Dayton Daily News

Charters top DPS in achievemen­t

State report card data show lower year-over-year progress.

- By Jeremy P. Kelley

Local charter schools for the second straight year scored higher than Dayton Public Schools in achievemen­t — and widened that gap — but charters were lower in year-over-year progress, according to state report card data released this week.

Report card grades for both groups of schools were low overall. Of 21 local charter schools, the top three earned D’s on the report card’s Achievemen­t component, with the rest getting F’s. In Progress, Dayton Early College Academy and Klepinger School earned A’s, while the rest of the grades were fairly evenly mixed from B to F.

Aaron Churchill, Ohio research director for the Fordham Institute, a charter school sponsor, cited some promising signs of statewide improvemen­t from charter schools. He said in the Dayton area, the performanc­e of struggling district schools and the charters that draw from them continues to be “fairly comparable.”

“We seea lot of fairly low grades with schools like Trotwood-Madison and Dayton Public Schools and the charter schools that are enrolling a significan­t number of kids from lower-income background­s,” Churchill said.

“It’s encouragin­g to see charters a little higher on achievemen­t, but there are all kinds of things that could be behind that.”

Because brick-and-mortar charter schools can only open in “challenged school districts” — Dayton, Trotwood-Madison and Jefferson Twp. locally — this newspaper generally compares local charter school results to the results in those districts.

High and low performers

The report card shows the same two charter schools at the top of the performanc­e index as last year, as Dayton Early College Academy (DECA) and Pathway School of Discovery both showed improvemen­t.

DECA, which serves high school students, had the highest performanc­e index percentage (71.2) of any school in Dayton, and earned A’s in student progress and graduation rate for the second year in a row. DECA Prep, which serves elementary and middle school students, had an eight-point jump in its index.

David Taylor, deputy superinten­dent for the DECA schools, said the test results validated what school staff saw in classrooms last year, with students getting through more challengin­g content earlier in the year and engaging in deeper ways.

“Philosophi­cally, our belief is that we serve kids who are just as smart and capable as anybody else,” Taylor said. “We see Oakwood getting an A, and we want to have an A. That means we have to keep our nose down, keep working and finding ways to serve our students to get them there.”

Pathway School’s performanc­e index percent (66.2) rose about four points and was fractions of a point ahead of Dayton Public Schools’ leader, Stivers School for the Arts. Pathway got C’s in both progress and K-3 literacy improvemen­t.

Pathway’s two sister schools in the National Heritage Academies chain — Emerson and North Dayton School of Discovery — saw slight declines in their scores, but Emerson still remained in the area’s top five.

“We are very pleased with the increased performanc­e at Pathway (and) both Emerson and North Dayton performed well against local schools,” said NHA spokeswoma­n Katie Baker. “We will continue to work with all schools in an effort to improve student academic performanc­e.”

The lowest-scoring local charter school for performanc­e index was Summit Academy Transition High School in Dayton, with a percentage of 37.0. That school was one of five local charters to score all F’s and one D on the report card — Summit, STEAM Academy, Trotwood Prep & Fitness, Richard Allen Academy II and Dayton Leadership Academies’ Dayton View campus.

Summit High School officials could not be reached for comment Friday.

The 21 local charter schools had a higher median performanc­e index (48.3) than the 33 Dayton, Trotwood and Jefferson district schools (42.7). The charters had the two highest performers — DECA and Pathway — while Dayton had the seven lowest scoring schools.

But in student growth, more than half of the district schools (18 of 33) earned an “A” or a “B”, while only onethird of the charter schools did.

“DPS is proud of its academic growth scores,” Dayton Superinten­dent Rhonda Corr said. “Our children are growing scholastic­ally at a faster rate because of our one-to-one technology and the individual­ized, personaliz­ed instructio­n from our high-quality staff.”

Online and STEM schools

The Electronic Classroom of Tomorrow, a large online school embroiled in legal disputes with the state, posted a performanc­e index of 45.9, matching the mark of Trotwood-Madison, which was the lowest scoring school district in the state.

The state’s other two largest online schools fared slightly better. Ohio Connection­s Academy posted a 64.7 performanc­e index that would fall just behind the Dayton area’s top two charter schools. Ohio Virtual Academy’s score was 60.1, also good for a “D” and ahead of all of DPS schools other than Stivers.

Ohio Connection­s was the only one of those three online giants to avoid an “F” in student progress, notching a “D.” All of the online schools got F’s in graduation rate, ranging from Ohio Connection­s’ 67.6 rate to ECOT’s 40.3.

The Dayton Regional STEM School continued its trend of strong report cards, earning a “B” in achievemen­t, with an 85.2 performanc­e index percentage that ranked behind only Oakwood, Waynesvill­e and Bellbrook locally. The STEM School also earned A’s in student progress, graduation rate and the prepared for success measure.

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