Bernie Sanders says we need more regulations on existing charter schools and a moratorium on federal funding for new ones.
‘The proliferation of charter schools has disproportionately affected communities of color.
True ,but for the better not to the detriment of black kids.
What's fascinating is that you put that bolded statement in without a shred of evidence to support it, merely evidence to support that it is preferred by a couple of the major minority populations.
Duh. The point is how blacks feel about Bernie on the issue of school choice.
Guess that skippedby you.
No, Ward, what skipped by you is your bolded statement:
for the better not to the detriment of black kids
YOU said that. The POINT is that you said something that was bullshit and you cannot admit it, same as ever.
So boring.
Not bullshit. REDSTATEWARD isn't capable of backing his statements with fact, and his motivation for the post is to poke eyes, and make snide comments about the horse race on the Democratic side. But I can have a real convo about this if you wish:
Our findings show urban charter schools in the aggregate provide significantly higher levels of annual growth in both math and reading compared to their TPS peers. Specifically, students enrolled in urban charter schools experience 0.055 standard deviations (s.d.’s) greater growth in math and 0.039 s.d.’s greater growth in reading per year than their matched peers in TPS. These results translate to urban charter students receiving the equivalent of roughly 40 days of additional learning per year in math and 28 additional days of learning per year in reading.
https://urbancharters.stanford.edu/
And the students attending those charter schools in urban areas are predominantly African American.
Not all Charters are as successful, as with non-urban schools in states that don't properly regulate them, or for-profit schools. But there are enormously successful non-profit schools that are doing good work eliminating achievement gaps in cities with school systems that are unfortunately effectively segregated by race.
Not saying that Charters are a cure-all. But a blanket ban on funding vs. figuring out what works and what doesn't is a bad idea.
I will take a look at this subsequently, in depth. Thank you.
I was a Charter School supporter at the outset and even an applicant.
The last time I reviewed the research, a couple years back now, I found a grossly uneven set of results - far beyond "not all Charters are successful" to gross fraud and schools closing in the middle of their founding year. Yes, those complete and utter failures meant that some charters must be doing amazingly well.
My biggest problem has ever been with the charter movement its apparent abrogation of the underlying reason to have charters at all: to try new ideas and, if some of them are working, to migrate those ideas into the regular public schools.
So few charters, among those doing anything different, are working to translate what they have done into the broader public system and I am appalled! Others are doing better because they can control their sizes better - which I applaud, but which we continue to get resistance about. And... the ones that are not serving an experimental purpose and which are not making a difference academically for their students?! They need to go away, if only so that we can replace them with fresh experiments.
But... that all said, I have not read the link youposted. It will probably sit until after I escape for the long weekend to celebrate our anniversary. I'll likely poke in here, sometimes, but I won't have the time for concentrated reading.
Again, thanks for the link!