Newark Superintendent Cami Anderson has proposed the end of neighborhood schools.

All district schools and charter schools will be part of a pool. Or something.

Reformers don’t like neighborhood schools. They like a free market where everyone chooses and no one has any loyalties.

Michigan has abolished district lines and schools advertise for students. They waste money on radio and TV ads, trying to poach students from each other.

This is the business approach. Typically, what happens is that students apply, but schools choose.

Karran Harper Royal, a parent in New Orleans, said this about the Newark plan:

“No assigned neighborhood school can be restated as no guaranteed right to the school closest to your home if that is indeed your choice. Parents should push back on this plan to ensure that they retain the right of first refusal to the school nearest their home. This is not a positive innovative practice, it is a way to segregate children by ability, income and parental motivation. Despite the claims in the article, this is not successfully implemented in New Orleans. The children with the highest needs now face chronic instability in their school placement.”

About 40,000 children attend public schools in Newark. About 12,000 are in charters. Charters are clearly favored. Parents get that. “Reform” means get rid of public education.

An interesting comment at the end of the article:

“Anderson also said she hopes the district and charter schools can pool their resources and work together to renovate aging district-owned facilities with financing only charter schools can currently access.”

Wait a minute: “financing only charter schools can obtain.” Why are charters co-located in public schools if they have easy access to facilities financing? Why are district-owned facilities “aging”? Couldn’t some of Mark Zuckerberg’s $100 million fixed up the schools?

And by the way, how will it improve education if neighborhood schools are wiped out?