Posted on 10/30/2015 11:44:28 AM PDT by MichCapCon
Jack Lessenberry, a columnist for Michigan Radio, wrote an Oct. 23 column that called for shutting down all of Michiganâs charter schools.
Lessenberry makes a number of demands and assertions that deserve a closer look. Here are some of them.
Lessenberry wrote: âThatâs right â get rid of them, all of them. Many or most of them donât work, and all of them are draining resources from our conventional public schools and helping further destabilize education.â
A Closer Look: âAll of them?â That would include quite a few charter school success stories. For example, in Benton Harbor, parents of about 600 children have fled the academically subpar conventional public school district after discovering a haven in the Countryside Academy charter school. The school does well academically, scoring an A on the Mackinac Centerâs school report card. Yet Countryside students have the same demographic profile as those in the public school district where most of them live. The conventional school district received a D in the middle school and high school rankings.
Lessenberry wrote: âOne thing is beyond doubt: Michigan has proven vastly incompetent at chartering, administering and overseeing these schools. ⦠The worst-performing charters are allowed to stay open year after year, and that overall, charter schools have been no better than traditional schools in educating our poorest students.â
A Closer Look: By any definition, many schools in conventional districts have failed academically. Yet two years ago, a charter school advocate who challenged a school lobbyist to list one conventional public school that has been closed for reasons of academic failure never received a response. State officials have said that conventional schools have closed for poor academic performance, but have yet to cite an example. The Michigan Department of Education has said school closures are made at the local level and the state does not track the reasons.
In contrast, charter schools that donât make the grade academically are and have been closed, though some have been closed for other reasons. Since 1994, when charter schools began in Michigan, 98 were open for a while and then closed. Academic deficiencies were cited in 28 of those closures. Last year Michigan had 302 public charter schools. Between 1994 and 2011 there was an artificial cap of 150 on the most common type of charter school.
Lessenberry wrote: The Michigan Radio columnist cited Stephen Henderson, editor of the Detroit Free Press editorial page, who wrote that he enrolled his children in one of what he (Henderson) called the âfew high-performing chartersâ in Detroit. Lessenberryâs comment was, âWell, of course. He was able to do that, since he is both highly educated and well-connected. However, most people are neither.â
A Closer Look: As many charter school opponents do, Lessenberry asserts that high-performing charter schools donât serve low-income students. This is false: They do. Evidence abounds that charter schools are giving children in poverty a better education.
For example, Cesar Chavez High School was recognized as the second-best charter high school in the state. It received an A on the Mackinac Center school report card, which recognizes the performance of schools that elevate challenging student populations by taking their socio-economic profile into account.
Cesar Chavez is located in Detroit, and 98.5 percent of its students were classified as economically disadvantaged last year, which means theyâre eligible for a free or discounted lunch. In other words, poverty was an even larger challenge for the charter school than the district; 75.5 percent of the students in Detroit Public Schools met the common definition of economically disadvantaged. Statewide, 70 percent of the students in charter schools are low-income, compared to 44 percent in conventional public schools.
Did Henderson's community standing help ensure that his children were enrolled in a high-performing school? By law, charters must accept all students who apply. That means every parent has an equal shot at getting their child in, regardless of who they are or how much money they make.
Lessenberry wrote: âTheir fans pointed to a few high-performing successful charters. But sadly, nothing has changed.â
A Closer Look: One of the countryâs leading academic research organizations is Stanford Universityâs Center for Research on Education Outcomes (CREDO). Its scholars stated in studies performed in 2013 and 2015 that charter schools in Michigan mostly outperform their conventional peers. In 2015, CREDO said the city of Detroitâs charter schools should serve as a model of success for other communities. CREDO's reports have repeatedly been recognized by authorities such as former U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan.
Lessenberry wrote: âSo if we did get rid of the charters, what should we do instead? The answer is simple â and incredibly complex: Commit ourselves as a state and a people to fixing public education. This wonât be easy.â
A Closer Look: When academically failing public schools are required to produce improvement plans, they tend to project only modest improvements â and those over time periods that exceed the school careers of most children. If Lessenberry had his way, parents within those school districtsâ jurisdictions would have no alternative but to wait for improvement that may not arrive. Their children would be stuck year after year in failing conventional schools while all the status quo stakeholders try to tweak the system.
In two of those failing districts, Benton Harbor and Detroit, parents have a choice because charter schools are thriving and producing better academic results than their conventional public school peers. These are not the only cities where this is true, however. Throughout the state, charter schools are giving thousands of children an opportunity today for a better education than the conventional public school to which they are assigned by ZIP code.
Let me guess ... Michigan Radio is NPR, right?
A Detroit native, Jack originally intended to become a historian, but recognized that he wanted to become a journalist during his graduate studies at the University of Michigan.
Jack Lessenberry - Michigan Radio
They Donât Care What You Think
They donât care what you want
By Jack Lessenberry
If you want to understand the Republicans who now control our state government, remember this: They donât care what you want; they have contempt for what you think; and they most emphatically donât care about you.
Even scarier, they arenât especially worried about winning your votes. Thatâs because they donât have to be.
http://www.metrotimes.com/detroit/they-dont-care-what-you-think/Content?oid=2144946
The left believes every kid should have the social and cultural advantages of public schools. After all, that is what modern education is all about. Besides, what parent would want their kid to be the only one on the block who isn’t brainwashed with the leftist agenda? It isn’t fair. No one should have to learn how to think for themselves.
y'shut down the government indoctrination centers
If this was the answer, there never would have been charter schools in the first place. If they were willing or able to do this, it would have been done long ago.
The top performing High School in Colorado was a Charter school so I can see that they want to destroy the competition.
Two (of seven) of my grandkids have profited greatly because of chartered schools available to them in Michigan. I’ve monitored their progress over the years and it has been outstanding!
Cesar Chavez High School? Wonder who suggested that name? SMH
When it comes to charters within the Grand Rapids area, the charters that are run by the National Heritage Academies are very popular. My nephew went to one that is near my house.
These schools at the time the school day is done has lines of cars waiting at the school entrance to pick up their children. Sometimes the lines block traffic lanes, and turn lanes.
The only way to get into these school is by winning an auction in many cases.
Lessenberry looks like he could be the younger brother of George Soros.
I can just imagine what this asshole thinks of private Christian schools and homeschooling.
Jindal in Louisiana has championed charter schools as well as school vouchers. Obama and the public school unions have fought him tooth and nail. The post-Katrina charters in New Orleans have gotten some pretty good reviews.
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