Every so often, a friend who is not deep into education issues asks for a short explanation of why I oppose charter schools. Didn’t Obama and Duncan support them? But now Betsy DeVos and the Koch brothers support them? I keep meaning to write a brief summary but have not had time.
Recently a friend in California wrote an explanation that might serve the purpose.
What’s wrong with charter schools? The picture in California*
Charter schools take resources away from the public schools, harming public schools and their students. All charter schools do this – whether they’re opportunistic and for-profit or presenting themselves as public, progressive and enlightened.
Charter schools are free to pick and choose and exclude or kick out any student they want. They’re not supposed to, but in real life there’s no enforcement. Many impose demanding application processes, or use mandatory “intake counseling,” or require work hours or financial donations from families – so that only the children of motivated, supportive, compliant families get in. Charter schools publicly deny this, but within many charter schools, the selectivity is well known and viewed as a benefit. Admittedly, families in those schools like that feature – with the more challenging students kept out of the charter – but it’s not fair or honest, and it harms public schools and their students.
Charter schools are often forced into school districts against the districts’ will. School boards’ ability to reject a charter application is limited by law; and if a school board rejects a charter application, the applicant can appeal to the county board of education and the California state board of education. Then the school district winds up with a charter forced upon it, taking resources from the existing public schools. Often this means the district must close a public school.
Anyone can apply to open and operate a charter school, and get public funding for it.The process is designed to work in their favor. They don’t have to have to be educators or show that they’re competent or honest. They may be well-meaning but unqualified and incompetent, or they may be crooks. Imagine allowing this with police stations, fire stations, public bus systems or parks.
Part of a school district’s job is to provide the right number of schools to serve the number of students in the district. When charter schools are forced into the district, that often requires existing public schools to close. Again, that harms the district and its students.
California law (Prop. 39) requires school districts to provide space for charter schools, even if the district didn’t want the charter. Charter schools are often forced into existing public schools (this is called co-location), taking space and amenities away from their students and creating conflict. This is a contentious issue in other states too.
Charter schools can be opened by almost anyone and get little oversight, so they’re ripe for corruption, looting, nepotism, fraud and self-dealing. Corruption happens in public school districts too, but charter schools offer an extra tempting opportunity for crooks, and the history of charters in California nationwide shows that wrongdoers often grab that opportunity.
Charter schools, backed by billionaire-funded pro-privatization support and PR machinery, have positioned themselves as an enemy to school districts, public schools and teachers, sending their damaging message to politicians and the media. These charter backers pour millions into electing charter-friendly candidates. Tearing down our public school system and our teachers, as the charter sector does endlessly, harms our public schools and their students.
The charter sector tends to sort itself into two kinds of schools. Charter schools serving low-income students of color often impose military-style discipline and rigid rules – hands folded on the desk, eyes tracking the speaker, punishment for tiny dress code violations, a focus on public humiliation. By contrast, some charter schools serving children of privilege are designed to isolate the school from a district so that lower-income kids aren’t assigned to the school. Charter schools overall have been found to increase school segregation.
Charter schools overall serve far fewer children with disabilities and English-language learners than public schools. Even those designed to serve children with disabilities serve far fewer children with the types of disabilities that are most challenging and expensive to work with, such as children with severe autism or who are severely emotionally disturbed.
Despite the many advantages charter schools enjoy, they don’t do any better overall than public schools. The rallying cry for charter schools used to be that the “competition” would improve public schools, but that hasn’t happened. In charter schools’ more than 20 years of existence, they haven’t overall brought better education to impoverished communities.
*Note: This commentary applies to California charter schools and California charter laws. Many of the issues apply to charter schools in most or all other states where they exist.
– Created by a longtime Northern California parent volunteer education advocate
Do you have anything to add?

California radio (at least in the Bay Area) is flooded with pro and anti-charter ads. Instead of doing typical sensationalist political ads, I wish the anti-charter ads would simply state what this post says.
