EduShyster (aka Jennifer Berkshire) girded up her loins and attended the riotously happy National Charter Schools Conference.
There she found that it was all about the numbers–growth, test scores, dollars:
“The numbers that are adding up, of course, refer to the growing number of charter schools, their students, and their scores (their scores!), not to mention the swelling ranks of advocates, politicians, actors, TV news personalities, pollsters and [insert unlikely charter supporter here] that have leaped aboard the charter express, now headed direct to achievementville. But what of the lesser numbers—the ones that are, well, less than prime—and hence, don’t quite add up? Was there anyone who would speak for them?”
Well, no. No one talked about the charter schools that folded. Or the Detroit Free Press exposé of $1 billion for charterrs that got no better results and had no accountability. Bet there was no mention of the UNO charter scandal in Chicago, and no talk of the nation’s biggest charter chain, the Gulen schools, somehow affiliated with an imam who heads a powerful political movement in Turkey.
What was not mentioned may be more important than what was celebrated. A growing movement to siphon money away from public schools to pay for schools where administrators get exorbitant salaries, teachers get low wages and turn over at a high rate, and kids are excluded if they have disabilities or don’t speak English, and the common good is forgotten.

The series on charter schools in Ohio is funny, because the legwork, the fact-finding, is being done by college journalism students in cooperation with two commercial media outlets.
I guess they need the students because they’ve cut staff so much at local media they can’t do all the document searches and other digging required.
I don’t know whether to be pleased or horrified that they can’t pay people to do this, so we’ve left it up to students 🙂
http://www.ohio.com/news/break-news/ohio-taxpayers-provide-jobs-to-turkish-immigrants-through-charter-schools-1.501940
LikeLike
One small item about Vegas that was left out. The Deputy Supt of Schools there is Pedro Martinez, a Broad Leadership vet who came to Nevada from Chicago. Martinez has his MBA (naturally) and worked for Chicago public schools for a few years, mostly in finance. But one qualification he did not need to qualify for the number two spot in the nation’s fifth largest school system — any classroom teaching experience. Like Arne Duncan, Pedro Martinez is a classroom virgin never having sullied his hands at a chalkboard or whiteboard before ascending to the top ranks of eduleadership, courtesy of Chicago’s corporate reform people and Eli Broad…
LikeLike
Actually, Martinez is now the superintendent of the Washoe School District near Carson City. One note of interest though, he can not legally evaluate any educational personnel.
LikeLike
Shouldn’t this ” riotously happy National Charter Schools Conference” have been called a “Pirate Party”?
LikeLike
So there it is….Our schools are becoming incubators for Turkish a’immah right under our very noses!
LikeLike
That is what happens when school governance is taken away from our local communities and given to strange fellows and aliens.
LikeLike
From the edushyster article: “Like in Nevada, where, according to the 2013 CREDO National Charter School Study, students in the state’s charter schools lose 137 days of learning per year in math and 115 days of learning per year in English out of a school year that is 180 days long. But what do these numbers add up to, besides the fact that Nevada’s charter school students are falling behind by six to seven months each year? Can you help us out CREDO? *States like Nevada show that charter schools are not a guaranteed solution to educational challenges.*” How are the students losing 137 days of learning in math and 115 days of learning in English per year? How was this determined? It makes no sense or am I just being dense? Is this typical of charter schools?
LikeLike
Gulen inspired Harmony opens across the street from DC Public School. Kaya Henderson is surprised. Read on…http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/new-dc-charter-school-highlights-debate-over-planning/2014/07/05/e0273644-02ea-11e4-b8ff-89afd3fad6bd_story.html
LikeLike
As a former parent of a Harmony school in Texas, I can spend hours talking about all of the improprieties, illegal activities and downright mismanagement at the Harmony campus we attended.
Here is a partial summary:
1. Safety Issues (inadequate fire drills, lack of traffic control during drop off and dismissal, disregard of threat by student, inadequate system of tracking students).
2. Financial Mismanagement (not paying teachers timely, not paying vendors timely, lack of transparency on fundraisers).
3. Discrimination (by all Turkish male administration) against: women/girls, special needs students, non-Muslims
4. Lack of Special Education Services
5. Compulsory Attendance Violations
6. Religious Demands and Exemptions that benefit Muslims
7. Bullying Teachers and Parents that question the school administration.
8. High Teacher Turnover and Stress
9. Discouraging Volunteers on School Premises
10. Requests PTO to only function as fundraising arm for school.
These schools are a scam!
Sadly, Harmony is not an isolated case among charter schools around the country.
LikeLike
I’m curious to see what happens here in DC and whether they’ll get a pass. I see that there is one in Annapolis (had some issues with AA Super Maxwell) but the one in Loudoun County, VA got voted down. Should be interesting…very interesting.
LikeLike