Archive for the ‘Charter Schools’ Category
Charter School Proposals Await Decision in September
A plan to build an independent public school (charter school) for the Somerville, Ma. immigrant community is causing debates as plans are finalized. The proposal is one of seven that have recently been submitted to the Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education, which plans to announce by mid-September whether or not it will encourage Somerville to file a complete application. After the filing of applications before November 7, the department will release its final decision on which charter proposal to grant by February 28, 2012. Read the rest of this entry »
Why Charter Schools?

anissat via stck.xchng
With all the controversy surrounding charter schools these days, its time to remember why charter schools make a difference to children, their parents and the communities they serve. The benefits and advantages of a well-run institution vastly outweigh the problems that need to be overcome to run such a school. And there is certainly no reason to believe in any of the terrible myths surrounding charter schools.
It is simply a fact that public schools have problems these days and that Millions of young Americans leave high school without the proper education they need to succeed in life. Its about more than simple knowledge. Public schools fail to prepare their students for the 21st century, instead relying on outdated models of teaching and an educational approach that leaves American students behind. Read the rest of this entry »
The Admissions Question
New York Charter Schools remain under investigation. If you read my blog a couple of days ago you know the story about a possible scam concerning the startup of several new charter schools in the New York area. Yesterday, more troubling news arrived via the New York Times. According to the Times, a charter school in the Bronx, the Academic Leadership Charter School, which opened its doors only two years ago, “has been put on probation for what city education officials called ‘serious violations’ of state law mandating random admissions, including possibly testing or interviewing applicants before their enrollment.” This is an older problem, of course, because charter schools are not allowed to pick students who they expect will do better on standardized tests, etc. over the ones that would likely do worse. Also, charter schools are not allowed to discriminate by race or religion. Read the rest of this entry »
New York Charter Schools Falter
The New York Times carried an article on some New York area charter schools yesterday that I wanted to bring to your attention. I have not been following this story too closely but from what I understand, three start-up charter schools, one in New York and two in New Jersey, are in great danger of faltering before they have even started their first year. The reason, the article argues, is mismanagement, failled planning and an educational leader and former executive director of education at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation walking away from the project instead of trying to find solutions. Mr. Tom Vander Ark, a proponent of online learning and regular contributor to the Huffington Post, gets criticized pretty harshly in the article and I wanted to invite those of you who know more to comment. Read the rest of this entry »
Charter Schools Against Underachievement
photo © 2011 U.S. Department of Agriculture | more info (via: Wylio)The advantages of charter schools in countering the deficiencies of the public school system are well known. The White House and the Department of State just released a report arguing that Hispanic student continue to score below the national average on standardized tests and that they have the “lowest education attainment levels” in the United States especially in reading and math. Charter Schools to the rescue – at least in New Mexico, where the problem has long been recognized. Several organization in Valencia county have recently come together in a pilot project that aims to use the possibilities of charter schools and works in close collaboration with the business community. Read the rest of this entry »
Florida Passes Charter School Legislation
photo © 2006 Samuel F. | more info (via: Wylio)
I just read that this month the Florida Legislature passed charter school legislation that some have called historical, appropriately in the very week when we celebrate National Charter School Week. The problem addressed by the Sunshine State was the competition between charter schools and the public school system. Rather than working together the two have competed against each other and public school officials have often lobbied against charter growth and expansion even for those charters that performed very well. Florida is now planning to designate so-called High Performing Charter Schools thus creating models for other schools to replicate. With long waiting lists across the state – and the country for that matter – the more open spots we can provide, the better. Read the rest of this entry »
