Bruce Baker of Rutgers University reviewed three policy briefs produced by the pro-charter, pro-choice Center for Reinventing Public Education at the University of Washington and found them to be “generally superficial and misleading.” The apparent intent of these briefs was to influence the policy debate in California, in which Governor Newsom and the Legislature are considering whether to take into account the fiscal impact of charters on public schools. Baker’s review was sponsored by the National Education Policy Center at the University of Colorado.
Reviewed by:
Bruce D. Baker University of Colorado Boulder
May 2019
Executive Summary
The Center on Reinventing Public Education (CRPE), based at the University of Washington, Bothell, recently released a series of three policy briefs on the financial impact of charter schools on nearby school districts in California. The briefs arrive at a time when a Task Force convened by California Gov. Gavin Newsom is deliberating on these exact matters. CRPE’s founder, Paul Hill, was a key source of testimony to the task force, serving as an expert viewed as “sympathetic to charter schools.”
The three briefs make note of the task force in their introduction and are seemingly intended to inform these ongoing debates over charter school financing and expansion in the state of California. The briefs are as follows.
- The first brief, Charter Schools and District Enrollment Loss, posits that charter school enrollment growth is not a significant factor in large district enrollment decline in California.
- The second brief, Do Charter Schools Cause Fiscal Distress in School Districts?, argues that charter school expansion is not a significant contributor to fiscal distress (fiscal stress and/or fiscal impact) in California school districts.
- The final brief, Do the Costs of California Charter Schools Outweigh the Benefits?, contends that there are “tangible benefits” and “few quantifiable costs” to charter schooling in California, though it does concede that a more thorough cost-benefit analysis is warranted.
The first brief acknowledges that over the long run, California charter school expansion has resulted in some district enrollment decline. But the brief contends that this decline has been modest and in recent years is no longer occurring. Further, the report asserts that whether charter schools expand or not, many districts will face continuing enrollment decline and “the financial challenges it brings” (p. 10).
The second brief lays out a set of figures showing charter school enrollment shares and comparing this to county-assigned classifications of district fiscal distress. It concludes boldly that (a) there is no relationship between charter enrollment share and host district fiscal distress; (b) instead, fiscal distress is most often caused by financial mismanagement; and (c) fiscal distress is too important to get wrong.
The third brief first asserts that there are benefits to, but few if any tangible costs associated with, charter schooling in California. Those benefits are illustrated by reports of differences in test score gains for children in some urban California charter schools versus matched peers in host districts. The brief also cites a handful of studies to support its contention that charter expansion also benefits, or at least does not harm, children in host district schools. Finally, it notes other potential benefits for children enrolled in charter schools, for which quantifiable values are more difficult to assign, including: “The option to choose” (p. 4).
On the potential-costs side of charter expansion, the third brief provides a short list, including, (a) lacking/losing economies of scale, (b) transfers/fiscal impact, (c) capital costs, (d) educating high-cost students, and (e) social cohesion and societal concerns. The authors then dismiss these five concerns, offering the conclusion that there are “few quantifiable costs to charter schooling” in California (p. 6). Yet they provide little analysis or reference to any valid, rigorous analysis by any other researchers.
Robin Lake, Ashley Jochim, Paul Hill, and Sivan Tuchman wrote these briefs and qualify their work with identical wording: “Given the time constraints for informing the commis- sion’s and legislator’s questions, we were limited to data available from earlier studies and from federal, state, and local databases, as cited in the three briefs” (p. 2 of each brief).
These limitations did impair the usefulness of the briefs, but other problems are also evi- dent. The first brief is misleading in its assertion that charter enrollment growth is not to blame for district enrollment decline. It is, and has been for some time, whether in districts with declining, stable or growing overall student enrollments. The brief also attempts to minimize the import of the considerable role played by charters in districts’ enrollment loss, offering up the non sequitur that enrollment loss can arise from other sources as well. The second brief relies on overly simplistic comparisons of charter enrollments and county-assigned “fiscal distress” classifications to conclude that there is no association between charter enrollments and fiscal distress. The contention here is that there can’t be an illness if the patient isn’t dead. In order to rely on this problematic approach, the brief erroneously dismisses a significant, more rigorous, detailed, peer-reviewed and published body of research that illustrates the fiscal impact of charter schools on host districts, and how those fiscal impacts may lead to fiscal stress. The third brief, which presents itself as an analysis of costs and benefits, merely touts the benefits of charter schooling as tangible while being entirely dismissive of numerous known and often measurable costs. Taken together, the briefs are useful only in pointing to some important issues that policymakers should consider; their analyses of those issues are, however, generally superficial and misleading.

We can count on reform to give us biased, bogus briefs along with a dose of demented data. When spin doctors, not scholars, do the research, we get “alternative facts.” I tend to believe Erika Jones, a teacher that has worked on the front lines in area under assault by charter schools. She notes, “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.”
I tend to believe someone that has lived through the loss of funding caused by unneeded privatization which imposes inefficiency on public schools and hobbles their ability to effectively serve the neediest students. Charter expansion is a ticket to nowhere while the loss of funds to public schools results in larger classes and reduced services for the most vulnerable students.
