Yellow flag: the charter school movement will need to overcome a raft of political obstacles and high-profile scandals. (Forum).
Manno, Bruno V.
SINCE 1991, 40 STATES HAVE ENACTED LAWS ALLOWING FOR THE CREation
of charter schools--independent public schools of choice that are freed
from many regulations but accountable for their results. There are now
2,700 schools that serve some 600,000 students in 34 states and the
District of Columbia (see Figure 1), with cities like Washington, D.C.,
and Dayton, Ohio, now enrolling upwards of 17 percent of all their
children in these new institutions.
While such numbers are impressive--a decade ago there were no
charter schools--we also see worrisome indications that the charter
movement is in trouble. In July 2002, Newsweek reported that a raft of
recent charter "reports find that too often, charters haven't
lived up to their end of the bargain," A Brookings Institution study released in September 2002 concluded that student performance in
charter schools was significantly lower than that of district schools on
state tests in reading and math.
At the same time, signs of a vital and thriving charter school
movement abound, Nationally, demand for these schools remains high, with
more than 75 percent of charters having waiting lists that together
could fill at least 900 more schools. The parents, students, and
educators involved with charter schools report high levels of
satisfaction. A California State University, Los Angeles, study of
California charters, released in March 2002, found that their test-score
gains outpaced those of students in regular public schools. In
Massachusetts, the test scores of charter schools on the Spring 2002
state test showed, according to the Boston Herald, "a greater
number of improved scores ...with more and more of the [charters]
scoring higher than their home districts." Even the Brookings study
may say less than it seems. The investigators themselves acknowledge
that their findings may be due to the fact that charters are attracting
"students who were already low achieving", a suspicion
supported by other studies th at find charter students to be relatively
disadvantaged.
Not only are many charter schools enjoying success, but they are
also held accountable in a way regular public schools are not, When a
charter school experiences severe troubles, it usually faces severe
consequences. To wit, more than 200 failed or failing schools have been
closed on fiscal, educational, and organizational grounds.
Can Success Survive?
In the education world, however, success often breeds
second-guessing if not downright resentment. The more traction a
successful reform gains, the more sour grapes it harvests. Despite
strong, bipartisan political support, charter schools have not been
immune from this attitude, America's deeply conservative public
education system is striking back at this disruptive innovation, which
shifts power from producers to consumers; demonstrates that more can be
done with less at the school level; and moves control of resources from
central bureaucracies to autonomous schools. Such tectonic shifts bring
new uncertainties and imply that many hoary public education practices
are no longer the only imaginable way to do things.
The initial efforts to stop the spread of charter schools took
three main forms: preventing the enactment of charter laws; limiting the
number of new charters; and ensuring that existing charter schools were
as meagerly funded and as heavily regulated as possible.
These strategies succeeded to some extent, For example, Washington
State, among other states, still has no charter school law-mostly
because of intense opposition from the teacher unions and other
interests vested in the status quo. Among those states with charter laws
on the books, more than a third have fewer than 20 charter schools in
operation. In addition, the early growth of the charter movement may be
reaching a plateau-in part due to the hostile tactics of charter
opponents.
One by one, however, states continue to come on board, In 2001,
Indiana passed a strong law that allows charters to be granted not only
by school districts but also by public universities and by the mayor of
Indianapolis. To date, school districts have allowed two schools to
convert to charter status; Ball State University has chartered seven new
schools; and Indianapolis mayor Bart Peterson has approved four new
charters, Eleven of the 13 approved schools opened their doors in
September 2002.
Three-Front War
Opponents are now regrouping, as the vigorous growth of the charter
movement and its impact on traditional district schools has alarmed its
adversaries. The resulting attacks come from three directions: state
policymakers, local school systems, and organized public education
interest groups.
State policymakers have an entire arsenal of charter-harassing
weapons at their disposal. These include depriving charters of full
per-pupil funding; denying them access to (or financing for) facilities;
placing new restrictions on existing schools or moratoriums on future
growth; and weakening charter laws. Two states provide vivid
illustrations.
Indiana's entry into the charter movement was nearly arrested
in early 2002 when Suellen Reid, the Republican state superintendent of
public instruction, balked at giving Indiana's new charters any
money during their first semester, basing her opinion on legal advice
from members of her staff. Nor would these schools be reimbursed for
expenses incurred during that semester. Only a contrary ruling from the
state's attorney general (at the strong urging of
Indianapolis's Democratic mayor, Bart Peterson) led to a reversal
of that decision. The reversal, however, prompted an outcry from some
legislators and from the superintendents of the 11 school districts
located within Indianapolis. They protested "the adverse financial
effects for public schools resulting from the formation of charter
schools in our county" and called for a moratorium on the creation
of new charters until the "financial inequities" were
resolved. Mayor Peterson refused to yield, however, and proceeded to
consider a second round of 13 charte r applications for the
2003-'04 school year.
