[Winona Online Democracy]

Below is an article from the Christian Science Monitor suggesting that
States make it easier to create charter schools.
I share it just in case it might be of interest and might generate dialogue.
I have often thought that a public school would be better of if they created
charter school type choices within their own system.  Another aspect, with
older kids, is why alternative learning center concepts can't be put into
place within existing schools instead of having to ship the child out.  I
know bricks and mortar is raised as creating barriers.  I believe those are
really psychological and can be worked through.  I, almost 30 years ago, had
experience with the choices my children could have with Magnet schools in
St. Paul.  Isn't specialization of a model preferred by parents what often
drives them to create a Charter School.  Why aren't there more Magnet
Schools?  Schools within schools creating more choice seems like a good way
to compete in today's market.  A more local experience I had was 20 years
ago.  My daughter was at Jefferson and we wanted more choice to advance at
her own speed in math and reading.  We had to transfer her to Goodview.  The
reason blocking more individualized approaches at Jefferson were given as
the old building with separate classrooms, etc.  I never have accepted that
as a good reason for not allowing individualized approaches.  I hope that
limitation has been overcome to some extent with new curriculums and
philosophy.  My point relates to real versus perceived limitations created
by bricks and mortar.
Here's the article --
Craig Brooks

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from the January 21, 2005 edition -
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0121/p08s01-comv.html

Charter Schools, Unbound
It's time to lift the states' limitations on the charter school movement.

Despite their controversy, charter schools are becoming more popular. As of
this month, 3,300 charter schools are operating across the United States in
40 states and the District of Columbia.

Many parents and students seem unable to get enough of them. That should be
no surprise: Charters have an autonomy that public schools lack. They can
more easily hire and fire teachers and principals. They control their own
budgets and use innovative course work and teaching methods.

Waiting lists for charter schools are now common across the country. In
Boston, for instance, 6,000 students are waiting to get into that city's 15
charter schools. A recent survey shows 40 percent of all charter schools
have waiting lists that, on average, are as long as the number of students
in the schools, according to the National Center for Education Reform, a
pro-charter group in Washington. And the demand for charters is even higher
in low-income urban areas.

One Brookings Institution study of 569 charters between 2000 and 2002 found
that although it takes a new charter a couple of years to start producing
results, its students ultimately advance more rapidly than their public
school peers.

One reason for the long wait is that most states put caps on the number of
charter schools, even though those schools teach just 2 percent of public
schoolers nationwide. The caps are demanded by powerful teachers' unions who
fear the competition and insist on their current job protection - which
often keeps bad teachers on the job. Those caps usually mean existing
charters can't expand, and no new ones can be created.

The 3-million-member national teachers' unions funnel a lot of money to
lawmakers at the federal and state level. According to the nonprofit Center
for Responsive Politics, since 1990, they've given more than $44 million to
federal and state parties and candidates, mostly to Democrats.

Lawmakers in turn have given the unions strong negotiating power with
schools over jobs, benefits, labor conditions, and the like. The result can
often be schools that simply are more costly to run, and teachers who are
often difficult to hold accountable.

Charter schools can have difficulties, too. They often attract students
who've had problems in traditional school settings, and their mission may
not be geared toward success on achievement tests. But when a charter school
fails, it closes. In fact, a charter often has a limited time period in
which to demonstrate success.

States need to lift their limitations on the charter school movement. Let
the marketplace decide the success or failure of these educational
alternatives. Charters are proving that education can be both academically
and financially viable. They stand as a challenge to the public schools to
do better and can satisfy taxpayers that their investment in children is
bringing the best results.

Full HTML version of this story which may include photos, graphics, and
related links

www.csmonitor.com | Copyright � 2005 The Christian Science Monitor. All
rights reserved.


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