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Shallow and misleading??
Say it ain’t so, Joe!
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The main “argument” of the charter cheerleaders boils down to “it makes no difference when a child leaves a public school for a charter because, although the money for that student is lost to the public school, the cost also decreases commensurately”
I have seen that argument made many times here.
One fellow (who claims to be an economist) even made the claim here that there is no economy of scale operating in education, which (coincidentally, I am sure), just happens to bolster the above argument.
Unfortunately, the latter claim is simply false (stupid, really, especially coming from an economist) and the reality of the economy of scale puts the lie to the idea that the cost decreases commensurately with the loss in funding when a student leaves a public school for a charter school.
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There are obviously many fixed costs that do not decrease linearly with the loss of a student from a public school and the school ends up having to make up the difference by cutting programs for the students who remain.
It’s not rocket economics, folks.
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NEPC really could benefit from quality control…
As just one example, in this report Baker et al state (pg. 8): “The CRPE authors imply that charters are as likely to be taking children from the private school sector as from the district schools (p. 4), inferring a unique causal parochial school enrollment decline.6”
Does anyone here in fact find support for that statement either on page 4, or elsewhere, in the CRPE report concerning enrollment?
Click to access charter_schools_and_district_enrollment_loss_0.pdf
Rather differently, the CRPE report actually includes such material as: “we do know that on average 15 percent—and in some schools more than 35 percent—of the students enrolled in Oakland charter schools did not come from the district.⁸ Trends are likely similar in Los Angeles, San Diego, and San Francisco, all places where parochial enrollments are declining.” pg. 10
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This is another research brief, Diane, worth posting on your blog. It’s powerful and needs to be shared. I’ve sent it to our school board, district admin. and state officials. No one seems to want to read these words but they need to be!
https://nepc.colorado.edu/publication/personalized-learning?fbclid=IwAR0v_fFHKpGqcRe3WDm33vNTXv4t3kGf6gJpHk9ni4E8Fmh5LXhAzgsTiQQ
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The tech moguls are completely out of control.
There’s no oversight and no restriction on what they do.
The Coup of Tech
The Coup of Tech
Is bound to wreck
Our schools and homes
With meddling phones
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Honestly, I don’t understand the analysis. I don’t think I have the background to understand it – which is fine. He’s an expert and I’m not.
I will say this, though, an ordinary reading of what the Center for Reinventing Education puts out on social media and the “capsule” version of their reports (the summary) makes it clear to me that they are pro charter and anti public school.
Which is fine! They can be advocates for more charter schools and fewer public schools. That’s a position. They prefer privatized systems. They share that with the US Department of Education, so it’s hardly revolutionary. But they should stop claiming to be agnostics, because it’s misleading.
They advocate on behalf of charters and vouchers and they do NO companion advocacy for existing public schools- no matter the “quality” of the public schools. That’s a pro charter and anti public school position.
If the Center for Reinventing Education is going to be federally funded, and they are, they are listed in USDOE grants, there should be a companion organization that is pro public schools and is federally funded. We are only funding one side of the argument and that’s bad. That’s not fair to students in existing public schools because they are omitted in a debate that involves them and their schools.
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“All in all, the field appears to have strikingly little appetite for staking out specific reforms to actually change K-12 schools.”
Ed reformers are pondering why none of the Democrats are running on Obama’s K-12 agenda. They’re not running on it because it was terrible. It did nothing to improve or support existing public schools (or students) and it did some harm- more in some places than others. I think it did the most harm in Michigan, Ohio and Pennsylvania but I may be biased, living in Ohio and watching the freaking disaster unfold up close.
The Democrats are retreating from Bush-Obama-Trump reforms not because of the mighty power of labor unions but because we’ve been doing “market based ed reform” for three consecutive administrations and it hasn’t improved public schools according to the people who are most important- the people who work in and USE public schools.
https://www.the74million.org/article/williams-democrats-awash-in-campaign-promises-to-put-more-money-into-education-but-silent-on-how-to-change-schools-to-better-serve-kids/
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Let’s hope California Superintendent Tony Thurmond is making good use of the Baker review. Thurmond really has his hands full. The CRPE briefs repeat the same tired lies we have all become so familiar with over the years. (1.) Charters are not the only cause of enrollment drops, so we’re supposed to believe charter enrollment drains are not significant; they are. (2.) We’re supposed to believe fiscal distress is not caused by lack of funding, but by a lack of deep enough budget cuts and that total fiscal austerity is desirable instead of a criminal injustice. False, fiscal distress is caused by funding cuts, not lack of spending cuts. (3.) We’re supposed to believe charters have magical miracle sauce. Wrong, there is simply no good reason to have parallel systems competing for funds. How many times do supporters of public education have to prove and explain these simple truths to the greedy pseudo-intellectuals on the charter side?
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CR(EE)PE briefs
The CR(EE)PE briefs
Repeat the lies
Of shyster thiefs
With charter ties
The CR(EE)PE claims
And CR(EE)PE craps
Are put to shame
By Baker’s stats
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Charter Miracles
Walk on water
Birth to virgin
Charter fodder
That’s for certain
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