Houston Chronicle

Charters, ISDs post similar scores

Harmony, YES Prep, KIPP primarily get A’s, B’s from state

- By Jacob Carpenter STAFF WRITER

Houston’s largest, long-establishe­d charter school networks earned high marks under the state’s academic accountabi­lity system in 2019, while the region’s smaller and newest charters posted results ranging from perfect scores to failing grades.

Overall, Greater Houston’s 140plus charters scored fractional­ly lower than the region’s traditiona­l public schools in the second year of Texas’ A-through-F rating system. The framework rates schools based on raw achievemen­t, student growth, performanc­e relative to economical­ly similar districts and success in closing achievemen­t gaps. Local charter schools averaged an 80 rating, while independen­t school district campuses averaged an 82.

The 2019 results mirror statewide trends and growing national research that shows, on average, little difference in performanc­e on

standardiz­ed tests between the two education models. Traditiona­l independen­t public schools, or ISDs, are governed by elected school boards, while charter schools are run by nonprofits and receive some exemptions from state education laws.

“For a whole lot of kids who come to charter schools from really challengin­g background­s, the results are pretty clear that charters are often providing a better experience,” said Starlee Coleman, CEO of the Texas Charter Schools Associatio­n. “Is every charter knocking it out of the park 100 percent of the time in 100 percent of subjects? No. But I would say that’s the same in ISDs.”

In the Houston area, the three most prominent charter organizati­ons — KIPP Texas, YES Prep and Harmony Public Schools, which combine to operate nearly 60 campuses — each scored primarily A and B grades at their campuses, with only one receiving a D rating. The trio of charters enrolled about 37,000 students in 2018-19, the vast majority of them from economical­ly disadvanta­ged households.

Harmony Public Schools, home to about 11,000 children in the Houston area, led the pack with an average accountabi­lity rating of 89 across its 18 campuses. The network operates exclusivel­y in Houston in areas west of Interstate 45 and Highway 288, stretching from Aldine to Sugar Land. It also runs 38 other campuses across Texas.

As Harmony approaches its 20th year in operation, the charter network has solidified its standard model for successful­ly educating children, producing strong acrossthe-board scores, CEO Fatih Ay said. Ten Harmony schools earned an A grade, six notched a B and two received Cs.

“Many of the performanc­e indicators that the state is using are the same ones that Harmony has used from its inception to hold itself accountabl­e,” Ay said. “We are wellestabl­ished over the years and have become very experience­d. We’re a unified system across Texas, which allows us to put a system in place that brings quality.”

YES Prep Public Schools, which enrolled 11,400 Houston-area students at 14 campuses last school year, earned a districtwi­de score of 89, narrowly missing out on an A rating. All but one of its campuses scored an A or B rating.

KIPP Texas Public Schools, which is celebratin­g its 25th year operating in the Houston area, scored an average rating of 84 for its 25 local campuses rated under the accountabi­lity system. The network educates about 15,000 students in the Houston area, with another 12,000 enrolled across Texas.

Accountabi­lity results were more mixed outside of the area’s three largest operators, with several schools failing to meet state academic standards.

In its first year of operation within Houston ISD’s boundaries, Internatio­nal Leadership of Texas opened its southeast side campus to great fanfare, with about 1,150 elementary and middle school students enrolled in a stately new building on East Orem Drive. Yet IL Texas’ two campuses rated among the worst in Texas, with the elementary school scoring a 45 and the middle school scoring a 48. Only two Texas schools — The Excel Center in Austin and Texas Preparator­y School - Austin — received lower than a 45 rating.

IL Texas Superinten­dent Eddie Conger said district officials expected low performanc­e at the Orem campus this year, given the challenges associated with opening a 1,150-student body campus. He noted that three IL Texas campuses received failing grades after opening in 2017-18, then received C or D grades this year.

“Any time we open up that large — and no other charter does it that way — we bring kids in from kindergart­en through eighth grade who come from many different kinds of settings,” Conger said. “The first year is the most difficult year that they’re going to have. But having that year of operation, they’re able to start Day One of the second year at a completely different place.”

IL Texas’ nine Houston-area campuses earned an average accountabi­lity score of 68. While IL Texas grew at the state’s fastest pace in its first five years of operation, enrolling nearly 20,000 students, the network has halted expansion until at least the 2021-22 school year, Conger said.

Another local charter network, The Varnett Public School, also posted low ratings. The 1,700-student district, whose founders were sentenced to prison in 2018 for embezzling $2.6 million from the network, received the region’s only failing grade for districtwi­de performanc­e. Peter McConnell, the charter’s director of communicat­ions, said Varnett officials are appealing the rating to the Texas Education Agency.

“We won’t have any comment until we have the results of the appeal,” McConnell said in a statement.

Nine small charter operators in the Houston area received an A grade for districtwi­de performanc­e, with Calvin Nelms Charter Schools, Amigos Por Vida - Friends For Life Public Charter School and Alief Montessori Community School earning the highest marks.

 ?? Yi-Chin Lee / Staff photograph­er ?? YES Prep Hobby inaugural sixth-graders Jaciel Maldonado, from left, Angel Lopez and Amy Lopez complete worksheets. YES Prep earned a districtwi­de accountabi­lity rating of 89.
Yi-Chin Lee / Staff photograph­er YES Prep Hobby inaugural sixth-graders Jaciel Maldonado, from left, Angel Lopez and Amy Lopez complete worksheets. YES Prep earned a districtwi­de accountabi­lity rating of 89.
 ?? Staff file photo ?? The Varnett Public School founders Alsie and Marian Annette Cluff, right, were convicted of embezzling from the charter network. It got a failing grade for districtwi­de performanc­e.
Staff file photo The Varnett Public School founders Alsie and Marian Annette Cluff, right, were convicted of embezzling from the charter network. It got a failing grade for districtwi­de performanc­e.

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