California passed its charter law in 1992 (the second state to do
so) and now has 362 operating charter schools. But the enemies are
circling. The 2001-'02 legislative session passed five
anti--charter school bills, four of which were signed into law by
Governor Gray Davis (who felt compelled, in one of his signing messages,
to claim that he still "supported charter schools"). The most
controversial bill gave the state board of education extensive powers to
regulate independent study or "nonclassroom"-based instruction
that uses computers as the main instructional tool. The bill's
intent was to force "virtual" charter schools to spend a high
proportion of their budgets on certified staff rather than on
technology, stifling their capacity to innovate. These "cyber"
charters must now document their instructional minutes, and their
per-pupil funding may be reduced if they offer less than the minimum
number of student course minutes per year--a district-style regulation
of the process of education without regard for outcomes.
Other proposals to cut funding for California charters emerged from
the state department of finance. These would have slashed funds for
students over age 18 (including former dropouts whom the charters were
seeking to "recover") and ended summer-school funding for many
charter students. While these proposals were defeated by an organized
charter school community led by the California Network of Education
Charters, charter operators expect them back in a future legislative
session.
Local Opposition
The local districts where charters choose to locate, and from which
they draw students, have felt the impact of charters most heavily. When
a district loses students to a charter, most (sometimes all) of the
per-pupil funding travels with those students. This places charters in
direct competition with districts--and the districts, instead of
competing, often try to influence the rules of the game.
In Houston, where 46 of Texas's 219 charter schools are
located, the district estimated recently that it will lose about 13,000
students to charters during this school year (up from 12,000 the
previous year) at a cost of $53.5 million in state revenues. The
city's school board is thinking of asking the state to consider,
before it grants any more charters, the financial impact a new charter
school will have on district revenues.
Charters may cause trouble for school districts, but they often
wind up saving money for the state. For instance, the Dayton, Ohio,
school board claims that charters are bleeding the district of some $20
million a year. Of course, they no longer have the students to educate,
either. And it costs less to educate a student in a charter than in a
district school. Scholars Bryan Hassel and Deborah Page showed that
during the 1999-2000 school year, charters in Ohio received about $2,300
less per pupil than local school districts. The seven largest districts
in Ohio would each have received $20 to $160 million less in state funds
had they operated under the charter school funding formula.
Local school districts can harass charters in many ways. They can
devise application procedures with absurd timetables or use meager funding formulas to slash the dollar allocations to charters. City
development agencies, zoning boards, or fire inspectors can raise a host
of regulatory problems, especially on the most difficult issue that
charter schools face: finding a facility.
In 2000, California voters approved Proposition 39, entitling
California's charter schools to facilities that are reasonably
equivalent" to those enjoyed by district schools. The Sequoia Union
High School District in Redwood City, California (one of the wealthiest
in the state), filed suit in May 2002 in San Mateo County Superior Court
to stop Aurora Charter High School from receiving its fair share--either
in the form of rent money or buildings--of the $88 million bond measure
that Sequoia passed in 2001. Sequoia believed that it had no legal
obligations to Aurora High because, while the school is located in
Sequoia, it was approved by Redwood City, an elementary-school district.
Aurora argued that a substantial majority of its students live within
the Sequoia district. Aurora countersued the Sequoia district in July
2002. In late August, Judge Quentin Kopp (who served in the California
state senate when the Charter Act was passed) ruled that Sequoia must
provide facilities for Aurora Charter High School. A s of this writing,
the district was considering an appeal of this decision.
In Washington, D.C., both the city and the school district are
making it nearly impossible for charters to find classroom space, even
though the mayor and the school district are broadly sympathetic to
charter issues. D.C. law requires city officials to give charter schools
the first option to buy surplus buildings--unless the city can make
substantially more money by selling them to others. Naturally, this
leads the fiscally strapped city to seek private buyers for those
buildings in the least disrepair and to offer charters more dilapidated
buildings that will cost millions to be made safe for children. One
charter founder reported that the building his school was offered had
"$3 million worth of asbestos issues and [would have] cost us $10
million [more] to renovate." Meanwhile, the D.C. school system
offers charters only one-year leases on vacant schools in the (unlikely)
event that the district needs to reclaim the school for its own
purposes.
