Three members of the Texas House of Representatives wrote this article, marking “School Choice Day” at the legislature. It appears in the Texas Tribune.
https://www.tribtalk.org/2019/01/23/whose-choice-is-school-choice/
Whose choice is school choice?
By Gina Hinojosa, Mary González and Shawn Thierry, Jan. 23, 2019
Lawmakers have come together this session determined to support our schools and provide the best education for all Texas children. Among many efforts to influence our work are rallies and events at the Capitol advocating for charter schools, like “School Choice Week.” However, as policymakers, we are determined to advance equitable educational opportunities for all Texas students. Charter schools may not actually be a choice for Texas children with the highest needs and challenges.
Current law, as well as the Texas Education Agency’s (TEA’s) latest “snapshot” data, reveals that charter schools are permitted to exclude students. As a result, many charters are educating a different demographic than our neighborhood public schools. In too many instances, charters are choosing the students they want rather than allowing families to choose the charter.
For example, a recent job announcement for a director of student recruitment and enrollment at IDEA Public Schools included a job responsibility to: “Manage to [sic] both quality and quantity of applicants ensuring that an applicant is a family who is prepared to persist with IDEA.” One of the largest “high performing” charter schools in the state is turning the notion of school choice on its head, choosing not just the student applicant but that student’s family as well.
Many charter schools take advantage of state law that allows them to exclude students from enrollment because of any disciplinary history — even visits to the principal’s office. As a result, unlike our public schools, which are required to educate all kids, charter schools can exclude students. Many of the largest charter schools, such as Harmony, Uplift Education, Southwest Key (Promesa) and International Leadership, ask about student disciplinary history on their admission applications. Not only does this practice allow these charters to screen out students, it has a chilling effect on those who might apply.
Children of color and children with disabilities in Texas are over-represented in many school- based discipline actions, according to a 2016 Texas Appleseed and Texans Care for Children report, “Dangerous Discipline.” Disciplinary exclusion policies limit educational opportunities for groups of students who are over-represented in the school disciplinary system.
Even charter schools that do not ask about disciplinary history are educating a different population. For example, in Austin, students in special education account for 8.3 percent of KIPP College Prep Charter’s population. Just down the road at Webb Middle School, the special education population is 19.2 percent — more than double the KIPP number. In Houston, Worthing High, a school that has received media attention for overcoming state testing challenges, is located just six minutes from KIPP Sunnyside. Yet, Worthing’s special education population is almost double that at KIPP Sunnyside.
These figures are troubling because they demonstrate that not all children have access to these educational opportunities — ultimately resulting in additional costs to neighborhood public schools.
When charters cherry-pick students, neighborhood schools are left to educate a disproportionate percentage of more challenging children. Neighborhood schools are required by law to enroll all kids, regardless of disciplinary history, special needs or family challenges. Educating children who face more challenges in life is more expensive; the cost falls disproportionately on local public school districts.
Yet, charters receive more funding from the state per student than 95 percent of all students in Texas. In El Paso, charters receive $1,619 more per student than El Paso ISD. In Austin, charters receive $1,740 more per student than AISD. This funding disparity holds true for many of the largest school districts.
This lopsided funding model results in increasing funding for charter schools and decreasing it for traditional public schools. In the 2018-2019 biennium, charter schools received $1.46 billion more than the prior biennium, and traditional public schools received $2.68 billion less.
Ultimately, this parallel system of exclusive schools, funded with increasingly more public money, is often a false promise that results in less access and less funding for many of our kids. Given the state’s constitutional responsibility to educate all kids, it is clear that the only meaningful “choice” to be made is for the Texas Legislature to “choose” to adequately fund all of our public schools and to stop exclusionary policies and practices that disadvantage Texas school children.
Gina Hinojosa
State representative, HD-49
@GinaForAustin
Mary González
State representative, HD-75
Shawn Thierry
State representative, HD-146

What does anyone expect from the great state of Texas. I got off the plane to switch aircraft in Dallas, TX and was shocked to see everyone walking around in cowboy boots and cowboy hats.
As I walked the airport I could not help notice all the beef and steak houses which prompted me to think about the culture in Texas. Texas is an ole school state housing many gov officials who have been in Texas since sliced bread was invented.
Texas needs new blood and a generation to help this state pull its boots up and get with the rest of the country.
