Las Vegas Review-Journal

Study: Charter school voids strand low-income kids

Authors urge filling gaps in Nevada’s ‘deserts’

- By Meghin Delaney Las Vegas Review-journal

Charter schools are often championed as a way to improve the educationa­l outcomes of underprivi­leged students, but many of their parents never get to find out if that’s true. That’s because many poor communitie­s — including six in Nevada — are “charter school deserts” that have no access to the publicly funded independen­t schools being created elsewhere.

That is the finding of a study published Thursday by the pro-charter Thomas B. Fordham Institute. The authors are hoping officials in Nevada and other states will use the new data to prioritize such areas for new charter schools.

Nevada’s deserts — defined as three contiguous census tract areas with more than 20 percent poverty and no charter schools — are evenly split between the Las Vegas and Reno metro areas, according to the study.

“When we look at the evidence, in most places, at least, we see charter schools have been quite effective at raising achievemen­t for low-income kids,” Fordham Institute President Michael Petrilli said. “We were curious if there were places in America where there were pockets of poverty that do not have charter schools as an option.”

Three areas in Clark County

In Clark County, a large swath of North Las Vegas and areas in northwest Las Vegas and near Paradise are identified as charter school deserts.

Historical­ly, charters tended to locate in urban areas, Petrilli said, either because of specific state or city laws dictating where charters could open or to serve high-needs population­s, which tended to be centralize­d in urban areas.

But as population­s have shifted, poverty has escaped the inner-cities, and charter school operators and

CHARTER When we look at the evidence, in most places, at least, we see charter schools have been quite effective at raising achievemen­t for low-income kids. We were curious if there were places in America where there were pockets of poverty that do not have charter schools as an option.

regulators have not kept up, Petrilli said.

New mapping produced for the report provides another layer of context for local operators and municipali­ties, said Jana Wilcox-lavin, executive director of Opportunit­y 180, a Clark County nonprofit that supports improving education in the area, including through charters.

From a quick look at the map, Wilcox-lavin said, charters are spread throughout different municipali­ties in the county, meaning operators looking to open a charter are working with different government­s that might have different policies.

“This is a real opportunit­y to look at what the potential local barriers are to schools to come in and to fill some of the gaps in those deserts. What are the policies of the local government and what are the opportunit­ies we have to potentiall­y work in collaborat­ion with them,” she said.

Charter performanc­e

Despite lower-than-average graduation rates, Nevada’s charters outperform traditiona­l public schools in other measures, including the recently released National Assessment of Educationa­l Progress scores.

Released every other year, NAEP measures students in reading and math in fourth and eighth grade. Taken as a whole, Nevada’s charters

outperform­ed Clark County schools and the state in every category. The charters outperform­ed the nation in both fourth-grade categories, tied the nation in eighth-grade reading and trailed the national average in eighth-grade math by 2 percentage points.

Contact Meghin Delaney at 702-383-0281 or mdelaney@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @ Meghindela­ney on Twitter.

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