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When I see a pro-charter ad in the Bay Area where I live, my first thought is that I want to set the billboard on fire and burn it to the ground.
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“Do you have anything to add?”
Yes, plenty:
Charter schools are run by unelected boards which are not answerable to the public. They rarely have open meetings. In fact, many charters have boards which are organized in other states.
Even though they bill themselves as “public” schools, charters are not usually required to keep open books and records, so there is no record of how public money is spent.
Also, even though they pretend to be “public” schools, charters are not usually subject to the same labor relations rules as public institutions. Even in union states, charters are not generally unionized and they fight union efforts viciously. Because they lack union representation, charter teachers are vulnerable to abuse such as over work and long hours, and they have little to no ability to speak out about practices that are harmful to students and/or teachers.
Charters often serve as a clearing house for real estate deals/scams. The relationships between and among charter authorizers, charter schools and charter management organizations are opaque and often involve paying extortionate rent to the CMO. Many charters are pyramid schemes which require opening more and more schools and using the new funding to pay down debt on existing buildings.
Due to the New Markets Tax Credit, charters offer a unique opportunity to make large return on investment – often touted as a guaranteed 7% per year.
Even given these potentially lucrative opportunities, charters often fail financially, resulting in schools closing with little to no warning, often in the middle of the year. The only place displace students are able to go is the public school which is required to take them. These closings invariably happen after the funding date, so the school keeps the funding, while the public school has extra students to educate without funding. In addition, charters or the management organizations often get to keep the assets including real estate, furniture, fixtures and supplies.
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The US Department of Education employees are heading out on another charter/private school promotion tour.
I just hope they resist bashing every public school student in the country this time- it’s really unfair to smear public school students in order to advance their anti-public school agenda. DeVos gives speeches written by political hacks where they portray all public school students as bullying, ignorant thugs.
It’s outrageous that public school families have to pay for DC political campaigns meant to weaken and harm our childrens schools.
Can’t they get one of their billioniares to pay them? Is there some reason I have to fund an attack on the public schools my own children attend?
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Due to all the dark money from wealthy donors, the charter lobby has too many of our representatives in their pockets that promote crooked schemes and endless profiteering. Charters often get preferential treatment in state houses and Washington, D.C. The interests public schools that serve 90% of the students are rarely considered. Instead, representatives rubber stamp more schemes like vouchers and so-called scholarships as well as endless charter expansion whether needed or not. The main goal is to shift as much money out of the public asset of public education and move into private hands. It is not even about education improvement anymore.
I listened to a podcast from NPE on Saturday with Carol Burris and two others. The topic was separation of church and state and vouchers. Burris pointed out that Florida offers “opportunity scholarships,” that are really vouchers. Almost all of these are used a religious schools, and almost all of these religious schools are unaccredited. Students cannot get into to most colleges after high school. I’d hardly call this a great opportunity. The goal is to move money out of public schools by hook or crook.
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A lot of the state campaigns in Ohio are focusing on public education. My state rep, who is an ed reformer, came out to our public school to campaign for himself.
It’s pretty pathetic. This guy can’t point to a single thing he’s done for any PUBLIC school student in his district. He kept repeating the ed reform slogans – “choice!” – but no one was fooled.
He’s got nothing to offer public school parents. HE can’t even come up with a reason we should vote for him.
It’s so bizarre. They are so far inside this bubble they travel TO A PUBLIC SCHOOL and lecture us on charters and vouchers. He is quite literally ignoring the parents and students standing in front of him and speaking to charter and voucher parents, none of whom are there, because it’s a public school.
I don’t why they bother coming to public schools. They have zero interest in us, our kids, or our schools.
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Not to blow your own horns, but I DO think public school advocates can take some credit for forcing politicians to at least give lip service to public schools this cycle.
DC Democrats put forth a public school funding plan. They did that ONLY because the political winds shifted, and it was once again fashionable to support public schools.
