Charter Schools
Grow Amid Questions
By Seth Sandronsky
Traditional public
school students and their teachers are facing a
shortfall of tax
support across the US. But things are brighter for
tuition-free
public charter schools, which operate with a contract
(charter) from a
public entity.
There were over 2
million students enrolled in about 5,600 public
charter schools
around the US in 2011, according to the National
Alliance for
Public Charter Schools, a Washington, DC-based,
non-profit
advocacy group. A recent NAPCS statement said that total
student enrollment
represents a 13% increase in one year.
According to the
federal Department of Education, 4% of US public
school students,
pre-kindergarten through grade 12, attend public
charter schools.
In 2010, California led the nation in public charter
schools with 983,
according to the NAPCS, serving over 412,000
students (7% of
the over-all enrollment of 6 million pupils
statewide).
Asked why
California has the most public charter schools, NAPCS
spokesperson
Sephanie Grisham noted the state’s 1992 law establishing
public charter
schools with 31 in 1993, biggest state populace
nationwide and a
“great” California Charter Schools Association (a
private firm).
“CCSA actively advocates for the promotion and access
of public charter
schools, academic achievement, and increased
Kathy Carroll, an
attorney for the California Commission on Teacher
Credentialing from
October 2006 to November 2010, is a whistleblower
who claims that
her employer fired her for speaking out on misconduct
such as violations
of statutory mandates (providing for fair and
impartial
decision-making).
Carroll also has a
critical view of public charter schools, education
policy and
policy-makers. She has appealed her firing to the
California state
personnel board and expects a decision in June.
For her, officials
who serve the public interest and a private
enterprise at the
same time create a situation that fosters the
potential for
financial and political conflicts of interest.
In her book, The
Death and Life of the Great American School System:
How Testing and
Choice Are Undermining Education, education scholar
Diane Ravitch
unravels the sometimes hazy role of private money in
public education
policy, and follows a trail that brings her to “The
Billionaire Boys’
Club.”
This club includes
the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the
Walton Family Foundation
(Wal-Mart Inc.).
Both foundations
fund the CCSA and the NAPCS.
In Sacramento,
funds from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation in
2003 helped the
non-profit St. Hope Foundation under current city
mayor Kevin
Johnson, a Democrat and past NBA all-star guard for the
Phoenix Suns, to
obtain a charter permission to operate the formerly
public Sacramento
High School.
The Gates
Foundation is also a donor to Capitol Impact, LLC, a
“Sacramento-based
consulting firm dedicated to improving policy and
practice in
California, with a particular emphasis on public
Asked what what’s
next for the US public charter schools movement in
2012, Grisham said
the NAPCS will work to change the law in states
where there are no
or weak public school charter laws to continue the
movement’s growth.
Seth Sandronsky
lives and writes in Sacramento. Published with permission, From The Progressive Populist,
February 15, 2012
Manchaca TX 78652
4 comments:
We must APPROVE the Gulen charter schools in California so our children can learn Turkish and be taught Islam.
They have used the name Magnolia Science Academy and are now using Pacific Technology Schools (Pac Tech) and currently have 8 charter school applications awaiting approval.
http://www.magnoliascienceacademy.blogspot.com
Are there basic minimum standards that charter schools are held accountable for? Why was Kathy Carroll fired since it was unclear in the article?
The writer says this:
Kathy Carroll, an attorney for the California Commission on Teacher
Credentialing from October 2006 to November 2010, is a whistleblower
who claims that her employer fired her for speaking out on misconduct
such as violations of statutory mandates (providing for fair and
impartial decision-making).
Carroll also has a critical view of public charter schools, education
policy and policy-makers. She has appealed her firing to the
California state personnel board and expects a decision in June.
There is also a video further down the blog of Cathy Carroll's views.
Here is her testimony.
http://choosingdemocracy.blogspot.com/2012/01/privatization-war-against-california.html
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