Interest Group Attacks
A phalanx of interests, from teacher unions to school boards and
superintendents, principals' associations, teacher colleges,
disabled-rights groups, and even private schools, often find reasons to
view charter schools as a threat, Let's consider two of these: the
teacher unions and private schools.
The unions' initial response to charter laws was defiance. In
time, they realized that this looked bad--the charter idea was popular
in too many quarters. So they moved from outright hostility to a highly
conditional embrace, with the National Education Association beginning
its own charter school project in 1996 (and subsequently abandoning it).
In the words of an Education Week reporter, "Both national unions
have endorsed the charter idea within fairly narrow limits, requiring
district control over the schools and collective bargaining for the
teachers within them." (What would distinguish such a charter
school from traditional public schools remains unclear.) The American
Federation of Teachers' July 2002 report, Do Charter Schools
Measure Up? which calls for a moratorium on the expansion of charters,
signals a renewed hostility toward charter schools (see Robert Maranto,
"Lobbying in Disguise," page 79 in this issue).
Today, the unions' stance toward charters is convoluted,
sometimes trying to co-opt the movement, other times trying to stop it
cold.
A once-secret report prepared by the Pennsylvania State Education
Association (PSEA) lays out a strategy that would organize all charter
employees under the NEA affiliate's collective bargaining
agreement, thereby depriving charter operators of a key element of their
autonomy. As the authors explained, "The main source of the
PSEA's influence is that almost all Pennsylvania teachers are
unionized. If we want to maintain influence, our ability to do anything,
we must make sure that education remains a unionized industry."
Here the union is hedging its bets, trying to weaken the charter
movement while also ensuring that any teachers who do slide into charter
schools will remain union members.
In Ohio the unions have mounted a new effort to sink charter
schools. Tom Mooney, president of the Ohio Federation of Teachers, is
leading two ever-widening lawsuits seeking to have the state's
charter law ruled unconstitutional. Tactics include involving all of
Ohio's charter schools in the lawsuit and requiring them to deliver
school records on a variety of issues, tying up time, energy, and
resources in matters far removed from classroom instruction. This
courtroom effort is also apt to chill charter enrollments, teachers, and
public perception of the charter movement.
Private schools also sometimes see charter schools as a threat to
their finances and influence. For instance, some charter schools are
attracting large numbers of students from Catholic schools. The
Archdiocese of Newark has lost 139 students to charter schools; the
Archdiocese of Detroit, 300 students. Of the 776 students enrolled in
St. Louis charter schools, 21 percent came from private schools--13
percent from Catholic schools and 8 percent from nonreligious private
schools. While private-school leaders have not grumbled openly about
charters, Sister Glenn Anne McPhee of the U.S. Catholic Conference has
noted that they are watching the situation closely to see what effect
the charter movement is apt to have on Catholic schools over time.
Enemies Within
Some self-inflicted wounds of the charter movement have
strengthened the hands of its critics and opponents. These include
greedy charter operators keener to make a quick buck at public expense
than to educate children; inept operators whose schools are fiscally
disastrous and academically inadequate; sponsors that exercise little
care in reviewing charter proposals or monitoring the schools'
progress; and supporters who press sponsors to leave the schools
alone--even to renew their charters--notwithstanding their
organizational, financial, and instructional failures.
Some of these schools have engaged in egregious misbehavior. In
Houston, Reverend Harold Wayne Wilcox opened the Prepared Table Charter
School in 1998. It rapidly grew to 1,500 students on three campuses,
making it one of Texas's largest charters. After state auditors investigated the school's operations, however, the Texas Education
Authority concluded that Prepared Table had overstated its attendance at
a cost to the state of $1.3 million; that it had commingled school funds
with those of Reverend Wilcox's church; and that it was governed by
virtually the same board members as the church. It also found that
members of Wilcox's family were working for the school and that
Wilcox, who also served as head of the school, was given a $235,000
buyout package one week before the state convened a hearing to determine
what to do with the school, The school was closed and its charter
revoked in August 2002.
Forty-six California charters had their funding reduced when the
state scrutinized their financial records during the 2001-'02
school year. They could not document how they had spent substantial sums
of money and were unable to show what instructional services they were
purchasing from private contractors. In some instances, the private
vendors were members of the charter boards, posing conflict-of-interest
questions.
