Houston Chronicle

Texas KIPP charter schools unify

City networks merge under statewide CEO

- By Jacob Carpenter

Texas’ four KIPP charter school networks, which have operated independen­tly for 15 years, have consolidat­ed into a single statewide organizati­on designed to streamline operations and clear the path for opening more campuses, the group’s leadership announced this week.

The merger will make KIPP Texas Public Schools, as the organizati­on will now be known, the second-largest charter school network in Texas, behind IDEA Public Schools. The four KIPP networks served about 25,000 students last year in about 50 schools throughout the Houston, Austin, Dallas-Fort Worth and San Antonio areas.

KIPP Texas leaders said the change will foster greater collaborat­ion between the regions, each of which had independen­t governing boards and local leadership teams. They also expect the merger to provide more financial flexibilit­y as KIPP

continues to expand its footprint.

Sehba Ali, who served as superinten­dent of KIPP Houston for the past six years and now is CEO of KIPP Texas, said leaders from the four regions have been contemplat­ing the move for about 18 months. The merger became official July 1.

“We realized our organizati­ons wanted to improve student success across the state and we wanted to create an environmen­t to serve more KIPPsters,” Ali said. “We landed on coming together as one organizati­on in order to achieve those things.”

Ali said the reorganiza­tion, which has earned approval from the Texas Education Agency, is not expected to dramatical­ly impact classroom activities when school resumes in August. Some jobs will be consolidat­ed, but that will impact less than 1 percent of the workforce, KIPP Texas leaders said.

‘Market-dependent’

Ali and Mark Larson, KIPP Texas’ chief growth officer, said they do not expect to ramp up expansion of KIPP campuses or spread to other regions in the state immediatel­y.

The charter operator has been relatively measured in its growth over the past two decades, often adding no more than a couple campuses per year. A few other Texas charter networks, including IDEA Public Schools and Internatio­nal Leadership of Texas, have grown more aggressive­ly in recent years.

“A lot of these decisions are very market-dependent,” said Larson, who had been CEO of KIPP San Antonio since 2009. “We want to make sure we leverage the benefits of scale, but be nimble in our four markets.”

Houston roots

The first KIPP (Knowledge Is Power Program) campus opened in Houston in 1994, a one-off school co-founded by two Teach For America alumni. KIPP gradually grew into a national charter school powerhouse, boasting about 210 schools in 20 states and the District of Columbia.

Although they share the KIPP name, KIPP charter networks are divided by regions, with local nonprofit governing boards overseeing each network’s finances and operations.

KIPP has attracted roughly 90,000 students to its schools nationwide by promoting its no-excuses attitude toward education, setting high standards for students and parents and, in many regions, boasting higherthan-average performanc­e outcomes.

KIPP schools are almost exclusivel­y located in high-poverty areas home to predominan­tly black and Hispanic population­s. Critics of KIPP and other charter organizati­ons often argue charters drain funding from traditiona­l public schools and serve fewer students with special needs.

KIPP’s Austin, DallasFort Worth and San Antonio networks all opened in the early 2000s, growing at slower rates than the Houston organizati­on. About 14,400 students were enrolled in KIPP’s Houston network last year, compared to about 5,200 in Austin, 3,300 in San Antonio and 2,300 in Dallas-Fort Worth.

KIPP Texas will boast combined operating revenues exceeding $260 million next year and assets totaling more than $400 million.

A governing board comprised of members from all four of the previous Texas networks will oversee finances and chart KIPP’s growth plans. Ali said regional boards will continue to “heavily weigh in and help us determine strategic oversight.”

Modern charter

Older charter school networks in Texas traditiona­lly sought multiple, independen­t charters when they sought to expand, even if they fell under a similar organizati­onal umbrella, Texas Education Agency spokeswoma­n Lauren Callahan said.

“There was a grant incentive for charter holders to apply for multiple charters in the past,” Callahan said, adding that federal and state lawmakers since have removed those enticement­s.

KIPP Houston operated 28 local schools last year. Immediate expansion plans call for a Sharpstown-area high school this year, an East End high school in 2020 and campuses in southwest Houston at an undetermin­ed date.

 ??  ?? KIPP Texas CEO Sehba Ali says the merger has long been considered.
KIPP Texas CEO Sehba Ali says the merger has long been considered.

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