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Exploring and expanding the education discussion in New England.
An interactive online initiative of the Nellie Mae Education
Foundation. |
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THE CURRENT TOPIC: |
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Stop the War: A Time for Reckoning on
Charter Schools |
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By S. Paul Reville |
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Each and every year, there is a
significant debate; some would say a battle, others, a war, over
the future of charter schools in Massachusetts. Proponents tend
to see these schools as offering students salvation from the
failings of “monopoly” school systems, while opponents see the
charters as unfair competition that is bleeding mainstream
school systems of the very reform funds necessary to reform and
improve. This perpetual, ideological war over charters reflects
poorly on the education sector, and can undermine the public’s
support for public education. As a field, we need to do better
than dissolving annually into battle while allowing ourselves to
be distracted from the substantial challenges of improving
education for all our children. “Doing better” will take
leadership, especially from policymakers. |
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One of the most visible and
controversial aspects of the landmark Massachusetts Education
Reform Act of 1993 (MERA) was the provision creating a new form
of public schooling in Massachusetts, charter schools. MERA
authorized the creation of twenty-five “Commonwealth Charter
Schools” designed for the following purposes: |
“ (1) to stimulate the
development of innovative programs within public education; (2)
to provide opportunities for innovative learning and
assessments; (3) to provide parents and students with greater
options in choosing schools within and outside their school
districts; (4) to provide teachers with a vehicle for
establishing schools with alternative, innovative methods of
educational instruction and school structure and management; (5)
to encourage performance-based educational programs and; (6) to
hold teachers and school administrators accountable for
students’ educational outcomes.”
-Massachusetts Education Reform Act of 1993 |
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Subsequent legislation modified
the original charter school provisions in a variety of ways by,
for example increasing the number of available charters,
altering the finance mechanism and in 1997, creating an entirely
new form of charter, the “Horace Mann Charter Schools”. These
“in-district” charters were conceived as an opportunity for
municipally operated school systems to take advantage of
flexibility and autonomy offered to Commonwealth charters. |
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The first charter schools opened
in the fall of 1995. This fall will mark the beginning of
the12th year of what many policy leaders consider “the charter
school experiment”. Notwithstanding this passage into early
adolescence, charter schools are still not fully accepted as a
permanent feature of the state’s education landscape. In the
2005-6 school year, there were 57 charter schools in
Massachusetts serving 21,866 students. The jury is still out on
matters of academic outcomes. Judgments on the performance of
charter schools are often clouded by incomplete or ambiguous
data and various qualifying factors that affect educational
results. On the other hand, charter students and parents, in
large numbers, appear to be highly satisfied. Long waiting
lists exist for many of the schools. Meanwhile, many mainstream
educators continue to resent the presence of these schools,
decrying the unfairness of their admissions policies, their
accountability obligations, and/or their financing. This
mixture of ambiguity and conflicting perspective creates a
fertile field for battle. An enormous amount of otherwise
potentially constructive energy, human and financial resources
is wasted on this struggle. |
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It is high time for a reckoning on
charter schools. Such a reckoning should include three
components: research, policy development and action. In other
words, we, as a state, need to analyze what has been
accomplished by the provision of this new form of schooling. We
need to examine the range of its costs and benefits. We need a
probing discussion on the purpose of charter schools in the next
phase of education reform. If we are to continue with charters
as part of the system, as seems inevitable, how many charters do
we ultimately want? For what purpose? What are our goals? Now
that we’ve had a decade plus of experimentation, we need to
become strategic and explicit about our intentions. Lastly, we
need some immediate action to revitalize the failed experiment
of Horace Mann charter schools. |
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Research – Although there’s
been a fair amount of “advocacy” research on charter schools,
there has been, to date, no comprehensive and independent
examination of the charter school experience in Massachusetts.
As a basis for policy development and action, we desperately
need objective evidence on charter school performance and
impact. Here are some of the questions that need to be
addressed: |
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The central question is:
How academically successful are charter schools? How does their
performance compare with district schools serving comparable
populations? |
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Other key questions are:
-Who have charter schools been
serving? Not serving?
-Have charter schools been
innovative? In which areas? What are the applications of these
innovations to mainstream public schools?
-What are the strengths and
weaknesses of charter schools?
-What is their impact on
mainstream, district schools?
-What have been the benefits
and costs of the charter school finance model?
-What has been the impact of
charter schools on the distribution of public school choice in
Massachusetts?
