Jeff Bryant points out an irony that should enrage every taxpayer and citizen: Both major political parties love charter schools, despite the numerous scandals that accompany unregulated, unaccountable charters.
http://educationopportunitynetwork.org/charter-schools-do-bad-stuff-because-they-can/
Here is a part of his great piece on the malfeasance that is now commonplace in the charter industry. There are many links:
“Charter schools have become a fetish of both Democratic and Republican political establishments, but local news reports continue to drip, drip a constant stream of stories of charter schools doing bad stuff that our tax dollars fund.
“An independent news outlet in New Orleans, where the school district is nearly 100 percent charter, reports that two homeless children were kept out of class for a month because they didn’t have monogrammed uniforms.
In Oakland, California, a state-based news outlet reports charter school enrollment practices ensure charter schools get an advantage over district schools when academic performance comparisons are made. The advantage comes from charters being able to enroll students who are more “academically prepared” than students who attend district-run schools.
“Oakland charters, when compared to public schools, also tend to enroll fewer students with special needs and fewer students who enter the school year late and are, thus, often academically behind.
“In Arizona, which has a higher percentage of students enrolled in charter schools than any other state, the demographic characteristics of charter school students don’t resemble anything close to what characterize public schools in the state. According to a state based news outlet, “enrollment data show the schools don’t match the school-age demographics of the state and, in many cases, their neighborhoods. White – and especially Asian – students attend charter schools at a higher rate than Hispanics, who now make up the greatest portion of Arizona’s school-age population.”
“In Florida, local newspapers tell of an operator of a chain of charter schools who is charged with racketeering in a scheme to use public education money from the charter operation for his own personal gain.
“The charter operator allegedly used more than $1 million for “personal expenses and to purchase residential and business properties.” The charges include falsely marking up bills for school supplies, inflating student enrollments in grant applications, spending public funds on companies affiliated with the owner, and using school money to pay for plastic surgery and cruises and trips to the Caribbean, Europe, and Asia.
“Next up, a Philadelphia news outlet reports a charter school, unable to pay employee and other expenses due to a dispute with the district over $370,578 in missed payments to the teacher pension system, simply closed shop over the weekend. It’s unclear how parents would have found out about the closure, and teachers weren’t told until late Monday afternoon, in an email, that students would not be returning.
“In Michigan, a charter school recently closed before the school year ended because of a dispute over $640,000 owed to the financial firm supporting the school. Even though the school is closing, it will still get state school aid payments through August.
“A news report from Arkansas tells of a charter school that has been in operation for nine years and has never met proficiency standards established by the state.
“And here’s a California charter school chain that “misappropriated public funds, including a tax-exempt bond totaling $67 million” and “failed to disclose numerous conflict-of-interest relationships.” The charter operator was able to divert $2.7 million of public charter school funds without any supporting documents. Eight different entities the charter operator was associated with benefited from doing business with the schools.
“Public schools are occasionally plagued with similar scandals, but there is an important distinction to be made from public school scandals and what happens in the charter school industry.
“As University of Connecticut professor Preston Green explains to me in an email, much of the malfeasance of charter schools comes from the entities that manage them. Called education management organizations (EMOs) or charter management organizations (CMOs), these outfits “create an agency issue with charter school governing boards that generally does not occur in traditional public schools,” Green explains.
“Public schools do not sign over operations to EMOS,” Green states. “By contrast, EMOs operate 35-40 percent of all charter schools.” And while nonprofit boards governing charters may want to ensure their schools are operating in a fiscally sound manner, the EMOs running the show “have the incentive to increase their revenues or cut expenses,” says Green.
“Those incentives can lead to numerous bad acts including engaging in conflicts of interest or cherry picking students.
“Where is the regulatory function that could intervene in these cases and ensure public tax money is being appropriately spent?
“In the case of the NOLA charter impeding the education of homeless students, a federal law requiring schools to accommodate homeless students was the basis for any grievances. But the state’s charter school regulations consider such treatment of students a breach of contract that warrants the school to only provide the students with the opportunity for make-up work or tutoring. In other words, the consequences are more of a burden for the student than they are for the school.
“In the case of the Oakland charters gaining an edge over public schools because of their enrollment practices, the report that outs the malfeasance notes that state “revenue policies” incentivize charter schools’ bad behavior.
