Wendy Lecker is a civil rights attorney who is Senior Attorney at the Campaign for Fiscal Equity of the Education Law Center, which fights for resources for the neediest students.
In this post, she asks important questions about the new CREDO national study of charter schools.
Although the media claimed that the study showed either major progress for charters compared to 2009, or that they were superior to public schools, the facts are otherwise.
Lecker writes:
“The verdict is in, and it is the same as four years ago. In updating its 2009 national study on charter schools, Stanford’s Center for Research on Education Outcomes (CREDO) reaches the same conclusion it did in its previous study: The vast majority of charter schools in the United States are no better than public schools.
“In 2009, 83 percent of charters were the same or worse than public schools, and now about 71-75 percent are. Even more telling, CREDO concludes that “the charter sector is getting better on average, but not because existing schools are getting dramatically better; it is largely driven by the closure of bad schools.” In addition, students at new charter schools have lower reading and math gains than at public schools.”
The bottom line, according to the study, is that the “the average charter school student gains eight days of reading learning over a public school student and nothing in math. Experts agree that math learning depends more on instruction in school, whereas reading advancement often hinges on skills and vocabulary gained outside the classroom.”
But what the study does not consider is more important than a few more days of reading gains..
Lecker writes:
“The human cost of this charter sector improvement is also not addressed in the study. Officials who authorize charters gamble with students’ fates. When the experiment fails, i.e. the charter school is bad, it closes. The study did not count the educational loss these displaced charter students suffer.
“In Connecticut, the human toll of charter schools includes severe discipline policies, such as shockingly high suspension rates of elementary school students as young as 5; mistreatment of those few students with disabilities in their schools so extreme it necessitates a civil rights settlement; high attrition rates; and exclusion of Connecticut’s neediest students.
“Charter schools exact a toll on parents, as well. Public schools are overseen by elected school boards that hold public meetings. When charters replace public schools, parents lose their voice in education. Charter boards are not democratically elected. There is no requirement that board members live in the community or answer to parents. Often, members are corporate executives with no children in charter schools.
“The cost of charters extends beyond the individual family. In neighborhoods across this country, public schools are community hubs. Funding a parallel school system starves the existing public schools and dooms vital community institutions. In Chicago and Philadelphia, officials de-funded public schools to fund charters, then closed an unprecedented number of neighborhood schools, despite dramatic protests by parents and students. In New Orleans, charter school expansion increased segregation, with children of color concentrated in low-performing schools and white students in higher-performing ones. In these cities, the negative effects of charter expansion fall hardest on poor children of color.
“At the same time states shell out billions of dollars on charter schools, courts have ruled that states have deprived public schools of billions of dollars owed to them. Since 1997, Connecticut taxpayers have spent more than a half a billion dollars on charter schools, not including special education, transportation and other expenses host districts pay, while the state has consistently underfunded Connecticut’s public schools.
“Taxpayers pay billions to fund parallel charter school systems that lack public oversight, exclude our neediest children, increase segregation, starve existing schools and decimate communities. As a nation and a state, it is time to question whether this price is too high to pay for an average of eight days extra in reading.”
Whoever’s in charge at CREDO had best exert better editorial control to ensure the unimpeachable quality of reports being published by staff. This report’s narrative discussion was inappropriately slanted to disguise readers’ attention from the dismal facts of the study’s charter school findings. A serious blow to CREDO credibility, and another vindication of the hard-won successes of America’s “real” public schools.
Great job, Wendy, in cutting through to the core of the study’s findings.