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And excellent report. The sickening propoganda fromthe charter school industry is that they are underfunded. Pure BS ( thank you Emma)
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Laura,
I read your comment at SSIR about DIB’s. Well done.
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Good for them….now if the parents would realize the scam.
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“Charters receive more funding from the state per student than 95 percent of all students in Texas.” Charters are getting preferential funding treatment while they drain resources from public schools. Charters also get to cherry pick the easiest and cheapest to educate while the most difficult and costliest students remain in under funded public schools hobbled by charter drain and stranded costs. Texas partiality is unfair considering that taxpayers are not asked if they choose to disinvest in their community schools and transfer funds to private entities that are unaccountable to the public.
The lopsided funding reflects the biased leadership of the state, and it is not the will of the public. Why should the needs of many students be secondary to the “choice” of a few and why would any state find this acceptable? The charter lobby is a “pay to play” organization that will always seek a bigger piece of the pie. The state needs to do what is right for the greatest number of students, and they need to reject the demands of the charter lobby whose goal is to undermine public education to promote privatization.
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WOW … in America right now … “UP” means “DOWN” and “CHOICE” means “NO CHOICE Charter Schools.”
There are more opportunities in Public Schools. When will people wake up?
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I do not see this as a problem. Different schools, with different educational programs, select different students. Schools for the blind, restrict their student body to visually-impaired students. Schools for the deaf, similarly restrict their applicants to hearing-impaired students. These schools receive public funding. They are not required to accept all applicants.
Similarly, gifted/talented schools, restrict their student applicants to gifted/talented students. See
http://www.imsa.edu
These schools are publicly-funded. They are able to choose their students.
Charter schools/choice/vouchers are like a “pinata”, that many people get a thrill out of swinging at.
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Charles, you are off topic.
No one here is referring to schools for special populations.
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Charles = TROLL TROLL TROLL TROLL
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Charles,
Please name a single public school SYSTEM that can exclude students they believe are too expensive to teach?
You probably don’t know this, so I will enlighten you. There is not a public school district in America that has ONLY a gifted and talented school. If a public school district establishes a gifted and talented school somewhere, they ALSO have a school that isn’t for gifted and talented students elsewhere.
That’s what PUBLIC education is all about.
Now I understand that many people are chomping at the bit to establish a PRIVATE charter franchise that can choose to teach only the children that a profitable to teach. That is what makes them private. Because as soon as they can get a child to leave, their system has no responsibility for their education.
Outsourcing the education of the most profitable students into charters is a waste of public money, but it definitely is good for the people who want to get rich from offering to teach only profitable students.
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Q Please name a single public school SYSTEM that can exclude students they believe are too expensive to teach? END Q
I do not know of any such system. I do know of Douglas County Colorado. There is a student “Endrew F.” . The system did not have adequate facilities/staff to give this child a proper and appropriate education. So the Supreme Court ruled, that the system had to “outsource” the young man, and send him to a non-public school, and that the public school system had to pay the costs.
Q You probably don’t know this, so I will enlighten you. There is not a public school district in America that has ONLY a gifted and talented school. If a public school district establishes a gifted and talented school somewhere, they ALSO have a school that isn’t for gifted and talented students elsewhere. END Q
I know this fact. I do not know of any single school district, that has established a separate stand-alone school for gifted/talented. The state of Illinois has such a school, it is open to gifted/talented students in the state of Illinois (subject to a rigorous and exacting entrance procedure). Even though the IMSA is publicly funded, it is not open to all public school students in Illinois.
There are many individual districts/schools which have “honors”, and “advanced placement” classes in their schools for gifted/talented students. These public schools, also have classes for individual students that are unable to meet the standards for the gifted/talented programs. So what?
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Charles,
We discussed the case you mention. The child had special needs, and the district was required to pay a large sum—$50,000 a year or so—to meet his needs. No voucher program pays more than the regular state tuition and most pay less.
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Charles,
Your example proves my point — thank you for recognizing that you are on my side and now understand the difference between a public and private charter school.
“The system did not have adequate facilities/staff to give this child a proper and appropriate education. So the Supreme Court ruled, that the system had to “outsource” the young man, and send him to a non-public school, and that the public school system had to pay the costs.”
Now that we agree that there is no such PUBLIC system that excludes students they don’t want to teach, how about you coming up with the name of a single charter school who has had to pay $50,000 tuition for a student that they did not have the ability to teach. I will be waiting and I hope you are honest enough to reply that there is no such thing because charter schools are not public schools and as long as they can mistreat a child into leaving, their financial responsibility ends forever.