“Charter school closings like we see occurring in Florida, Pennsylvania, and elsewhere are a feature of charter schools, not a bug. An analysis by the National Education Association finds that “among charter schools that opened in the year 2000, 5 percent closed within the first year, 21 percent closed within the first five years, and 33 percent closed within the first ten years.”
“Charter school scandals of the sort we see in Florida and California have become routine occurrences, yet a national organization that ranks state laws governing the charter industry rates Florida in the top ten of its annual assessment of states with the best charter school laws. And efforts to rein in the abuses committed by California charters have been routinely turned back by the state’s governor, Jerry Brown, who started two charter schools in Oakland.
“As for that Arkansas charter school that was able to stay in business despite poor performance, the school has “powerful friends,” according to the reporter. “The Walton Family Foundation, [the charity operated by the heirs of the Walmart fortune,] provided cash infusion to fix [the school’s] red-ink-bathed books. The money was passed through an opaque, unaccountable charter management corporation,” and lobbyists in the state legislature “put the cherry on this hot mess sundae” in support of the school.”
Thanks Diane!
To think they killed decentralization because of a few scandals–or so they claimed
Sent from my iPhone
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Reblogged this on Crazy Normal – the Classroom Exposé and commented:
I don’t trust corporations. That distrust was earned. Corporations are profit generating cancers that will crush anyone and anything that gets in the way of profits. But I have always trusted public school teachers. I do not trust teachers that work in the private sector without the protection of due process rights and where the boss/investors are motivated primarily by those profits. Profits should never be the goal of schools supported with public dollars.
I think the only way to stop this hostile takeover of public education is to cut off the many heads of the hydra, and state and federal elected representatives or appointed, unelected school boards are not that hydra. They are just the minions, the servants of the hydra.
And after being bought by Big Money to sit on the board, too many new board members prove a lack of not just school issue knowledge, but overall general knowledge
An elected mouthpiece for a billionaire doesn’t need to know anything. All they have to do is follow directions from their god/devil.
The problem is, even if your own personal representative is fine, there are sure a lot of others more than willing to destroy teachers, and their people vote for them. We have a state senator in Utah who is terrible, and the vast majority of us can’t even vote against him. But he destroys education for all of the rest of us.
A study found that 91-percent of the candidates that won their elections spent the most money. That explains why the autocratic billionaires are spending millions on elections that used to just cost a few thousand. Is this evidence that most people do not fact check or do any research on the candidates?
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2014/04/04/think-money-doesnt-matter-in-elections-this-chart-says-youre-wrong/?utm_term=.eec8dee13716
The many charter scandals are ignored because privateers are keeping the lid on the scandals. Privatization is backed by the wealthy members of both parties, and the charter lobby is actively pursuing its mission to gain access to public tax dollars. Money buys influence, and there are many billionaires and corporations pulling the strings to ensure their agenda will prevail. Scandal, waste and fraud are ignored as they will slow down the hostile takeover of public money. Our government is so corrupt that our young people are no longer a priority. Our only hope is a taxpayer revolt will vote out complicit politicians, and this is difficult to do when money can buy elections.
The news media participate in the cover up. Look at all the media outlets have refused to cover the FBI raids on the Gulen schools. Public media have not lived up to their responsibility.
I haven’t the $lighte$t idea why there is biparti$an $upport for corrution.
How about $cam$?
Any idea$ about why there i$ biparti$ano $upport for tho$e?
8 years of Obamacare and Arnie demonstrated the oligarchs rule both parties. Sanders better represented the public good in policies.
This paragraph in the posting leapt out at me:
[start]
“Charter school closings like we see occurring in Florida, Pennsylvania, and elsewhere are a feature of charter schools, not a bug. An analysis by the National Education Association finds that “among charter schools that opened in the year 2000, 5 percent closed within the first year, 21 percent closed within the first five years, and 33 percent closed within the first ten years.”
[end]
Those pushing charters and privatization and such love ManagementByTheNumbers/ManagementByObjective. They argue: why rely on subjective judgment when high-stakes standardized test scores and ROI provide “objective” indicators of success or failure?
They obviously consider their self-serving cherry picking of numbers and data a surer path to continued $tudent $ucce$$ because (like their ideological fount of wisdom, Donald Trump) it is more important to be “symbolically” successful in providing stable and genuine learning & teaching environments than “literally” providing them.
