Matt Di Carlo here reviews the new national CREDO study of charters.
The findings are not much different from those of 2009, mainly, that charters vary widely in their ability to produce higher test scores and that on the whole the test scores of students in charters are not significantly better than students in public schools.
Ever the patient social scientist, Di Carlo is impressed that the charters seem to be getting better results than in 2009 (but could it be because of the number of low-performing charters that were closed? What happened to the students in those charters? Did they get sent back to the public schools? Is there “survivorship bias,” in which only the better charters survive?).
Di Carlo scrutinizes the data about test scores in math and reading. But he does not address the questions that Wendy Lecker asked when she reviewed the same study. Lecker, a senior attorney and director of the Campaign for Fiscal Equity, wrote this:
“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.”

“. . . that charters vary widely in their ability to produce higher test scores. . . ”
Yep, that sure is a fundamental purpose of public education. Oh, wait, charter schools aren’t public. But some are, others aren’t. All that is beside the point, with the point being that to judge a school on its supposed ability to “produce higher test scores” is about as ludicrous and insane as it gets.
Public educator supporting folks, until we attack the weed of educational standards and standardized testing at the taproot we will continue to waste vital time, effort and resources fighting the foliage. Until most have read and understood Wilson’s landmark policy analysis “Educational Standards and the Problem of Error” found at: http://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/577/700 and follow up with attacking the false foundation upon which this educational standards and standardized testing house of cards is built, all will be futile. It is “just a mere flesh wound” to the Black Night that has stood in preventing passage of true educational improvement efforts, those led and done by the professionals, the teachers themselves at the local level.
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Forgot to include the link to the Black Night (see: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2eMkth8FWno )
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Exactly, Duane. If the standard of measurement is questionable, then the whole enterprise of comparing schools based on those measurements is questionable.
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The ads that the taxpayers pay for the charter schools say they are public. They have this one in Louisiana that says, “To begin with, charter schools are public schools”. Yeah right. Public schools with selective admissions, that don’t follow the rules and teach religion. If that’s a public school so is a Sunday School class.
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Are limited admission magnet schools like Thomas Jefferson High School in northern Virginia public schools?
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Coming soon to a bumper sticker near you …
It’s the Con of You, Stupid ❢
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In traditional public school systems parents have no voice (unless they move) in the school their children attend. Which is more effective for improving your child’s education, choosing a school or voting in a school board election?
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Parents have a voice–they can join the PTA, speak with teachers, speak with the principal, speak with central office personnel. etc. Not every parent has the time or skills to do this, but to simply say parents have no voice in public schooling is clearly wrong. Have any children in public schools?
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Parents do have a voice! The School Advisory Council (SAC) can strongly influence what happens in a school; squeaky wheel syndrome! A vocal parent can get a teacher fired!
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I did not say parents had no voice, just asked where parents had more impact on their child’s education. Do you think they have more impact through the channels you mention or more through changing schools?
I sent a foster son through 10-12 public, a biological son through 1-12 (skipped a grade though and took a year of university courses while in high school) and my secon son is a rising Jr., all public school.
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Your call is important to us.
Your Educational Service Representative will be with you shortly.
Your position in the Educational Service Queue is ~click~ No. 96 ~click~
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kDGUZeZWKZo
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Have loved that song from the first time I heard it back in the 60s!
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Any suggestion that parents will have more voice in their children’s school when their communities have been ravaged for the sake of corporate profits is just plain absurd.
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My town has been ravaged by a progressive school, a Montessori school, a Waldorf school, a catholic school and a small nominally episcopal high school.
The parents with the means to pay for those schools seem to see them as valuable choices. Those without the means go to PTA meetings and sometimes as permission to send their children to one they have not been assigned to.
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But no one has been talking about any of the those things except maybe to point out that public purses have public purse strings.
Charter schools have been managed as public schools in the past, subject to the duty of care that goes with experiments on human subjects, and they could have continued to be managed that way.
But that is not what the forces of destruction have rammed their fingers, hands, arms, and Mack™ Trucks through the loopholes of charters schools for. That is the problem and that is what people who see the problem are addressing here.
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In my district every student who goes to the Montessori costs the public school district state support. Is that uncommon?