Charter schools are creations of corporations. Corporations are now “people,” thanks to the fantasies spun by the Supreme Corporate Court. Their invasion into public school, as has been the case in every invasion of a formerly federal or state entity, is to serve the corporation. “Serve” means one thing, and one thing only: suck the money/life out of the public entity, in this area, siphon money to a Charter so the robbery will appear to be “business costs” and watch the parasites feed! The charade of bettering education is a kabuki dance that little time is required to uncover the real, single motive: MONEY. Haven’t we learned the lesson of the siren song to disaster before with promoters of “trade” like Clinton who helped in the outsourcing of the nation’s wealth producing sectors? Can’t we see a pattern behind every corporate design? Are we so unable to recognize a jackal when we see one? Or, do we forever buy the hype, then
suffer “buyer’s remorse” to a country wrecking realization? Why do we forever lay languid in the hopes that the snake oil will be the miraculous cure it pro ports to be?
Intellectual laziness, pandemic apathy, and a childish belief in irrational posits that
live only because we have atrophied our brains by gulping down the corporate Kool aid.
We have enable these debacles by our own willful ignorance. Enjoy America,
what conditioning of mantras of “bad teachers” has exchanged into charter school
crap.
AND Mary Pishney, what do you work for if not money?
Don’t fall for it, Mary. Harlan’s just got another hate on for public school teachers today, as usual.
There is nothing like an Intrinsically rewarding career, but unpaid work won’t pay the bills. For most of my career, I’ve been a low-paid non-union teacher, with no benefits, working in private schools and I’ve always struggled to make ends meet. Unlike Harlan, I don’t resent that our tax dollars go to making sure that other teachers are paid a decent salary with benefits. I think that all working people deserve a livable wage, not just elite factions of our society.
OH PLEASE! What an absurd comparison: a teacher working FOR PAY to the best of my abilities to advance my students, and the greedy corporates who don’t work for a wage, but rather suck institutions, our past industrial base that these same corporate wolves have savaged for their parasitical greed! They “help” no one, no institution or anything else, they are merely international parasites that leave a trail of destruction and misery! Your comment is ludicrous, and a sad statement of your cover for corporations ravenous motivation.
The most important part of the charter debate is NOT addressed by any of the CREDO studies:
Whether or not the “successful” charters are replicable.
This is the entire key. If “successful” charters are “successful” through cream-skimming and attrition, they are simply not replicable.
And if “successful” charters are partially “successful” through the use of more money, more class time, more wrap-around services, smaller class sizes, and higher teacher salaries, they are only replicable with an influx of new revenues.
CREDO tells us nothing about this. As a document to help guide policy, it is nearly useless.
I don’t understand this criticism of charters that they cream the best students off. Even if they DO, isn’t that the way of the world? Don’t kids get cut from varsity football rosters? Is it creaming by a football team to exclude kids who wouldn’t contribute to the success of the team? There may be some level at which kids cut from the team can learn the game, and play it, and enjoy it, but no kid, it seems to me, has a god given right to play on the varsity if he can’t hack it. Is it any different is academic work? And if not, why should it be different. Why should every school be expected to educate every kid? The demand from public schools that charters should be held to the same rules defeats good and elite education. The opportunity is there if a kid can “make the team.” If not he has to accept it. He won’t be able to wear a letter jacket or a letter. So what? He had the same chance everyone else had to try out. Same in trying out for the school musical. If you can’t sing, you shouldn’t get to be in the show. That doesn’t mean there isn’t SOMETHING you can do that you’d enjoy and would contribute to society, but if academic work is just not your thing, why do public school teachers criticize charters because they enroll students who are good at math and english? We allow everyone, no matter how ignorant, to vote. That should be enough.
Can we cream on blogs please?
Linda, Linda, Linda, you always make your attitude clear, but you never offer reasons on the issues. Snark is a cop out.
What do you consistently offer in your posits? Excuses for the corporate cronies and their money inspired actions, or objective facts. To label someone’s thought in such a derogatory slam reflects poorly on the intelligence of the speaker!
So is bloviating (cop out that is).
So can we cream here too?
I really just skim your rants anyway. 🙂
Harlan, we have an open forum here but you are a reader not the owner of the blog. Please stop hogging the comments space, and keep under control your anger at established institutions and those with whom you disagree. It is not civil.
Thank you for making my day, Linda!