But just consider: why is THEIR self-serving subjective priority of putting the few (themselves and their cronies) first more important than the well-being and education of the vast majority?
“It is not the answer that enlightens, but the question.” [Ionesco]
😎
Remember the truism: FOLLOW THE MONEY.
The answer to the question should be simple. Many (not all) politicians send their children to non-public schools. This removes any incentive to ensure that public schools are run properly, and serve the public. Many (not all) politicians do not face any opposition from the public, when the politicians are supportive of school choice, and parental control of their children’s education, and the parent’s tax dollars.
The right to make choices, includes the right to make bad choices. If parents choose to enroll their children in poorly run non-public schools, the politicians are off the hook. You see, most people spend their own money, more carefully than they spend someone else’s money.
As long as we have educational “apartheid”, in this country, and the politicians are not held accountable, we will have poorly run non-public schools, and poorly operated publicly-run schools as well.
Wealthy people already have school choice, this is why so many (not all) wealthy people send their children to non-public schools. They have no incentive to get involved in assisting other people, in obtaining quality education.
If this sounds cynical, it is because it is. Sometimes cynicism is truth.
Given that public schools are a state responsibility, are you saying that most state politicians send their children to private schools? Really? Could you please point me to your source of information?
Here’s something from The Texas Tribune on where that state’s elected reps in the state legislature send their children. I suspect we’d find these results in most states.
“The results? Overwhelmingly, about 75 percent of their children attend, or have attended, public schools. …
A few other standout facts from our analysis of the 182 elected officials who responded to the poll:
https://www.texastribune.org/2011/03/16/where-do-texas-officials-send-their-kids-to-school/
Thanks, Lloyd. I wonder what we would find in Ohio, Florida, and Louisiana.
Charles keeps telling us that elected officials all have their own children in private schools. Wrong.
Read my post. I said that MANY (not all) politicians send their children to non-public schools. Here is a segment from a report from 2003:
(This report is about congressional politicians)
Other data gathered by the Heritage Foundation showed the following Washington elite also exercised their private school option:
46% of Congressional Hispanic Caucus members
Read the report for yourself at:
https://www.publicschoolreview.com/blog/how-many-politicians-send-their-kids-to-public-schools
see also
http://dailysignal.com/2017/01/09/senate-dems-set-to-scrutinize-trumps-ed-secretary-pick-attended-private-schools/
http://www.heritage.org/education/report/how-members-the-111th-congress-practice-private-school-choice
http://www.newsmax.com/Politics/Democrats-DeVos-Private-School/2017/02/21/id/774797/
Be Fair. I have NEVER said that Q elected officials all have their own children in private schools END Q.
I just report what is public record. Many federal politicians send their children to non-public schools. This includes a majority of the democrats on the HELP committee, who all voted against the DeVos confirmation.
I cannot locate any reliable information about state-level politicians. I would guess that the percentage of state-level politicians who enroll their children in non-public schools, is less than the level of federal politicians.
Politicians are hypocrites. Stop the presses.
Be fair. I asked you to which politicians you were referring. From your response, it is now clear that you were talking federal. Nobody claimed that you said ALL politicians sent their kids to private schools, but given the devastation of education in the district, I would suspect that most government employees who lived there would be looking beyond the public schools, charter for those who can’t afford private. I would assume there are still a few decent public schools in wealthier neighborhoods (?). From all the reports that have come out of the district, it looks like a model of reform failures.
@speduktr: I live in metro Washington DC. The publicly-operated schools in our nation’s capital, are arguably the worst in the nation. see this report:
http://dailycaller.com/2015/07/28/study-dc-schools-are-literally-the-worst-in-the-nation/
There are excellent publicly-operated schools in Fairfax county VA, and Montgomery County, MD.
Oh, no, Charles!
The D.C. Schools have charters and vouchers just as DeVos wants!
How can they be the worst in the nation??
Excellent public schools are usually found in affluent communities. Every district with high numbers of kids in poverty and high levels of racial segregation struggles. Switch the teachers from Fairfax to DC, and they would very likely get the same results as D.C. Teachers. Pasi Sahlberg made exactly that point about Finnish teachers. They are excellent teachers because their students are healthy, well-fed, and do not face difficult home lives.
About one of every four children in the United States lives in poverty. In Finland, less than 5 percent of the children live in poverty.