The same is true in Ohio. All of a sudden every Republican in the state rediscovered the 90% of students they have utterly ignored for the last decade.
Even Scott Walker is running on public schools. It’s a 180 from his entire term in office.
What changed in ed reform since 2010? Nothing. It’s the exact same people and the exact same agenda. The only thing that changed is the incumbents see some political risk to eradicating public schools. THEY’RE at risk- they may lose their seats.
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I hope nobody believes Walker. He’s a Koch Brothers clone and inveterate liar.
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Have you read his book, called Unintimidated? My mom always taught me calling someone a liar without proof they actually are is unacceptable. Do you have proof?
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myfellowteachers,
I think this captures Walker’s lying quite clearly: “Even Scott Walker is running on public schools. It’s a 180 from his entire term in office.”
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According to Politifact Wisconsin, you can take you pick of the lies and false statements. http://www.politifact.com/personalities/scott-walker/statements/byruling/false/
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Hello,
I’ve been a public education (anti charter) advocate in Ohio for years. My son, Cassimir Svigelj, (https://www.cassimirforohio.com/) is running for the 16th district Ohio House seat representing North Olmsted, Rocky River, Bay Village, Westlake, and Fairview Park. He is anti-charter/pro public education, and endorsed by Ohio BATs. He has found that through discussing the amount of money lost in his districts to charters, many constituents have been awakened to the charter scam. I hope once more people find relevance to the issue in their lives that they join us in the fight to save public schools. We also need to help pro public education, Louise Valentine, defeat the current House Ed Cmt Chair, Andrew Brenner. http://www.valentineforohio.com/. I hope through getting more pro public education candidates in office in Ohio that we can begin to chip away at the corrupt charter industry.
Melissa
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The problem with explaining charter schools to people is that they want to look at it as a political issue when it’s not. Both parties have been equally wrong headed on education in the past. They use it as a rallying cry to get more votes but do little to improve it when they win.
This isn’t a Republican problem. Both parties are guilty of supporting this nonsense.
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While it may not be a partisan issue, it is most definitely a political issue.
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Charters are certainly a political issue, but I think you mean it isn’t a partisan issue, since both Ds and Rs are supportive of charters.
Agreed. The abandonment of public schools and unions is a moral shame upon corporate/establishment Democrats and a big reason why the masses (aka voters) don’t get excited about them.
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I am a long-time reader and also a founding board member of a charter in LA Unified. I learn a tremendous amount from reading this blog and Diane’s books. But this description from your friend is wrong, and even more important it is incredibly unfair to the staff of the LAUSD charter division, who work so hard to make sure these things don’t happen in LAUSD-authorized charters. If you have any doubt, Google “LAUSD charter oversight visit report” to see the kind of diligence that is completed for every charter in the district, every year.
Of course I can’t vouch for all authorizers, but LAUSD is a pretty big counterexample to this letter.
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I followed your suggestion and googled “LAUSD charter oversight visit report.”
The sample report I saw describes one charter school, but it doesn’t describe the funding or student makeup of the public schools that school drew students from. It doesn’t contrast the salary of the charter operators with the salaries of the local public school leadership. It doesn’t reveal the staff turnover level at the charter school, as contrasted with the area public schools. It doesn’t analyze student post-count date attrition or identify what schools students attend when they leave the charter school. The report doesn’t detail the charter’s real estate agreement or contrast it wit that of the local public schools.
In short, the report provides absolutely no counterexamples for the issues cited in the original post.
Charters are part of the problem with public schools, not part of the solution.
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And at the same time you list every possible thing you feel is wrong with charter schools, it seems only fair that you would also compile a list of every possible thing wrong with public schools, and hold them side by side.
If public schools were doing a stellar job, no one would have even had to consider an alternative for students and families who were being failed by their neighborhood public school. I teach in a public school. I see the deep issues. I myself would choose an alternative for my children.