Anytime my friend, from one vet teach to another.
Teachers unite. Teachers strong! Love to all 🙂
I appreciate your candor regarding the creaming and your agreement with JJ on the point of replicability. So tell me again…. Why do we need charters?
I know I shouldn’t poke the troll, but HU, your “analysis” is disingenuous. No one has the right to be on the varsity football team. Most, if not all, state constitutions have public educations as right and requirement for their citizens. Students are losing quality education because of these charters, and yet no one in a position of power is doing anything to stop them. On the contrary: everyone from Obama down touts them as miracles. And before you accuse me of “putting Obama there,” as you often do, I have never voted for him.
Linda: as always, KrazyTA is here to help, in this case providing you with a little homework assignment you might pass on to the bloviator-in-training. “Studies have shown” [love that phrase!] that folks seriously pondering the following have a 1/3 to 1/2 chance of not turning into educational deadwood.
“Words empty as the wind are best left unsaid.” [Homer]
“I prefer tongue-tied knowledge to ignorant loquacity.” [Marcus Tullius Cicero]
“Ignorance is bold and knowledge reserved.” [Thucydides]
I am the first to acknowledge that none of this is cagebusting twenty first century EduSpeak but, go figure, I was born in the depths of the non-innovaty twentieth century and still think that it is “Better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak and remove all doubt” [Abraham Lincoln] {see also Proverbs 17:28, New International Version and King James Version of the Bible}.
As always, Krazy props. Keep commenting.
🙂
Just in case anyone didn’t know exactly who we are dealing with here, let me just highlight and briefly explain.
Harlan said, “The demand from public schools that charters should be held to the same rules DEFEATS GOOD AND ELITE EDUCATION.”
Harlan spent his career teaching at an ELITE PRIVATE SCHOOL. He is not concerned about the fact that public schools are required by law to educate ALL children, not establish segregated schools, provide education just for the elite nor merely give training for the commons.
Harlan also said, “We allow everyone, no matter how ignorant, to vote. That should be enough.”
Actually, that was not enough for Harlan and his party, who claim that corporations are people, too, so our conservative SCOTUS ruled that they can effectively try to buy elections.
What really irks Harlan is that those supposedly “ignorant” little people have been figuring out how to capitalize on our democracy and defeat elite moneyed interests, starting with those in the Republican party. He can’t handle that a new era has dawned, marking the beginning of the end of common people blindly voting for corporate bought politicians and against their own best interests. And he still mourns the loss of his beloved 47% hating Mittens.
Go Commons!
Aaron Copland, Fanfare for the Common Man (Take a look at who is conducting)
“. . . isn’t that the way of the world?”
Isn’t slavery the way of the world?
Isn’t the king and queen the way of the world?
Is the German Occupation the way of the Vichy world?
Set yourself up for that one HU!!
Harlan:
I know of no state that has a constitutional provision guaranteeing the right to play baseball, though most states constitutionally guarantee the right of students’ equal access to public education. If certain schools are “creaming,” creating disparate possibilities for peer group interaction (see the Coleman Report), then that right is undermined. The well established tendency of charters to deny services to students with disabilities, which under federal civil rights laws they are required to provide, is yet another refutation of your assertions.
Your arguments are silly.
Or is the right to an appropriate education enhanced by creaming for the students that are creamed?
Dr. Ravitch has often posted that students who are creamed get an educational benefit from positive peer effects. If we eliminate creaming, don’t we give those students a worse education?
TE, do you have any suggestions for the schooling of the kids left behind after the charters cream off the top 5-10%? How do feel about racial segregation? Class segregation? Just wondering.
I have no doubt that creaming could reduce the quality of education for those left behind just as it increases the quality of education for those that are creamed. I am just pointing out that eliminating charters (and the even worse, from this prospective, limited admission public schools) and perhaps even refusing to allow students to take courses outside of the school building because it removes a positive peer influence from a class DOES NOT provide a better education for all. It provides a better education FOR SOME, perhaps even most, but a worse education for others.