“About 15 million children in the United States – 21% of all children – live in families with incomes below the federal poverty threshold, a measurement that has been shown to underestimate the needs of families. Research shows that, on average, families need an income of about twice that level to cover basic expenses. Using this standard, 43% of children live in low-income families.”
http://www.nccp.org/topics/childpoverty.html
And what does a study out of Stanford say about these children in every country?
“There is an achievement gap between more and less disadvantaged students in every country; surprisingly, that gap is smaller in the United States than in similar post-industrial countries, and not much larger than in the very highest scoring countries.
“Achievement of U.S. disadvantaged students has been rising rapidly over time, while achievement of disadvantaged students in countries to which the United States is frequently unfavorably compared – Canada, Finland and Korea, for example – has been falling rapidly.”
http://news.stanford.edu/news/2013/january/test-scores-ranking-011513.html
And
while trashing the community-based, democratic, transparent, non-profit, traditional public schools will not change what the Stanford study discovered in every country on the planet.
@Diane. If you read the article, you will see that it discusses the publicly-operated schools in WashDC, NOT the charter schools.
see also
http://bigthink.com/articles/are-the-dc-schools-the-worst-in-the-country
If you really want to weep: Check out the government-operated school systems on the Native American reservations in this great land.
see
http://www.politico.com/story/2015/11/how-washington-created-the-worst-schools-in-america-215774
Charles,
Half the students in DC go to charter schools. DC has the biggest achievement gaps in the nation. That includes charters.
Wasn’t competition supposed to improve public schools or is it a death sentence for public schools?
There are other factors at work on Native American Indian reservations that must be accounted for when considering the alleged failure of the government schools on those reservations.
“Substance Use in American Indian Youth is Worse than We Thought”
https://www.drugabuse.gov/about-nida/noras-blog/2014/09/substance-use-in-american-indian-youth-worse-than-we-thought
Native Americans and Alcoholism
http://www.recovery.org/topics/native-americans-alcoholism/
Poverty and Health Disparities for American Indian and Alaska Native Children: Current Knowledge and Future Prospects
“American Indian and Alaska Natives are especially likely to experience a range of violent and traumatic events involving serious injury or threat of injury to self or to witness such threat or injury to others.19 Of all races, they have the highest per-capita rate of violent victimization, whereas children between the ages of 12 and 19, in particular, are more likely than their non-Native peers to be the victims of both serious violent crime and simple assault.20 This situation has been associated with many other health disparities.21 In a national survey of more than 13,000 youth in grades 7–12 drawn from 200 reservation-based schools, a factor analysis of 30 risk behaviors was conducted. Among the seven risk factors derived from this analysis was one including violence and gang involvement. This factor was correlated with other risk behaviors, such as alcohol and drug use; suicide attempts; and vandalism, stealing, and truancy. …
“Within this large network, American Indian and Alaska Native children are also exposed to repeated loss because of the extremely high rate of early, unexpected, and traumatic deaths due to injuries, accidents, suicide, homicide, and firearms—all of which exceed the U.S. all-races rate by at least two times—and due to alcoholism, which exceeds the U.S. all-races rate by seven times.”
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2567901/
There is a major scandal now blowing up in Prince George’s County Maryland (suburban WashDC). There are allegations of inflated grades, School board members have alleged that grades were changed and students were credited for courses they did not take, leading to fraudulent graduation rates.
The governor (Larry Hogan), has called for an investigation.
see
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/md-politics/hogan-calls-for-investigation-into-alleged-tampering-with-graduation-rates/2017/06/25/66861cd6-59e2-11e7-a9f6-7c3296387341_story.html?utm_term=.ec5e3c33d2d7
and
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/md-politics/state-lawmakers-from-prince-georges-seek-broad-probe-of-graduation-rates/2017/06/22/6902c54a-577b-11e7-b38e-35fd8e0c288f_story.html?utm_term=.23e11bfc3f69
As bad as the schools in WashDC are, the schools across the line in Prince George’s county are worse. Many Maryland parents, illegally enroll their children in WashDC schools, by providing them with a false address in DC. They smuggle the children into and out of the district on an “underground railroad”. You can go to any DC school, and see that many of cars that pick up the kids, have Maryland license plates.
(There are scandals in publicly-operated schools too!)
True, Charles. As many have warned, high-stakes testing encourages cheating and grade inflation.
