Posted on 07/23/2014 3:58:37 PM PDT by MichCapCon
The president of the Michigan State Board of Education said there are detrimental effects on education performance with an "unregulated" school marketplace where parents are left to decide.
John Austin made the comments in an email when asked about accountability of charter public schools. He said parents dont have perfect information about education quality and many parents and their students can't execute a choice if they wanted to they don't have time energy, transportation money to pick or get to a different school. (See Austin's full comment here).
In a later phone interview, Austin said he considers Michigan to be "heading in the direction" of an "unregulated" school marketplace.
Austins comments are part of growing sentiment among the public sectors top decision makers that charter schools need more oversight.
State Superintendent Michael Flanagan said he would use his authority to suspend charter authorizers that dont measure up after a series of articles by the Detroit Free Press was critical of charter schools.
Austin also cited Paul Reville, the former Massachusetts Commissioner of Education, as saying that if a charter school doesnt outperform a conventional public school, there is no reason to have them.
We hold our charters to a higher standard of performance than typical schools because there are extra costs associated with charters. We expect them to be innovative and high performing. If theyre not, its hard to justify the increased expenditure, said Reville, now the Francis Keppel Professor of Practice of Educational Policy and Administration at Harvard Graduate School of Education.
Reville said that an example of tight control in Massachusetts was that there arent multiple authorizes of charter schools, just a single authorizer with very clear standards and procedures.
We close down charter schools if they are not high performing, he said. The standards are just high. What we are saying is the school has to be innovative and it has to be high performing. It cant be more of the same.
Austins stance is that charter schools that dont do better than conventional schools arent necessary.
But Audrey Spalding, education policy director at the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, wondered what these state officials have done to bring accountability to Michigans conventional school system.
Why do state officials value conventional schools more than charter schools? Why should a higher standard applied to charter schools? Spalding asked.
Karen Braun, a parent activist who blogs about school issues and is involved with Stop Common Core in Michigan," said that Austins comments about parental ability to make choices on education for their children are at odds with the Michigan revised school code. She said the school code recognizes that parents have the natural and fundamental right to direct the education of their children and public schools work by cooperating with the pupils parents and legal guardian.
It speaks to who is the ultimate authority in education in Michigan, Braun said. Parents are the authority and Austin and the schools [are supposed to] work in cooperation with us.
Gary Naeyaert, executive director of the Great Lakes Education Project, said charter schools are often a better academic option for students than the conventional school district they came from. Naeyaert cited a Center for Research on Education Outcomes (CREDO) study done by Stanford University that found Detroit school children are learning at a rate of an extra three months in school a year when in charter public schools compared to similar counterparts in conventional Detroit Public Schools.
Naeyaert said Austin and others who want more restrictions on charter schools have a limited view of choice in education.
They believe choice is restricted options within the traditional public school model or allow you to pay tuition for a private school. Thats what they believe choice is, he said.
Spalding said the concern of the extra cost associated with more charter schools isnt persuasive.
Using that logic, why have any choice at all? There are extra costs to having alternative grocery stores, doctors, etc. should the government ban those options? Spalding asked.
Ooh! The drop in the number of small minds and bodies that they can indoctrinate evidently is causing anguish.
The attitude of every left wing commissar or bureaucrat on full display. Elections matter.
Charter schools are still public schools though
Wonder if they apply the same standards to public schools and close them down if they don’t perform? .... Never mind a silly question to say the least.
Chairman Austin, Superintendent Flanagan (with that name, he probably had Christian, yea Catholic ancestors): The issue of the RIGHT of parents to send their children to private or parochial schools as they see fit has already been decided, probably long before either one of you were born and you lost!
If you need a verrrrry expensive lesson as to how permanently you lost back there in 1925, including compensatory damages, attorney's fees and punitive damages, the Becket Fund for Religious and similar First Amendment oriented Christian public interest law firms await any attempt by the state of Michigan or either or both of you to try to behave as though the children residing in Michigan are "Michigan's children" and not the children of their families, bring it on and pay the price.
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