How can you attack those who are seeking to make sure children receive a quality education, whoever it is, for profit or not?
The point is, children need a great education, and if public schools don’t get it together, they will lose out to parents who rightfully choose the best option for their children. Charters push public schools to start offering solutions.
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The solution to bad public schools is to improve those schools for ALL students. The solution is not to drain resources out of struggling public schools to create a parallel parasitic charter school system to benefit private operators, overpaid administrators, and only some students.
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MFT
The charter school debate has two sides with distinctly different missions:
1) Engaged and supportive parent(s) who prefer a safe and orderly learning environment over the chaos and dysfunction of a public school that is overwhelmed by high poverty, high needs students.
2) Public schools/educators required to teach ALL, regardless of disability, language barrier, or behavior – while being forced to comply with a very complex and debilitating web of state mandates.
Neither group has taken up the wrong side of the issue.
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“while being forced to comply with a very complex and debilitating web of state mandates”
Debilitating mandates that exist because of the same lying, greedy, power hunger forces pushing to privatize the public schools.
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Thanks for sharing your experiences, Stephanie. Our experiences are similar – authorizers vary in their skill & diligence.
I recall being in LA more than 30 years ago when fellow educators were creating options with the district (as some of us did in Mn). Lots of venom from families having public school options. Meanwhile, progressive educators have recognized for decades that there is no single “best” approach for school. Some youngsters thrive in a strict traditional school; others in a more open, projected based school.
Thanks for your efforts to help more students succeed.
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Sorry, meant to say lots of venom 30 years ago from some opposed to allowing families to have public school options.
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“Imagine allowing this with police stations, fire stations, public bus systems or parks.”
This is what the Kochtopus wants. This is what this fascist, hate-filled, greedy, autocratic, racist group has been working toward for decades.
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Erik Prince, Betsy DeVos’ brother, created a parallel private military with his mercenary company Blackwater. Call it a charter military system.
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Reblogged this on Crazy Normal – the Classroom Exposé and commented:
What is wrong with MOST private sector charter schools?
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When people criticize charters including educators and politicians, they often state that there are also some good charters. What do they mean by that? If it just based on test scores? How many of those “good” charters succeed due to cherry picking their students, counseling out those with behavioral problems and discouraging ELL and special ed students from enrolling.
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I think there are some “good” charters in terms of good intentions. They intended to serve all students, perhaps especially the most difficult to serve. They intend to be teacher-led. They intend to use humane, progressive methods. They intend to be community focused and child centered.
Most such schools, however, end up “failing” in some way or another. It’s quite expensive to educate all students, especially the most difficult, so financial viability is a problem. Schools that take all-comers, especially the most challenging, get low test scores, which opens them up to predation from larger big-box charters that swallow them whole, or they get closed by the state for “poor performance” (the same sort of poor performance doesn’t usually get large charter chains closed down). Diane has occasionally had a few posts about charter schools that tried to do the right thing in line with Shanker’s original vision, but usually when they’re under attack.
It should be noted, however, that even the “good” charters have many of the same inherent flaws of all charters. For instance, all charters pull funding from public schools.
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In April, 2018, The Thomas B. Fordham Institute, champion of all things charter published its latest marketing tool for charter expansions titled CHARTER SCHOOL DESERTS: High-Poverty Neighborhoods with Limited Educational Options.
This state-by-state report is intended to redefine high-poverty geographic areas by census tracts.
I think everyone should read the report for their state to see where the charter school service industry wants to expand.
This is how the report on California begins, on page 31:
Begin quote:
Where are the charter school deserts in California?
We detail the distribution of schools in California in order to provide educators and policymakers with information about communities that provide no access to charter schools. Many families lack the financial means to move out of neighborhoods when dissatisfied with their schooling options, so the location of schools is key to ensuring access and equity for all students.
