things like that, I hope that I am wrong.
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David Hundley
Deep In The Heart of Taxes
03:44 PM on 02/24/2012
It has to be against the law to take txpayer's money and give it to Private(for profit) Charter and Parochial schools. That's how they are outsourcing our children's education.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/09/29/shrinking-texas-school-pa_0_n_986909.html
No over-sight and no school board elections. Shame. We got to stop this trend or we will pay dearly in the future generations of DA's.
01:49 PM on 02/24/2012
You can not use this article to represent EVERY charter school in the US. This person may have run across a few that fell intot he racial characteristics. I have worked in education for over 20 years and heve seen many Charter schools around the US. Most had a very large diversity of students. I will agree that many students in the charter schools are low er income families, howere it is only because these parents want "better" than what they have. What you and every parent should be concerned with is not the "Charter" school, but the experience of the teachers in it. A "New" school does not make it better Often times it is worse because the teacher is new and using your child as a test subject for her/his teaching expeerience.
01:01 PM on 02/24/2012
Selective entry public schools do very well as well. If you can select your student body, the school will do well - regardless of teacher quality and skill. If the best students are selected out of a school, that school will do badly - regardless of teacher quality and skill. But the best teachers want to teach at the best schools and are more likely to quit if they can't. So the teacher quality tends to be better at the better schools as well.

The leading universities are good, but they are good because they have a good reputation, which causes a large group of talented students to apply, from whom the choose a strong student body. They are benefiting from a virtuous cycle.

Schools who lose their best students can easily get into a vicious cycle that increasingly drives away the better students.

The best students will do best at the selective schools, but the students who are not quite as good as the best will do worse if the best students are not there to help and inspire.
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Ashok Hegde
04:46 PM on 02/24/2012
If you're a parent of a "best student", your only goal is to get them away from the bad students. If you are one of those "best students", you are best served if you don't have to intermingle with those bad students.
08:47 PM on 02/24/2012
True, but it can help a very good student to have students who are serious, but not quite as good in a well run class, as the best students can help the not quite so good students with the material, thereby helping themselves.

When my daughter was in 6th grade, I had her moved to the 7th grade math class (introductory algebra). She was not the only 6th grader there. The teacher announced to the class ""I have given each group of tables a 6th grader. If you have any questions, ask them first before you ask me.They should be able to answer your questions." And in general, they did.

She skipped 8th grade and jumped to the honors and IB program at high school. She will be heading off to college to study engineering and/or medicine next year, having just turned 15.
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djaikins
10:46 AM on 02/24/2012
How about this: public schools get to weed out the poor performers, the handicapped and the trouble makers and give them to the Charter schools.
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David Hundley
Deep In The Heart of Taxes
03:55 PM on 02/24/2012
You must work in the schools too. That is the most true and remarkable statement I have read today. Thank you. 2XFv
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djaikins
04:34 PM on 02/24/2012
I taught for 33 years in the public schools and loved it. I see what those who know nothing about education are trying to do to education. Thanks for your comments.
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Ashok Hegde
04:48 PM on 02/24/2012
The whole point of a Charter school is to weed those bad apples out. Parents who value education want their kids surrounded by bright people...other future college grads. The whole point of pulling children out of public school is to get away from bad influences.
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djaikins
05:21 PM on 02/24/2012
They don't "weed" anyone out. They take their pick. All students need an opportunity for an education. Those students who do less well are often encouraged and challenged by those who do better. Often their desire rubs off. Charter schools are a scam designed to take money from the public schools. Certainly there are schools that have problems. If so, fix the problems.
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djaikins
10:42 AM on 02/24/2012
Charter schools are a profitable way to reintroduce segregation and religion into our school system.
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XV8 Crisis Suit
09:23 AM on 02/24/2012
Charter schools are like a basketball team that gets to screen its players and kick them off if they aren't playing well, whereas public schools are like one that has to take everyone, give them all equal playtime, and cannot kick a player off no matter how bad they are... And then the charter schools step forward and claim that their success if caused by how awesome their coaches (teachers) are. Yeah... right...
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Ashok Hegde
04:49 PM on 02/24/2012
Using your analogy - the public school teams are doing a disservice to the good players they may have. Because those good players get pulled down by the influence of all the bad players.

Separating the good players out, and allowing them to thrive helps a society. We are tapping into potential which otherwise may not have flourished.