You asked “so what?” when you acknowledged that no school district only has programs for gifted students and tells the students who can’t do well in those schools to leave and find a charter to teach them.
As you point out, there is nothing stopping any district having a school with exclusively gifted students. But they ALSO have to have a school for the other students, too. A PUBLIC school system can’t dump students into the street and tell them to find a charter to teach them. A charter school, just like other private schools, just dumps them. No responsibility once a student is gone.
The “so what?” is a big deal. It is the very definition of public education. You seem to believe that public education means that you allow private schools to get tax dollars to teach the kids they find profitable to teach and dump the ones they don’t back to public schools. It isn’t.
I am shocked we now have advocates of privatizing public education like Charles who insist that there is nothing wrong with private schools deciding which students are profitable to teach and getting money to teach them and dump the ones who aren’t.
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I will give answering NYCPSP’s question. The NYC Public School System pays the private school tuition for over 4,1000 students at a cost of over $170 million a year because they do not provide and adequate education for those students in the public school district.
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If the same kids applied to a charter school, they would be rejected. The public must provide a free and appropriate education to all. Charters and vouchers do not.
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teachingeconomist says:
“The NYC Public School System pays the private school tuition for over 4,1000 students at a cost of over $170 million a year because they do not provide and adequate education for those students in the public school district.”
Again, you just proved my point.
There are 1.1 MILLION students in NYC public schools. You do realize that 4,700 students in NYC is the equivalent of one student in every two grades in a typical medium sized suburb. Are you now going to claim that if a suburban public school system pays the private school tuition for the 6 severely disabled students between the ages of 5 and 21 who reside in their suburb, that is just like having a charter school? If a child is born without the ability to communicate, move, and see, a PUBLIC school system pays for a private school that can serve him. If a child is a quadriplegic because of an accident, the PUBLIC school system pays for his education.
That’s why the cost of PRIVATE school reimbursements is so high. That’s why charter networks in NYC that are ten times as large as a typical suburban public school system but who refuse to pay the private school tuition of even one single severely disabled child are free riders. Charters are free riders in a system that is no different than if Alexandria, Virginia was able to force the neighboring city of Arlington, Virginia to pay for the cost of teaching every single severely disabled student who resided in Alexandria because the city of Alexandria said that they just didn’t want to be financially responsible for the cost of teaching those students so the city of Arlington Virginia should pay for them to get an education instead.
You would think that was absurd. And yet that is exactly the system that charter schools have. They adamantly refuse to teach any child they don’t want to teach and insist that the financial responsibility for all the students they don’t want to teach must be borne by a different system –the public school system.
When large charter networks that are larger than many medium sized cities start paying the private school tuitions of severely disabled students and the 1:1 aides and nurses that those severely disabled students need, THEN they will be more similar to public schools.
Charters say “sorry, you are far too severely disabled for our charter network to teach so we don’t have any responsibility to you because we are really PRIVATE schools when it comes to having to teach anyone we don’t want to teach.”
It is ironic because it is charters CEO who keep identifying huge numbers of at-risk children and claiming they are so violent or disturbed — in Kindergarten and first grade! — that no public school could ever be expected to teach them.
And then they send them back to the public schools where presumably you would support them paying a private school $100,000/year to teach the shockingly high number of 5 year old charter lottery winners whom charter network CEOs claim are unteachable in charter schools.
PS — I know that there have been some abuses and not all of the 4,700 students in NYC who get private school tuition are severely disabled. But the majority of them are. And given that there are 225,000 students with disabilities in NYC public schools — that’s right there are 225,000 (!!!) students with disabilities in NYC public schools — it hardly seems shocking the most severely disabled 2% of those 225,000 might need specialized private schools. Remember 98% of those students with disabilities are in NYC public schools.
It has nothing to do with charters, unless your point is that charters refuse to be financially responsible for ANY student with severe disabilities (or less severe disabilities who isn’t thriving in their school) even if their network is larger than 3 suburban public school systems.
Which sounds exactly like a private school to me.
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Was NYCPSP’s question about charter schools? If so, I missed it.
I am surprised that NYCPSP did not know that his/her/zirs own school district outsourced the education of these students to private schools. It has come up before on the blog in discussions of giving public money to private schools, but that was some time ago. Perhaps before NYCPSP started posting.