Policymakers and parents can use this information to better understand the supply of schooling options in their states and cities— and to press for changes that would improve that supply. Charter operators and authorizers may also find this analysis helpful as they consider where to establish new schools.
What is a charter school desert? The following maps display where elementary charter schools are located in California. A charter school desert is three or more contiguous census tracts that have poverty rates greater than 20 percent but that have no charter schools.
Results: California has 5,920 public elementary schools, of which 874 are charter schools. The state as a whole has a 14.4 percent poverty rate.
California has eighteen charter school deserts, representing 3 percent of mid- to high-poverty census tracts,1 located in the far northern (just west of Fresno) and southeastern parts of the state, and MANY IN THE LOS ANGELES, San Fransisco Bay, and Sacremento (sic) metro areas.
In total, fourteen of the eighteen charter deserts are in urban areas.
end quote
The maps of so-called “deserts” are color coded and designed to show the opportunities for charter expansion, including suburbs that are not strictly high poverty, the usual targets for charter expansion, but also “mid-poverty.”
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The Office of Inspector General of the U.S. Department of Education has issued a report which warns that, because of their lack of financial accountability to the public “CHARTER SCHOOLS AND THEIR MANAGEMENT ORGANIZATIONS POSE A POTENTIAL RISK TO FEDERAL FUNDS, EVEN AS THEY FALL SHORT OF MEETING GOALS” because of financial fraud and the artful skimming of tax money into private pockets, especially hedge fund pockets.
If nothing else is required of charter schools, there is one thing that must be required so that charter schools are accountable to taxpayers and inform taxpayers as to where taxpayer money is actually going when it’s given to charter schools; that one key thing is this: Charter schools must be required to file the SAME detailed, public domain financial reports under penalty of perjury that public schools file.
Charter schools will cry that this is “too burdensome” — yet public schools file such reports. What would the outcry be if public schools were “freed” of this “burden”? Why, the outcry would rattle the very heavens! So, why is it that private charter schools are allowed to get away with taking public tax money and not have to tell the public on an annual basis how those public tax dollars are spent?
Charter schools bill themselves as “public schools”, but Supreme Courts in states like New York, Washington and elsewhere are catching on to the scam and have ruled that charter schools are really private schools because they aren’t accountable to the public because they are run by private boards that aren’t elected by voters and don’t even have to file detailed reports to the public about what they’re doing with the public’s tax money. Of course, if they have to do that, the public and the media will see what the charter school scam is all about, and charter schools will fade away.
Forget every other strategy to stop charter schools: If you can force them to file the SAME detailed, public domain, annual financial reports under penalty of perjury that public schools file — and why not? — the public school industry will dry up and move on to other privatization scams in other areas to divert public money into private pockets.
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Charters provide cover for hedge fund managers to shovel money into political campaigns. Instead of looking like greedy Wall Street sleazebags, they pass themselves off as “philanthropists” investing in the education of poor children of color.
But there are federal tax credits that allow investors to make huge returns on their money for building or even just financing charters in so-called “empowerment zones”. These programs also allow preferred immigration status to foreigners who invest in charter construction. This led to the famous Gulen scandal.
Charters pay less and offer fewer benefits and worker protections. They have longer days and years and are under intense supervisory pressure to concentrate on test scores.
Charters in NY violate the law that created them in 1998, which requires “special emphasis” on “students at risk of academic failure”. In reality, few charters comply and worse yet, cherrypick students so they force public schools to serve more than their share of at-risk students.
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Was it mentioned how charter schools treat teachers. I was in one 12 years and with no union they treated teachers like line workers. I got punched in the face by a boyfriend of a student at a pep rally, no apologies from anyone. Luckily the director at least paid for the emergency 7 stitches in my lip.
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Wayne – Unquestionably teachers are treated badly in some schools – whether district or charter. That’s wrong.
Twice a month I write a column carried in a number of Mn newspapers that celebrates great work in public schools, and challenges what I see as efforts to restrict and discourage that great work.