-How does the Massachusetts
charter school structure and experience of charter schools
compare with that of other states? |
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Although some of these questions
cannot be answered fully and finally, we have an obligation to
probe as deeply as possible after an experiment of this
duration. |
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Policy- Research will
help to inform and stimulate some vigorous policy discussion and
the formulation of long-term policy strategies to build on the
strengths and eliminate the weaknesses of the charter school
experience. Notwithstanding the list of purposes for charter
schools in MERA (see quotation above), there consistently has
been ambiguity and wide diversity of views on the role charter
schools should play, if any, in the future of public education
in Massachusetts. There is a fundamental dilemma that needs to
be addressed. The questions are: |
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-Should charter schools be a
limited network of specialized, innovative, educational
laboratories designed to develop and export new and effective
practices to mainstream schools? |
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Or |
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-Are charter schools an expansive
new component of a 21st century public education delivery system
that features a portfolio of different schooling options for a
diverse body of students? In other words, are charter schools
an alternative delivery system designed to give students and
parents more choice and mainstream schools some competition to
drive improvement? |
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Proponents of charters used both
of these arguments and a variety of others in advocating that
the Legislature follow Minnesota’s example in allowing for the
creation of charter schools. In the end, the Legislature looked
favorably on the concept of charter schools but failed to
resolve the question of purpose by simply taking an “all of the
above” approach and listing multiple purposes. The problem with
this approach was that it did not resolve the question of
“educational labs versus an alternative delivery system”. The
answer to this question is critical to resolving the heated
disputes over limits on the numbers of charters and the
financing of the schools. For example, the lab concept would
seem to indicate a very limited number of state financed schools
whereas if we are establishing an alternative delivery system,
then the number of charters would presumably be unlimited and
existing local and state funds would be diverted for this
purpose. If we wanted a “hybrid” system of some charters and
some mainstream schools, we would need to set some target
proportions for the different components of the expanded public
educations system. |
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Unless and until we resolve this
dilemma of the central purpose of charters, a dilemma which has
existed since the onset of charter legislation, we will have no
principle with which to guide the future of charter schools. In
fact, the answer to this “purpose” question on charters will
have a major effect on how we view the comparative success of
existing charter schools, thus complicating the research task.
If charter schools are laboratories of innovation then we should
judge them on the degree of innovation and the educational
effectiveness and general applicability of those innovations.
If, on the other hand, charters constitute an alternative
delivery system, we should judge them on how well they serve
students without regard to innovation.
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Once policymakers establish some
strategic direction for the future of charter schools, they can
begin to address tactical questions like financing
modifications, geographic distribution, capital costs, types of
students to be served, accountability, school size etc. |
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Immediate Action on Horace Mann
Charters - Finally, there is the problem of Horace Mann
charter schools, an aspect of the charter school experiment that
has not had a sufficient trial. The Horace Mann attempt to
build state policy on the success of Boston’s Pilot Schools must
be viewed, in spite of some exceptional schools, as a failed
policy experiment. As the Rennie Center has documented in its
recent report, entitled “The Road Not Taken: Horace Mann Charter
Schools in Massachusetts”, there simply has not been sufficient
interest to truly test a promising concept. There are currently
only seven Horace Mann charter schools operating out of an
authorized, potential total of 48. In addition, there has not
been a single Horace Mann application for a charter in the past
two years. The Rennie Center report identifies some reasons for
poor uptake and makes some recommendations for policy
corrections that might enhance the attractiveness of the Horace
Mann option. |
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The report identifies a set of
financial, political, communication and technical barriers to
the development of Horace Mann charter schools. We make
concrete suggestions to improve the available information and
outreach efforts, to enhance the autonomy of the schools, to
develop potential leaders, provide start-up assistance and
better document the success of these schools. |
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We see the Horace Mann schools as
having a great deal of positive potential, especially the
possibility of dampening the ardor and diminishing the waste of
the war on Commonwealth charters. We believe the Horace Mann
recommendations are worth pursuing and that action should be
taken immediately in order to give this aspect of charter law a
chance to realize its potential and be tested. |
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It is time to settle the debate
about how charter schools are to be part of the state’s
education future. Leaders need to make judgments about past
experience based on evidence and use this analysis to formulate
decisions on strategies for the future. The questions involved
are not simple, nor do they evoke absolute answers. For
example, research on charter school academic performance will
not likely be conclusive. Dueling research studies will
continue to capture headlines on the presumed superiority or
inferiority of charter schools. We should accept that there is
nothing inherent in the governance structure of charter schools
that predicts, in and of itself, superior performance. Some
charter schools will be excellent, while some will be poor. |
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Massachusetts has to grapple with
this ambiguity and chart a course. It is important that our
future strategy on charter schools be guided by a comprehensive
“theory of action”, a rationale for the strategy and its
predicted benefits. With any luck, this “theory of action” will
be grounded not just in rhetoric about structural and governance
change, but it will fundamentally involve the core business of
education, teaching and learning, since when all is said and
done, it is the quality of the teaching, regardless of school
structure and governance, that will make the most powerful
difference in improving student learning. Policy-makers would
do well to be mindful of this. |
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If the Commonwealth can commission
some credible, objective and thorough research, engineer a
thoughtful policy development process designed to conceive a
unified strategy on charter schools and lastly, take some action
to upgrade the Horace Mann option, then policy leaders would be
taking advantage of the opportunity to learn from the charter
school experience, thereby fully capitalizing on the very
substantial investment they have made to date in charter
schools. If charters are an asset, they should be developed. If
they are plagued with problems, the problems should be fixed.
Either way, it is time to move forward. In so doing, leaders
would be exercising the kind of leadership that is essential to
moving all Massachusetts schools and students into a brighter,
21st century future where each and every child receives a
quality education. |
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S. Paul Reville is the
president of the Rennie Center for Education Research and Policy
and a lecturer and director of the Education Policy and
Management Program at the Harvard Graduate School of Education. |
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