Albuquerque Journal

Charter schools offer opportunit­y in lower-income neighborho­ods

- BY PATRICK MCDONOUGH Patrick McDonough is the chairman of Excellent Schools New Mexico and the husband of Nella Domenici, the Republican nominee for U.S. Senate in 2024.

Adear friend of mine has a standard question for his friends complainin­g about the state of education in New Mexico. He asks, “what are you going to do about it?”

Well, my wife Nella Domenici and I are doing something about it.

We believe this is the social justice issue of our time — the lack of educationa­l preparedne­ss that is systemic in underserve­d, and often ignored communitie­s. We know, based on results being achieved nationally in underserve­d communitie­s, and at our Excellent Schools New Mexico (ESNM) partner schools, that this can be, and therefore must be remedied.

With a bipartisan group of outstandin­g New Mexicans, we founded ESNM in 2016. ESNM provides start-up capital, zero percent interest loans, facility developmen­t, talent recruitmen­t and charter authorizat­ion services to new school founders as well as existing top charter school leaders looking for growth capital.

Most of our partner schools are located in our underserve­d communitie­s in the Albuquerqu­e South Valley, south Santa Fe, or near the Navajo Nation. At scale, our partner schools will be teaching close to 9,000 students.

Freed from bureaucrac­y and authorized to enact their own vision for teaching math, reading, writing and other subjects, our leaders recruit and train their teachers, and supervise more in-class hours through the school year.

Early results are promising. Our students are outperform­ing their district peers in math and reading, in some cases substantia­lly. While these results are encouragin­g, we feel the best is yet to come. We are disproving the myth that the children in these underserve­d communitie­s can’t achieve the same academic results as the children in our best schools.

Mississipp­i proved it in a short period of time. The Magnolia State went from second worst nationally to the middle of the pack in reading scores. So, of course, New Mexico’s situation can be fixed. The ESNM partner schools, in addition to other outstandin­g charter and magnet schools in state, are proving it, too.

Charter schools are public schools and therefore, free. New Mexico’s public schools are generously funded, as compared to the national average. Money is not the problem. The problem is a lack of accountabi­lity, especially in underserve­d communitie­s where parents’ voices are often ignored. It is here, in these communitie­s, that our ESNM schools really thrive and make the biggest difference.

The recipe for success is simple to describe, but enormously difficult to execute.

It all starts with our outstandin­g school leaders — leaders like the founder and CEO of Mission Achievemen­t and Success Charter School (MAS), JoAnne Mitchell. She says, “I could not have grown MAS from 100 kids to over 2,000 students without the expertise of ESNM.” She considers Nella a “burst of pure energy and light with a beautiful heart.”

Leadership is essential for any high performing organizati­on, whether it is a small business or a firehouse or police station. Top performing organizati­ons will be led by outstandin­g leaders instilling a first-rate culture. Schools are no different, and our ESNM partner school leaders are some of the most impressive leaders I have encountere­d in any business setting.

This is not an indictment of all public district schools. There are many outstandin­g district schools in New Mexico, but typically they are clustered in more affluent areas of the state.

The real failing is in our lower-income neighborho­ods. It is in these neighborho­ods where outstandin­g charter schools can create options for frustrated parents who want their kids to enjoy the great American dream.

Competitio­n is an essential ingredient to the American success story. Nella has never been afraid to compete. Organizati­ons like ESNM will ensure there are high quality schools that offer opportunit­ies for all New Mexican children, irrespecti­ve of their ZIP code.

So, to answer my friend’s question, Nella, I, and many other committed New Mexicans are doing something about it.

 ?? CHANCEY BUSH/JOURNAL ?? Audrey Vrawner reads during class at the Mission Achievemen­t and Success Charter School in southeast Albuquerqu­e in November 2022. The charter school that requires students to wear uniforms opened in August 2012 with a campus on Yale and a student body of 100 children in sixth and seventh grades. Today, it serves more than 2,200 pre-K through 12th grade students on two campuses.
CHANCEY BUSH/JOURNAL Audrey Vrawner reads during class at the Mission Achievemen­t and Success Charter School in southeast Albuquerqu­e in November 2022. The charter school that requires students to wear uniforms opened in August 2012 with a campus on Yale and a student body of 100 children in sixth and seventh grades. Today, it serves more than 2,200 pre-K through 12th grade students on two campuses.
 ?? ?? Pat McDonough
Pat McDonough

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