If that is the horn you choose, the discussion can move on to deciding which students we should get a better education, and which a worse.
Reblogged this on Crazy Crawfish's Blog and commented:
Excellent point. Charters are not all bad, but are the successful ones good enough to make up for all the bad that comes with them? I also wonder if traditional schools and districts were given more resources and autonomy if they could not produce the same or much better results?
In some places, Utah for example, the charter schools aren’t even “average.” 41 PERCENT of Utah charter schools do WORSE in math than public schools. But, of course, there’s no talk of closing them down.
http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/news/56510901-78/charter-schools-students-utah.html.csp
“But, of course, there’s no talk of closing them down.”
No need to close them down, the vaunted free market will do that (eventually, if ever).
This post (https://dianeravitch.net/2013/06/26/reader-new-credo-study-celebrates-survivorship-bias/) faults the CREDO study because too many low performing charter schools have closed. Damned if you do, damned if you don’t?
I’d rather have them (charter schools) be damned both ways.
¿Dónde está José cuando las fuerzas de las escuelas charteras lo necesitan?
I haven’t had time to read the CREDO report yet, but I’m wondering if anyone knows whether they controlled for extended school days and years, as well as the months and days when the tests were taken, when calculating those 8 extra days in reading achievement.
They did not control for the extended school time. I read the report and communicated with one of the researchers. The way the researcher answered me, I doubt they controlled for the time the tests were taken either.
Charters were created for nefarious reasons, in Los Angeles for instance, charters solved A number of problems for the district, they decreased the size of the district(enrollment),they decreased the effectiveness of the union,they allowed private entities like religious orgs to get public money for their schools Most importantly, it was a money grab by business on the public sector. Were they ever created to benefit students and the community? Not at all.
Just for arguments sake let us assume that it is OK for charter schools and such to cream the crop at regular public schools. Now the question is how do you compare the two. I am sure the trained statistical people will understand that you need a “Correction Factor” to equalize as charter schools do not have to follow most state ed code, local regulations, cherry pick students and parents and do not like to deal with behavioral problems, ESL or special education. This is a big difference. What that factor is will be interesting as it is not small. The next question is what does that do to the scores and pronouncements of the CREDO Study when recorrected to allow for the “Correction Factor?” You do not even have to know the final result to understand that in reality charter schools do a lot worse than people think they do now.
Also, we need to pay teachers a reasonable income and benefits. They are professionals doing the most important job there is. What they are doing in Tennessee and other places like LAUSD is outrageous. As also they go after those at the top of the salary scale and about to obtain lifetime benefits as a result of their years in the district and/or profession teaching. Why would any sharp person want to come into a profession like it has become when there are other easier paths? Most stay in teaching because they love it. There are always deadbeats in any large organization or group of people.
Is it ok for qualified admission public magnet schools to cream? Is it ok for the highest performing students to leave the building to take courses at colleges or universities? Ok to graduate early? All of these will lower the scores of the traditional school and make it look worse than if that was not allowed or remove these positive peer effect from the traditional school building.
I think the best studies compare the students that win a seat in the lottery against students that lose the lottery, so they compare student to student over a fairly large number of students.
To reiterate what Linda asked, can we pleeeeze cream the Johnny One Notes right here who have been constantly promoting segregation and elitism? This has gotten old and annoying.
Otherwise, folks, over time, a really effective strategy (and peer effect) is “planned ignoring”, which is why Behaviorists refer to it as “extinction.”
I don’t know if your post is directed towards me, but I invite you to take the other horn and argue that there is no positive peer effect that comes from choosing students, so we need to look elsewhere for an explination for better results of charter schools in the latest CREDO study. That is not the horn Dr. Ravitch chose here, https://dianeravitch.net/2013/06/25/new-charter-study-shows-improvement-raises-questions/, so I wrote first about the orthodox horn choice.