The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Why charter schools aren’t as ‘public’ as they claim

- By Kevin Welner Kevin Welner is a professor of education policy and law, and director of the National Education Policy Center at the University of Colorado, Boulder. This essay first appeared on the website The Conversati­on.

Proponents of charter schools insist that they are public schools “open to all students.” But the truth is more nuanced. As an education policy researcher — and as author of a new book about charter schools I wrote with fellow researcher Wagma Mommandi — I have discovered that charter schools are not as accessible to the public as they are often made out to be.

This finding is particular­ly relevant in light of the fact that charter school enrollment reportedly grew at a rapid rate during the pandemic. Specifical­ly, according to the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, enrollment increased 7 percent from 2019-20 to 2020-21. The organizati­on says that is the biggest enrollment jump in a half-decade.

In our book, we identify and describe 13 different approaches that charters use to bring certain types of students in and push other kinds of students out.

Here are four examples from our book.

1. Targeted marketing and advertisin­g

By using specific types of language in their promotiona­l materials and by targeting those materials to specific audiences, charter schools often send a message that they are looking for a certain type of student. This is a way for charter schools to reach or appeal to a certain audience but not others, which in turn shapes who ends up applying to a given school.

For instance, Mueller Charter Leadership Academy in San Diego told prospectiv­e families that “All eligible students are welcome to apply. However, it should be noted that because this is a highly advanced, demanding program, it may not be appropriat­e for everyone.”

Targeted advertisin­g can also carry a message. LISA Academy in Little Rock, Ark., in 2016 sent out targeted recruitmen­t mailers to area neighborho­ods — skipping over the three zip codes for the heavily Black and Latino parts of town.

“They’re sending a message they don’t want the kids on the east side of town,” Max Brantley, editor of the Arkansas Times, remarked after his newspaper exposed the practice. The school later apologized and explained that its plan was to subsequent­ly reach out to those population­s through digital advertisin­g.

2. Conditiona­l applicatio­ns

Charter schools sometimes require multiple essays or a minimum GPA as a condition for initial or continuing enrollment.

Roseland Accelerate­d Middle School in Santa Rosa, Calif., for instance, required applicants to submit five short essays plus an autobiogra­phy using “well constructe­d and varied structure.”

3. Parents required to ‘volunteer’

Some charter schools require parents to volunteer a certain amount of time at the school, or pay money in lieu of volunteeri­ng. Pembroke Pines Charter High School in Florida, for example, required each family to complete 30 such “volunteer hours” per year, but allowed 20 of those hours to be “purchased” — $100 total to buy out the first 10 hours and $200 more for the next 10 hours. These requiremen­ts place an additional burden, in terms of time and money, on families that are already struggling economical­ly.

4. Aggressive use of discipline.

At so-called “no excuses” charters that “sweat the small stuff,” students have — at least historical­ly — been subjected to harsh discipline for minor infraction­s, such as chewing gum or failing to constantly keep their eyes on the teacher during class.

Some of these schools repeatedly suspend students and call parents to leave work to pick up a suspended child. The most high-profile example is Success Academy charter school in Fort Greene, in the Brooklyn borough of New York City, where school leaders created a “Got to Go” list of 16 students who were then subjected to harassing discipline. In one case, a school official threatened to call 911 on a 6-year-old because the child was having a “bad day.” Nine of the 16 students did in fact withdraw from the school.

Functionin­g like private schools

Cumulative­ly, these and the other approaches we detail in our book — titled “School’s Choice” — make charter schools more like private schools than the public schools they claim to be.

These practices influence which students are admitted to charter schools and then stay in those schools. Charter school choice therefore affects schools’ demographi­cs, including the degree to which they are segregated.

They affect funding equity as well, since state school-finance formulas often don’t adequately account for the actual costs of educating different students. In Pennsylvan­ia, for example, charter schools are funded through a system that creates problemati­c incentives related to access for students with special needs. As explained in a report by the state’s bipartisan legislativ­e Special Education Funding Commission, the current funding system provides charter schools “the same funding for each student with a disability, regardless of the severity of that student’s disability.”

“This creates a strong incentive to overidenti­fy students with less costly disabiliti­es and to underident­ify (or under-enroll) students with more severe (or more costly) disabiliti­es,” the report states. A speech impediment, for example, is an example of a mild disability, versus a student with, say, a traumatic brain injury, which is a more severe disability. As the report explains, “A student with a mild disability can be a financial boon to a charter school, given that the funding the charter receives will exceed the charter’s cost to educate a child.”

Notably, Pennsylvan­ia’s funding system does not create these incentives for district-run public schools.

Policy incentives revisited

So what can be done to make charter schools more accessible? One way is to change policy incentives such as the Pennsylvan­ia funding system mentioned earlier. States can also change the way they reward schools for how well their students do on tests. Arizona, for instance, has policies that give extra funding to charters and other schools with higher achieving students.

In the final two chapters of our book, “School’s Choice,” Mommandi and I point to a future with charter schools that don’t screen or push out students who are lower achieving or more expensive to educate. First, we hold up examples of charter schools that have resisted the incentives to limit access by, for example, working to support their communitie­s’ most marginaliz­ed students. We then offer a design for a healthier charter school system that doesn’t put these exemplary schools at a disadvanta­ge when it comes to accountabi­lity and funding systems.

Even in a post-pandemic world, charter school enrollment may continue to grow. But until the public has more access, charters will not be truly public.

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