Contract schools, however (charters), are more likely to steal millions from taxpayers because there is little or no oversight. I have documented many cases of multimillion dollar charter swindles here but have not yet heard of a similar theft in public schools.
I posted Bryant’s Article at OEN https://www.opednews.com/Quicklink/Charter-Schools-Do-Bad-Stu-in-Best_Web_OpEds-Educational-Crisis_Fraud_Scandal-170625-85.html#comment664257
with a comment that has 2 posts from this site
I posted this today, too The Akron Beacon-Joirnal reports on a multi-state charter scandal.
http://www.ohio.com/news/local/multi-state-investigation-alleges-akron-area-charter-school-founder-bilked-millions-from-parents-students-taxpayers-1.776444
Carol Burris notes in this article https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/answer-sheet/wp/2017/06/22/problems-with-charter-schools-that-you-wont-hear-betsy-devos-talk-about/?utm_term=.a00fdb2d9b5f
that the NAACP passed a resolution last year demanding a moratorium on new charters until charters cleaned up their actioms and policies.
Instead of doing some self-examination and trying to right what was wrong, the charter apologists attacked the NAACP.
Burris reviews some of the notable charter scams and corruption in the past year or so.
Back in the 1990s, when I was a Charter fan, I believed that charters would cost less money (no bureaucracy), but now they demand the same funding as public schools. The slogan of the day was that charters would get autonomy in exchange for accountability.
Now we know, 25 years later, that charters want autonomy with no accountability.
That’s a bad deal for students, teachers, and taxpayers. It does not produce better education. It robs public schools of resources. We are re-creating a dual school system. This is not Reform. It is a massive scam.
Gates gave the Center for American Progress $2.2 mil. from 2013-2015.
Gates is a very BAD person.
Gates’ main problem is that he believes he knows everything and that he therefore knows what is best for everyone else.
I worked with and under Gates’ type for years and the malady is actually very common among computer geeks.
The irony is that when they get out of their very narrow field, they actually know very little but nonetheless believe otherwise.
It’s a special case of the Dunning Kruger effect.
There are both Democrat and Republican politicians bought and paid for by both Republican and Democrat billionaires. They can all be counted on to be pro-Wall Street and pro-billionaire.
I don’t think there are any Republicans who aren’t pro-charter. Republicans do what they are ordered to do — look at how Betsy DeVos won every vote. And I include Susan Collins, who insisted on voting FOR DeVos in committee when her vote counted and only opposed her when she knew her vote didn’t. Collins is worse than the others because she dishonestly pretends to be concerned while intentionally enabling every action she professes concern about. She has a lot of power which she refuses to use to stop any part of the right wing Republican agenda because deep down, she is 100% complicit. She just wants to pretend she isn’t. She’ll go down in history as one of the
Rabidly pro-charter Dems like Cuomo, Booker, Emanuel, and even Brown find that supporting charters brings in the donations.
The NAACP and Black Lives Matters called for a moratorium on charter schools until there is a real look at why the top performing ones insist that so many of their youngest African-American students are violent and suspend them — sometimes over and over again. Cuomo, Brown, Rahm all say those 5 and 6 year old children in charters ARE violent and nobody should tell the white educators who recognize just how violent so many of them are how to run their charters. As long as they get top scores, why shouldn’t they suspend as many kindergarten children as they want? Because those children ARE violent, say Cuomo, Brown and Emanuel and the other complicit charter folks who stand by silently so that racists can hear that “evan Democrats” admit that so many young African-American kindergarteners are violent.
It’s no wonder that Americans were primed to believe Trump. He just said out loud the nasty things that no-excuses charter folks have been implying for years to excuse their high suspension rates of the very youngest elementary school kids — it’s just so many of them are violent they had no choice.” Talk about feeding into the racists. And yet so many Democrats won’t call out that racism and instead give it credibility.
The other problem is that the politicians like Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren who aren’t owned entirely by big donors have far more important issues to care about than public schools and they can’t be bothered to spend their precious time learning why even the “public” charters they seem to still cheer on are a deceitful sham with the best ones dishonest and the “good” ones far too complicit to call them out.
Finally, there are politicians like Tim Kaine and Bill de Blasio who seem to really get it and become targets of the complicit people of their party — like Cuomo — for not advancing the cause of the billionaire donors.
NYC public school parent, THANK YOU for your comments. True!
The issue would be clearer if the schools were called what they are- contractor schools.