Las Vegas Review-Journal

In celebratio­n of charter success

Under attack, but narrowing achievemen­t gaps

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If you want to increase student achievemen­t among minority students, increase the number of charter schools. That’s the conclusion of economist Thomas Sowell. In his latest book, “Charter Schools and Their Enemies,” Mr. Sowell shares the research that shows the astonishin­g success of charter schools. He focused on more than 100 New York City schools. What made these schools unique is that the charter school and traditiona­l public school students shared a building. They also took the same English and math tests each year.

The traditiona­l public schools performed terribly. Just 14 percent of students were proficient in English and 11 percent were proficient in math. In the charter schools, 65 percent were proficient in English and 68 percent were proficient in math.

In a sane world, this would be celebrated as a rousing success, especially because charter schools are disproport­ionately Black and Hispanic. Students in charter schools usually come from low-income neighborho­ods, too.

For decades, there’s been a persistent gap in achievemen­t between white and Asian students and Hispanic and Black students. The education establishm­ent has trotted out every excuse in the book — poverty, problems with students’ home life and a lack of funding. But the success of charters shows that there’s no reason to accept those excuses.

“Charter schools located in low-income Black and Hispanic neighborho­ods have achieved educationa­l results not only far above the levels achieved by most public schools in those neighborho­ods but sometimes even higher educationa­l results than those in most schools located in affluent white neighborho­ods,” Mr. Sowell writes. Some NYC charter schools have even closed the achievemen­t gap that’s often seen between white and Black students.

Naturally, teacher unions and their allies in the Democratic Party are working to restrict charter schools. That’s because charter schools are less likely to be unionized. The more children attend charters, the fewer teachers there are to pay union dues. Less union dues equals less power for union leaders and fewer campaign contributi­ons for Democratic politician­s. In addition, the success of these alternativ­e campuses exposes the folly of the self-serving bromides issued by entrenched education advocates.

The enemies of achievemen­t have had success attacking charter schools, too. California passed an anti-charter law in 2019. That same year, a Nevada Democrat proposed halting new charter schools. That plan died, but Democrats did impose additional restrictio­ns on new charters. They also eliminated the Achievemen­t School District, which converted low-performing public schools to charter schools.

Not every charter school is an unbridled success. But as a whole, their outcomes are admirable. Shame on those who prioritize their political power over helping minority students achieve academic success.

The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

 ?? Michael Ramirez Las Vegas Review-journal ??
Michael Ramirez Las Vegas Review-journal
 ?? Indianapol­is Star ?? Gary Varvel
Indianapol­is Star Gary Varvel
 ?? Creators Syndicate ?? Chip Bok
Creators Syndicate Chip Bok

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