This column published last month, praises a coalition of Minnesota’s statewide teachers union, state PTA, school board, superintendent, rural, urban and suburban district schools, and Minnesota’s state charter association. They were battling an effort to assign either a 1-5 Star or 1-100 point system to each public schools. Ultimately this coalition was successful. The proposal did not become law.
http://centerforschoolchange.org/2018/05/proposed-mn-school-rating-system-could-discourage-excellent-educators/
I’ve spent much of the last week working with St. Paul district public school teachers and parents who are challenging the local district, which has allowed classrooms temperatures to be more than 90 degrees in some places. We’ve been working at the board, school and community level on this. Sadly, a number of teachers have sent emails saying they are afraid to speak out publicly because they fear what the district will do to them.
Part of the work I’ve done over the last 45 years has been to support and empower educators to create and sustain wonderful work many of them are doing – in district and in chartered public schools. Part of the work has been to join with others in challenging bad treatment of educators, families and students, whether in district or chartered public schools.
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You paint all charters with the same brush, you have to, that’s how “advocates” operate. However, for those of us in the trenches everyday, your advocacy sounds shallow and shrill. I left academia to teach at a college preparatory charter 18 years ago. It was the best decision of my professional life. There are over 400 charters in Arizona, yet the district schools are just as crowded as when I started here(Mesa High has 4,000+ students.) We are not hurting the large district schools, and we cannot turn any student away. We are an option to parents in Arizona.
Charters are meant to be different. For parents who are not comfortable with their children getting lost in a sea of thousands, or the home schooler looking for a smoother transition to a classroom setting, charters represent a real choice for parents. You attack the pillars many charters are built on as if the status quo before school choice was acceptable. Codes of conduct, dress codes, and academic accountability are not detrimental to student success, they enhance it.
For profit, mega-corporate charters are indeed a threat to the education system. They threaten districts as well as legitimate charters. They build multi-million dollar campuses which are identical to district schools while at the same time boasting college preparatory academics, though most teach to tests built on Common Core. Bigger is not always better, one-size-fits-all does not deliver in secondary education.
The common ground here will most likely be ignored because of your advocacy- only those in lock-step are welcomed.
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Schaeffer, why diponr you read Curtis Cardine’s New book, “Carpetbagging America’s Schools.”
He studied every charter in Az since 1994 and found that 49% had closed, and that corruption, self-dealing, and fraud were rampant. Or look at his website, Grand Canyon Institute. I was especially interested in the post about Discovery Creemos Academy, which applied for renewal and received a 20-year Renewal. Despite the fact that it had debt of $3.3 million, despite the fact that less than 20% of its students passed the state test. Six months after getting renewed, it abruptly went bankrupt and closed last January.
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So, by your rationale, I am to throw away the last 18 years of my professional life because you disagree with many of the same people I do? Yes, 18 years, at the same charter…. you are willing to kill the good in the name of the perfect. That won’t happen here.
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Thanks for sharing your experience and thanks for your commitment to young people and families. Imho, we make progress in part by learning from schools that help most of their youngsters identify and develop their skills and talents. There are marvelous schools around the country doing that – some of them district, some of them chartered.
And there are lousy examples of each, too.
Thanks again for adding to the conversation about how to help more youngsters succeed.
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Perhaps you recall that the national NAACP called for a moratorium on new charters.
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Yes, I recall that. As is true in many communities, there’s disagreement among African Americans on this issue.
This national poll of millennials found, ” A majority of Millennials support charter schools, including 65%of African Americans, 61% of Asian Americans and 58% of Latinxs.”
Click to access GenForward-Education-Report_Final.pdf
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In the Deep South, Hoe, your love of segregation has a lot of support.
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I don’t love segregation. I love empowerment, especially of low and moderate income families.
And I would never send our children to a private elementary or secondary school, unlike some who post here.
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