The bad apples are another problem...perhaps we need other tactics, beyond school..
08:51 PM on 02/24/2012
You're not making sense to me. How is it that separating out the "good players" are allowing us to tap into their potential? Tapping their potential would mean to keep them in with the rest of students and helping them to rise up. If they're getting "pulled down by the influence of all the bad players", then they're not actually good players. I came from a lower middle-class, minority background, and went to public schools for all of my K-12 career, yet still managed to go to an Ivy League college. I have an upper middle class income now, but still live in a very middle class neighborhood. I never felt like I was dragged down by my less scholastic peers in grade school. Several are still my friends, 30 years later. My kids are in public school; we enroll them in private tutorial classes in the summer to keep up their math and reading skills, so they do very well during the school year. But I see no reason to segregate them from their peers and neighbors, and have never seen any evidence that such a program you advocate benefits society.
09:32 PM on 02/24/2012
The literature on this disagrees with you. Precious Snowflakes who are bright little angels will improve the performance of those Precious Snowflakes who are not. However, non-bright Precious Snowflakes don't actually have any adverse affects on bright Precious Snowflakes.

This is most likely because if you are a bright Precious Snowflake, you have resources within you family and neighborhood that keep you on the steady...those same resources that made you a bright Precious Snowflake to begin with. (You didn't, actually, just fall onto this earth with academic talent and the resources to develop them and achieve).

So the whole "bad kids drag my genius little angel down" is actually nothing more than a middle class myth fueled by paranoia and fear (and sometimes a lil' bit o' racism). BTW: We knew this as early as the 90's, when I first heard about the studies we did...that, apparently, nobody cared to heed.
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Gyrlznluv
It's Not What They Call U,It's What U Answer too!
08:41 AM on 02/24/2012
I live in Albany NY and had my son attend KIPP Charter School from 5-8 grades. The public schools here have lots of problems with behavior issues in the Middle and High Schools. KIPP was the best choice I had in my school district besides private school. He was one of a hand full of latin, white, and asian children among the predominant African American students. It was an awesome education for my son. KIPP has a proven program, providing a safe and structured learning environment with excellent academics. There are 109 KIPP public schools in the US. My son did so well that is was given a partial scholarship to a private High School where he is attending now and will be graduating in two years. There is bad charter schools out there, just like there is bad public schools. As a parent I am glad I had the choice of a "gold standard" charter school for my son.
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frankcaprafan
Stay healthy Hillary
09:33 AM on 02/24/2012
KIPP is an excellet model/program--EXCELLENT. Problem is that the kids who go there are the ones with good parents who actively advocate and shop around for better opportunities (like you). What about the child who doesn't have that? I wonder if KIPP is doing anything for that student. By the way, I believe that the fact that you were out there advocating for child in this way, indicates that your son was going to be successful wherever he went.
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suds mcduff
Employers sense in me a denial of their values
11:48 AM on 02/24/2012
"What about the child who doesn't have that? "
F them....I got mine, you get yours
Charter School Parent
11:59 AM on 02/24/2012
Exactly, Frank.

One of my favorite quips about education:

API (Scores) = the Affluent Parent Index

Study after study shows that teachers and schools have almost nothing to do with actual outcomes compared to parents and affluence. The recent Harvard study (cited by everybody as "proof" that teachers made all the difference until people understood the math) showed that the best teachers can make a difference of a couple of percentage points--whereas socioeconomic factors are a hundred times larger.

This is why Charters are starting to attack the "nice" areas: they virtually can't help but have high test scores and great outcomes.
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Autismmomx4
Autism rocks! and flaps and spins..
08:25 AM on 02/24/2012
National Heritage Academies, Inc. (NHA) is a for-profit charter school management organization headquartered in Grand Rapids, Michigan. It was formed in 1995 by entrepreneur J.C. Huizenga.

As of 2010, National Heritage Academies is a collection of 67 charter schools in the eight states: Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, New York, North Carolina, Colorado, Georgia, and Louisiana. The nationwide network of schools are classified as free open enrollment K-8 college preparatory public schools mostly in under-resourced communities throughout the United States. There is a separate company, PrepNet (http://www.prepnetschools.com/), which operates a network of college preparatory high schools.

Mr. Huizenga is a RW fanatic....his schools are Christian schools operating under the guise of public. Mr. Huizenga home schools his children.
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rdsathene
Pedagogy of the Oppressed by Paulo Freire
02:49 AM on 02/24/2012
Ursula Wright shameful defense of discrimination is further indictment of the corporate charter push and their drive to profit from public education.

"School choice" used to be the clarion call of segregationists in the 1960's, turns out it still is.
09:01 AM on 02/24/2012
Why should non-blacks have to send their children where black culture dominates. President Obama sends his own children to a schools that is about 10% blacks and most of those children are the children of ambassadors and recent immigrants.

If diversity is good for education then why do the children of the Democratic Party leadership attend schools that are overwhelmingly white?
10:56 AM on 02/24/2012
You don't think it has anything to do with security implications of them being children of the leader of the free world, right?

Dishonest argument.
01:04 PM on 02/24/2012
There are plenty of predominantly white schools where I'm sure the President would not send his children. The situation you reference is not about black and white, but green. The schools with greater funds will attract the more affluent parent, eventually yielding the next generation of the affluent to pass through their halls. Totally different topic of conversation.