1 / 15

A Bit of background

A Bit of background. California passed charter school enabling legislation in 1993 The ambition was to introduce competition into the public school systems that would spur innovation. Fresno Proposal for a State Position—non recommended, for concurrent adoption.

brosh
Download Presentation

A Bit of background

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Bit of background California passed charter school enabling legislation in 1993 The ambition was to introduce competition into the public school systems that would spur innovation

  2. Fresno Proposal for a State Position—non recommended, for concurrent adoption • The League of Women Voters of California supports the concept of educational choices for parents and students within the public school system, including charter schools • Education Code regulations with respect to the authorization, reauthorization and oversight of charter schools-- whether independent, dependent, seat-based, independent-study, virtual or other-- should be clear and enforced. • The League supports the implementation and enforcement of academic, equity, transparency and financial standards for the authorization and reauthorization of all charter schools.

  3. The League believes that charter schools should • be authorized and under the oversight of a locally elected or appointed school board within whose district they reside, • not be governed by an entity without ties and accountability to the community whose students they serve, • be required to report the same academic and financial data, including attendance, to the state and public as any other public school and school district, • be required to get authorization for any expansion to new sites (including resource centers) and that any such expansion requires an evaluation of their current effectiveness and compliance with their contract, • adhere to the California Public Records Act and applicable Open Meeting laws and provisions of he Political Reform Act of 1974.

  4. The League further believes that • California standards governing the granting of charters, their renewal and their funding should be periodically reevaluated and amended as necessary, and • the calculation of attendance for independent-study and virtual schools should be periodically reevaluated to align attendance practices with school district standards.

  5. Our study We took on this task in 2017 • We visited the charter schools within the Fresno boundaries • We held meetings with the Charter authorizer within FUSD and with charter school administrators • We collected data from the California Department of Education.

  6. Relevant Findings Out of 17 charter schools within the Fresno Unified boundary, only 8 were chartered by FUSD. 6 were chartered by other school districts *including large independent study high schools chartered by one-school elementary districts 3 were chartered by the County Office of Education

  7. Appeals of authorization and reauthorization determinations are arbitrary. While acknowledging the academic failings that lead to a local charter being denied renewal, the County nevertheless renewed it. Several independent study charter schools have opened satellite sites without knowledge of those sites being shared—with Fresno Unified or the State. New charter numbers were applied to existing charters by the State, eliminating the history of those schools at the CDE.

  8. While the demographics of most charters are similar to Fresno Unified Achievement is worse on average than the district Independent study schools have lower graduation rates, higher dropout rates and lower achievement scores than Fresno Unified’s own independent study site. Two exceptional schools have very much higher proportions of white , non-poverty, non-English Learners and non special education students.

  9. Financial information is particularly difficult to access or understand • Charter schools do not report the same sorts of financial information in the same form as school districts. • We were forced to use unaudited financial statements to estimate the proportion of their funding that went to instruction and to teacher salaries • The number of full time equivalent teachers is not available data. • While there are ed code provisions for lower funding levels for independent study and virtual schools, all of our charters are funded on exactly the same attendance and LCFF rates as the District’s seat-based schools.

  10. State Leagues with charter school positions OHIO “Ideally, we believe charter schools should be under the oversight of a locally elected school board but barring that, at a minimum the school should be under the oversight of an elected state Board of Education. . . and not be governed by an entity with no ties or accountability to the community it serves

  11. Illinois • The financial impact on traditional schools must be evaluated before charters are granted. • Charter school authorizers should evaluate the performance of existing charters before granting new charters or approving additional campuses. • The authority for approving an renewing charters should reside exclusively in the local school board. • Funding for virtual schools should be based on actual costs, rather than on the same level of funding provided to other charter schools

  12. New York • Authority to grant, oversee, renew and revoke charters, other than those granted in pubic school conversions, should be vested in a single entity • Charters should be subject to more stringent oversight of charter compliance in the renewal/revocation process, with greater emphasis on positive educational outcomes.

  13. Michigan • Moratorium on new charters until the State can provide adequate oversight. • Qualified staff at the authorizing institutions must provide well developed oversight of charter schools. Oversight must include evaluation of curriculum,compliance with legal requirements, and financial management that follows accepted government auditing standards. The State Board of Education should ensure that authorizing institutions are performing their oversight and accountability functions.

  14. Proposed legislationin California SB126 Transparency and conflict of interest requirements for charters. PASSED AB 1505 School districts the sole possible authorizer—no appeal AB 1506 Cap number of charters in state to current number 1,323 AB 1507 Rescind an exemption that allowed a charter school without available facilities to locate in another district within the county—has passed the Assembly* AB1508 Allow consideration of the financial impact of a charter to the resident district in considering authorization

  15. Newsom Commission • The new governor has asked Tony Thurmond to appoint a commission to look at the financial effect and other impacts of charters. • Their recommendations are due on July 1st.

More Related