New York Post

Charters Actually Teach

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Faced with the undeniable fact city kids attending charters schools do far better on state exams than those stuck in the regular public-school system, critics routinely complain that charters “teach to the test” — as if that’s somehow a bad thing.

Tests, after all, measure what kids are supposed to learn. Schools that don’t “teach to the test” effectivel­y aren’t teaching at all. In other words, the critics are just avoiding the fact that public charter schools work — and, most embarrassi­ng to the vested interests that depend on the regular system, work far better for lower-income minority children.

As ex-Gov. David Paterson, a Democrat who fought successful­ly to allow more charters back in 2010, told The Post: “The charter schools took the kids that people said couldn’t learn. These kids are getting scholarshi­ps and going to college.”

Our reporting shows that city black students, in particular, face better futures if they attend a charter, with far higher percentage­s scoring proficient in math and English.

This, though about 80% of charter students count as economical­ly disadvanta­ged, and roughly 15% of have Individual Education

Plans (usually linked with being in special ed), per the NYC Charter School Center.

Indeed, total city charter enrollment is about 41% black and 49% Hispanic — proof positive that charters are increasing opportunit­y, not “skimming the best students,” as critics also pretend.

Bottom line: Gov. Hochul’s push to allow more charters to open in the city is the most genuinely progressiv­e idea on the educationp­olicy table. And the state lawmakers who oppose it are opposing true “social justice” at the behest of the majority-white United Federation of Teachers.

Despite the UFT’s best efforts, charters now enroll more than 142,000 New York City students — about 15% of public-schoolage kids. If Hochul succeeds, those numbers will soar, and more children will learn enough to actually pass their tests.

“It is outrageous that the Legislatur­e would prevent mostly minority parents the opportunit­y to improve their children’s education,” thunders ex-Gov. George Pataki, the Republican who forced through the original charter law in 1998. “It’s simply discrimina­tion and unfair.” Fight the power.

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