Erika Jones is an experienced teacher in California. In this post, she responds forcefully to the claim by charter advocates that privately managed charter schools “save” children of color.
They don’t.
I urge all charter advocacy groups and individuals to read her eloquent article and consider her words carefully.
She begins:
As a public-school educator who is African-American, I am keenly aware of what it means to be a student of color within the public school system and the role institutional racism has played.

We have faced decades of funding and resource inequities, which have left our current public schools in marginalized communities unable to fully serve their students. Historically, acknowledging these inequities can lead to strategies to combat institutional racism in our schools and across the country.
The last 20 years of exploding charter school growth in communities of color also make it clear that many proposed solutions can have serious negative consequences for the overwhelming majority of public school students. The time is now for our elected leaders in Sacramento to pass laws to support students by curtailing the worst parts of this broken, decades-long experiment.
Often within the conversation of supporting communities of color, school choice and specifically charter schools frequently are presented as the answer. When looking at institutional racism within public education, instead of being the panacea for children of color, more often than not the charter school industry actually leads to worsening conditions for a majority of students of color. This is because many school districts in California, whose students are overwhelmingly students of color, are in crisis mode: seeing upwards of a 200 percent growth in charter schools, lacking facilities and averaging hundreds of millions of dollars in fiscal impact directly attributed to this growth.
Yet the achievement gap for students of color has continued to widen. We see a select group of children of color leaving the traditional public school setting to attend charter schools, while the majority of children of color remain in the traditional setting.
I taught both 3rd grade and kindergarten in South Los Angeles at Angeles Mesa Elementary and during the years I was there multiple new charter schools popped up surrounding my school. I saw firsthand how our families of color were lured away by the promise of free tablets for their kids, nicer uniforms and so-called college readiness. I hugged parents as they brought their children back to my school, feeling devastated that their child had been kicked out of one of the charters or their children found themselves in schools with higher class sizes and less student support. Some of my families had even been misled to believe that the new charter school was their new home school.
The original intent of charter schools was to be educator-driven incubators of change where innovations that lead to student success could be shared with all schools within the public school system. Here we are 20 years later and instead of sharing methods, many traditional public schools in communities of color find themselves competing for resources, having disproportionate numbers of students with high needs and having larger populations of English learners. All this while for the most part charters are performing about the same as traditional public schools.
Erika Jones answers all the questions with facts and evidence. Please read the rest of her article.

To some, performance doesn’t matter; it’s the claim that counts.
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Diane, how hard would it be to add the Hall of Fame and Hall of Shame to this site? For the sake of institutional memory, it’d be nice to have both groups memorialized. Alternatively, it could be a good wiki.
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LOVE the idea!
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After all the hype, lies, scams, insider deals, embezzlement, cheating and gross mistreatment of students and teachers at charter schools, it’s a little late to ask charter supporters to see reason.
What many of them need to see is the inside of a prison cell; that might focus them a bit, and make them a little more receptive to facts.
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And it would come full circle by having half of our privatized prisons make a profit off the suffering of a bunch of schemers, liars, and cheaters who have been parasites imposing on children and their families.
PERFECT! Now, THAT’S capitalism!!!!
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Of course the 74million is now pushing for black ownership of charter schools and sponsoring “town halls” around he country to shore up choice as a panacea.
https://www.the74million.org/is-school-choice-the-black-choice-photos-video-and-reactions-from-philadelphia-education-town-hall/?utm_source=The+74+Million+Newsletter&utm_campaign=daa02078ec-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2019_05_29_07_38&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_077b986842-daa02078ec-176113397
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The 74 is unabashedly pro-segregation.
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Using skin color as a form of hocus-pocus will not work any more because eventually people of any color will judge each other for the content of character and not for the color of each other’s skin. Mistreatment is mistreatment.
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Quotable quote: “We are seeing that even when a small group of students of color in some charter schools show improvement, it’s to the detriment of the majority of students seeing resources siphoned off by a broken system.”
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That’s the point. Jim Crow …
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That’s the point. Jim Crow …
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Diane,
Thank you, again and again.
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PRIVATE charter schools!
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What I don’t understand is why these rich people are supporting charters. You can’t really make money on schools. They cost too much to run. Are they planning to destroy the public schools and then abandon the charters so what’s left of public schools will be shells for babysitting and will not cost them much in taxes to run? Or what?
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When confronted with the demand to raise taxes to pay for better schools, smaller classes, more services, the billionaires change the subject and claim that charters and vouchers will solve the problems, NOT TAXES.
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I understand how bad many, if not most charter schools are. I don’t need to be convinced. What I don’t understand is what rich people think they are going to get out of pushing charters. They are spending so much money and getting nothing for it (as far as I can see) and then what will they do to stop spending? Do they expect to raise class size exponentially. I don’t know any other way to save money running schools. What am I missing? How is there anything in it for them?
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