Talk to Parents Before Closing a Charter School

One of the few points of universal agreement in education policy is that bad charter schools should be shuttered. But what exactly is a bad charter school?

 

A school with meager enrollment that can't make financial ends meet? Yes.

A school that finds itself on, or even near, the wrong side of the law? Absolutely.  

A school with low standardized test scores yet high parent demand? Maybe. Maybe not.

Check out the rest of this blog post in Education Week. Click here.

How School Choice Forever Changed the Lives of Two Alabama Students

“I didn’t even know anything (when I first came here). I saw numbers and letters and was wondering, ‘Where did these letters come from? This is math!’ But at the beginning of this school year I did a review. We took a test and I made a 93. The teacher was proud. She said, ‘You’ve come a long way since you got here.'”

Read the rest of this inspiring story here.

Online Charter Schools Under Attack in California

Imagine enjoying your summer holiday vacation only to learn that special interest lawmakers beholden to the California Teachers Association are voting to close down your child’s school.  As a parent, you’ve never received any school closure information or a single news report.

Sound far-fetched?  Actually, it’s not.  When the state Legislature reconvenes on Aug. 1, lawmakers will have the opportunity to close down a handful of online public charter schools.  It’s a sneaky effort to catch parents off-guard.  Over 20,000 California students are at risk of being displaced – literally kicked to the curb.

Check out the rest of the article here

Republican Dilemma: How to Push School Choice Without Swelling Government

Alyson Klein writes in Education Week: 

It's no secret that most Republicans are big fans of school choice. But they are also big fans of a lean federal government.
So how does the party push its agenda to give parents a greater array of options—including access to charters, vouchers, and education savings accounts&mdash while not going so far as to create a "federal Department of School Choice"?

You can read the whole article here

Over a ten year period the number of children enrolled in charter schools rose by 1.7 million.

Charter schools now serve 6 percent of all public school students. Enrollment has grown sixfold in the past 15 years. During the 2015–16 school year, more than 400 new charter public schools opened, serving an estimated 250,000 additional students.[1] More than 6,800 charter public schools are now enrolling an estimated 2.9 million students throughout the country.

Read the rest of this article which is published as part of the Heritage Foundation's 2016 Index of Culture and Opportunity.