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Where do you get the idea that parents have a voice in charters? They are run by a dictator. They often have strict discipline codes. I just do understand where all the choices are.
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They leave the school. In an important sense it is the ultimate choice.
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You just keep on drawing attention to non-problems. The only reason I can think of for that is to draw attention away from the real problems.
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This is a reply to teaching economist at 4:24 PM who said, “I did not say parents had no voice…” for your comment of 1:57. However, you said EXACTLY that! “In traditional public school systems parents have no voice…” Please pay attention to the good comments by Dr. Ed Fuller & lindajanneyLinda–of course parents have a voice in the “traditional public school systems!”
And I agree with Jon Awbrey’s comment (to you) above. Please stop making problematic assumptions that have no basis. And, also, please do not refute something that you VERY clearly stated (read your own comments!). That’s all I have to say about that.
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Retired,
My statement was that parents have no voice in which school their children attend. The part of my statement that you omitted is important. The point of the post is to argue that having school choice gives parents a profound influence over the nature of their children’s education. It also allows schools to differentiate themselves from each other in ways that traditional schools can not. This was seen as a virtue in the threads about the common core.
I take the use of geographically defined catchment areas to be a defining characteristic of a traditional school system. Do you disagree?
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Reblogged this on Transparent Christina.
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This is how LAUSD raises its test scores. Drive off the low performers. Last year over 117,000 did not come to school everyday. These numbers come from the California Dept. of Ed. (CDE) website. They are the difference between the enrollment, those who say they are coming to school and sign up, and Average Daily Attendance (ADA) or those who actually came to school. This difference cost LAUSD over $1.35 billion in revenue in that year alone. In 2001-02 only 14,500 did not come to school everyday and LAUSD had 86,000 more in enrollment at that time. You can bet this is going on everywhere.
What almost no one is talking about except some in law enforcement and CORE-CA is the effect of this on the criminal justice system and those associated costs with this travesty.
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And on top of all that, John White in Louisiana gave Teach for America another S1.2 million to fund their not teachers and add some more.
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Yes, and the money is only for recruiting them. The school district has to pay their salary plus a few extra thousand (?).
Those Teach For Awhiles will come in and save those poor children from the ravages of the Louisiana public schools. They will be gone in two years, with a nice addition to their resume. I wonder what would happen if Mr. White actually put that TFA recruitment money into funding public school resources instead of taking money from PreK to pay for his pet project of the day??? He has hired lots of out of state employees to help him dismantle our state dept of Ed. And has given them huge salaries. Meanwhile public schools have had to functions with fewer resources.
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My take: the leading charterites/privatizers are simply getting better at putting up slightly better numbers in some of their Eduproduct Outlets.
Overall, I think #23 of Gerald Bracey’s 32 “Principles of Data Interpretation” applies well to this CREDO report: “If a situation really is as alleged, ask, ‘So what?’”
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There were parallel school systems long before the charter movement came along. In many large cities, there were and are neighborhood schools and selective admission schools. Some people who work in neighborhood schools legitimately resented the selective admission schools.
Another form of parallel school system is called “the suburbs.” Public funds help support those affluent enough to move to exclusive suburbs (and not all suburbs are exclusive).
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Agree with your comments in both paragraphs, Joe. Having been a public school teacher (now retired), I think that there is less resentment toward magnet schools. As to “the suburbs,” (having been both a product of those &, also, having a daughter who’d also attended those schools), I still hope for the day (don’t see it coming anytime soon, though, sad to say) that a property tax equalizer can be passed (we tried in Illinois–ONE time–and it failed). I am a true believer in the mantra of Chicago protesters–“Whose schools? OUR schools! Whose children? OUR children!” I have always wanted for ALL children what I’d had and what my daughter has had, in terms of educational opportunities.
Not a believer in the phrase “other people’s children.”
EVERYONE needs to read Jonathan Kozol’s book, Savage Inequalities. If the East St. Louis, IL/Monsanto story doesn’t make you cry (&, of course, I don’t mean you, personally, Joe–this is just a general statement), you have a heart of stone. However, I know I’m preaching to the choir (Diane’s readers) here!
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