In 2010, I traveled to California to talk about my new book “The Death and Life of the Great American School Syatem: How Testing and Choice Are Undermining Education.” It was a startling reversal of my views, and I met many people who were thrilled to find an author who supported their deeply held revulsion to the current system. I met parent activists, including Caroline Grannan. We stayed in touch over the years. She went to work for a major newspaper and was careful not to make her views public. The following is an article that she published anonymously in 2018. I recently saw it on Twitter and realized that it was now safe to post her name.
– Guest post created by a longtime Northern California parent volunteer education advocate
- 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 and 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.
Reblogged this on Crazy Normal – the Classroom Exposé and commented:
What’s wrong with Charter School in California and why they should not be funded with public money?
Here’s something that happened in our town. https://countyda.sccgov.org/macsa-officials-plead-guilty-grand-theft-will-pay-back-diverted-retirement-funds
Hi! It’s delightful to see that on your blog, Diane! I wrote it a few years ago while I was working in the San Francisco Chronicle newsroom, and posted it anonymously on a local teacher’s blog because Chronicle journalists aren’t allowed to voice political opinions publicly. I retired last month (February 2023), so now I can come out and put my name on it. — Caroline Grannan, San Francisco public education advocate (Note: One could argue that an opinion on charter schools isn’t a partisan political position, but you know the charter/“reform” folks will go for the jugular.)
Caroline,
I meant to post it in April 2023 but it somehow got posted before I finished writing it. I fixed it.
I am an educator and parent of (grown) children who went to LAUSD schools, including a combination of both “regular” and charter schools. I do not know a single parent or student who has not absorbed the ideology that charter means “better.” The exception is my daughter-in-law, whose Teach for America (that’s aNOTHER storyt!) assignment was in a charter school in a very low-income neighborhood. Children were treated as if they were soldiers, trained to look at the teacher at all times, with hands on the desk, reprimanded for untucked uniform shirts, and not allowed to use the school library. Generally speaking, though, people in Los Angeles will fight you to the death to defend charter schools, and will cry “unfair” when their co-location deals expire.
Anne,
The aura of charter school “success” is the product of marketing. Charter schools are no more successful than public schools. But their marketing is outstanding. And they do exclude kids they don’t want.
Diane: So true! When it comes to charter schools, highly educated progressive parents are not immune to the hype.
A few years ago, Scott Schmerelson of the LAUSD school board said publicly that 80% of the charter schools in Los Angrles had empty seats. I doubt that has changed.