Charter school growth in Michigan brings cautionary tale on quality

MI

January 17, 2013

By Joy Resmovits

(From The Huffington Post, January 17th, 2013)

Charter schools are the fastest-growing sector of public education, taking root in most U.S. states, thanks to a big push by the education reform lobby and the federal government’s Race to the Top competition. And since the movement’s inception in the early 1990s, its founders have learned a few things.

Across charter schools, there are similarities in what works to boost student achievement. A 2011 study identified five successes of charter schools: “frequent teacher feedback, the use of data to guide instruction, high-dosage tutoring, increased instructional time and high expectations.”

But just because charter schools have the flexibility to become successful in these ways doesn’t mean all of them meet those five criteria. In fact, most probably don’t.

“Are they living up to their promise?” asked Harrison Blackmond, who works as the Michigan director for Democrats for Education Reform, a national pro-charter group. “No. I’m not so sure.”

Many charter school advocates are now taking stock of the fruits of their lobbying efforts, and finding that for the movement to succeed, it has to get better at policing its own duds. It’s hard to cobble together a coherent, quantitative answer to the question of whether charters live up to their funding levels across the country. But one state — an early believer in the promise of charter schools — offers a representative example.

Read the full post here.