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giving public money to private schools is in general a very bad idea.
there may be exceptions, like for severely disabled children, but the exceptions should be rare.
Private schools in NYC range from $30,000-60,000.
There are few if any empty seats in them.
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teachingeconomist,
You seem to be saying that there is no difference between a public school district’s obligation to pay $100,000/year or more in private school tuition so that a student with severe disabilities who may not have the ability to even communicate or move can be taught in a very specialized setting, and charter schools.
According to you, since public schools pay tuitions for the tiny fraction of students (in NYC it is .004 of the 1.1 students receiving this), that is no different than having a separate system of charter schools that are run by private entities under their own rules, but get public money to teach the students they want to teach.
If I misunderstood you, please explain. Just like I explained exactly what I believed your point was. If what I described above — that paying tuition for children with the .004 students with the most severe disabilities is no different than having a privately operated charter school competing for the easiest to teach students — was not your point, then you are free to explain again what your point is. As I did above.
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NYC PSP,
Aren’t you moving the goalposts a bit? I named a school district that outsourced educating the most difficult students. Did you mean to ask that for a single public school SYSTEM that can excludes any more than a small portion of the students they believe are too expensive to teach?
As for the rest of your comment, I do not live in the black and white world where so many of the remaining posters here inhabit (this was not the case when I began reading this blog). I take notice that NYC Public spends more than the annual budget of my local school district outsourcing students to private schools, but think that this might be a good thing. It might be better if NYC Public did even more of that, but we would have to do the hard work of investigating the advantages and disadvantages of doing that.
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teachingeconomist,
I find it odd that you are worried about me “moving the goalposts” when you have established a football game between the NFL Super Bowl championship team and a junior high pee wee football league winner.
teachingeconomist wrote: “I take notice that NYC Public spends more than the annual budget of my local school district outsourcing students to private schools…”
Are there 1.1 million students in your local school districts? So why would you compare “annual budgets” and total spending between the two? NYC also likely spends more on field trips for the 1.1 million students than a small local district’s annual budget. You did not address my point that private reimbursements are spent on a fraction of students who are the most severely disabled and to you it seems like a lot of money because most local districts might only have 1 or 2 children who would be so severely disabled and have their tuition paid for.
Are you saying that because your local district very likely has at least one child who might be disabled you believe that is an argument for every child in your district getting a voucher to choose their own school? I don’t really get your point. But I do know that by using “total spending” and trying to compare a system that teaches 1.1 million student with your local district, your argument did not seem very convincing.
I think you are saying that if your school district paid the private school tuition of a child who was injured and suffered a brain injury that meant he could not communicate nor move without a full time nurse, then that is an argument that privatizing public schools is okay or already happening. And I think that argument would seem silly but it seems to be the one you are making.
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Hopefully this will be the fate of more charter scams-
https://www.newhavenindependent.org/index.php/archives/entry/achievement_first_external_investigation/
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No Charter school left behind?
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Charles, I don’t know where you live, but I live just outside of Chicago. CPS has more than just ONE public school for gifted & talented students, & these schools consistently top the rest of the state in testing (but we all know these tests mean diddly squat–of COURSE gifted students are going to do well on them, anyway).
& see Diane’s comment above RE: the special education student case; this happens all over, because some special ed. students’ needs far exceed what a public school can provide, & then the school districts involved most often have to pay the tuition.
This is NOT “outsourcing” students; rather, these are cases in which the student is best served. &–I am speaking to this issue as a 35-year special education teacher, who, retired, serves on the boards of 2 special education organizations, so am still involved, as an advocate for both sp.ed. kids & PUBLIC education.
&–an aside–I’m also certified in–& have taught & parented a gifted child–gifted & talented. We had to send our daughter to a private school for gifted students (on our own dime; even though our local school district had NO gifted program, we are just not into litigation against public schools & the $$$ it would cost them, hurting their students).
Education is #1 to our family, so, having one child (& my own continuing ed. courses & workshops to improve my teaching skills) we spent money on that, rather than other things–we feel blessed that we could do it (my husband has a 22-year-old car, & mine is 26, & we bought both of them used).
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If charter schools were really public schools, they would, on occasion, have to pay the private school tuition of students who need that special education environment that a public school can’t provide.
But charter schools are just like private schools. When they can’t provide for the student, they simply throw him back to the public school system.
Because charters are not public schools.
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