In Arizona, a record number of that state's charter
schools--31 of 288 reviewed--were fined in 2002 because of "late
audits, ignored testing requirements, and financial fraud." This
represented more schools than the total number disciplined since
charters began in Arizona in 1994.
The basic charter "bargain" grants independence to school
operators in return for superior academic results. But with that
independence come opportunities for misbehavior--and these are apt to
arise well before the results are measured, This places a heavy burden
on authorizers to do careful due diligence before awarding charters and
to perform ongoing reviews--without clamping down in classic
bureaucratic fashion. Some sponsors are not up to this subtle, solemn
responsibility.
Consider Techworld Charter School in the District of Columbia, The
school was chartered by the elected D.C. board of education in 1997 and
opened the following year. It was finally closed in June 2002 after
three years of accounting irregularities, governance tiffs, and
overreporting of enrollments, It was placed on probation several times
during those three years, but was never adequately monitored by the
board, which in 2000 was replaced by a new hybrid board of elected and
appointed members. The new school board set out to close down the school
but encountered a belligerent principal. Just before its closing, he
instructed the school's financial manager to award him a $20,000
bonus, along with $5,000 each to eight other employees, including his
wife. The school's board of directors began to consider legal
action against the principal, whose wife then changed the password to
the computer files containing students' grades, hoping to force the
board members not to prosecute her husband. The school's director s
eventually retrieved the grades through a costly reconstruction of the
computer records and turned the matter over to federal prosecutors.
The new D.C. school board moved during the 2001-'02 school
year to close three other schools chartered by the previous board. They
had an array of problems: overcrowded classrooms with little
ventilation, high absentee rates, few textbooks and other instructional
materials, abysmal academic results, and failure to file financial
reports and to offer the advertised courses, This "cleanup"
action could be traced to the failure of the old board to exercise
adequate due diligence in approving the original charter application and
monitoring the schools. This behavior contrasts sharply with the
approach of the alternative, nondistrict chartering authority in D.C.,
the D.C. Public Charter School Board, which has chartered nearly 20
schools, none of which has been closed.
Counter Attack
The charter movement can no longer coast on a theory and a hope. It
has a track record, if not a solid one. This has given new opportunities
to those who never liked the charter movement in the first place. But
there are ways to strengthen the charter movement to counter the attack.
The National Association of Charter School Authorizers, created in 2001,
is the kind of institution necessary to support the charter school
movement as it matures. Members regularly receive information on topics
of high interest to charter authorizers, such as evaluating charter
applications and school performance, negotiating accountability
agreements, renewal/revocation decisionmaking, policy updates, and
state-by-state information on authorizers.
Also needed is a national organization dedicated to pressing the
charter movement to clean up its act and deliver the results promised by
charter boosters. It would also recruit new charter supporters at the
state and local policy level, especially since many governors,
legislators, and local activists who gave birth to the charter effort
have since moved on to other endeavors, Their successors are disposed to
view charters as someone else's idea; are more aware of
charters' problems than their successes; and are being skillfully manipulated by interests that have finally recognized that charters
aren't going away.
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
Figure 2
Competitive States
Of the 39 states (plus the District of Columbia) with school charter
laws, five stand out: Arizona, California, Florida, Michigan, and Texas.
More than a third of the states have fewer than 20 charters.
State (year Total operating
law passed) in 2002-'03
Arizona (1994) 468
California (1992) 452
Florida (1996) 232
Texas (1995) 228
Michigan (1993) 186
Wisconsin (1993) 115
Ohio (1997) 97
Colorado (1993) 95
North Carolina (1996) 93
Minnesota (1991) 92
Pennsylvania (1997) 91
New Jersey (1996) 56
Massachusetts (1993) 47
District of Columbia (1996) 39
New York (1998) 38
Georgia (1993) 36
Kansas (1994) 30
Illinois (1996) 29
New Mexico (1993) 28
Louisiana (1995) 26
Missouri (1998) 26
Oregon (1999) 26
Hawaii (1994) 25
Connecticut (1996) 16
Alaska (1995) 15
Delaware (1995) 14
Idaho (1998) 14
South Carolina (1996) 14
Nevada (1997) 13
Utah (1998) 12
Indiana (2001) 10
Oklahoma (1999) 10
Rhode Island (1995) 9
Arkansas (1995) 8
Virginia (1998) 8
Mississippi (1997) 1
Wyoming (1995) 1
New Hampshire (1995) 0
Iowa (2002) 0
Tennessee (2002) 0
NATIONWIDE 2,700
SOURCE: Center for Education Reform
Figure 3
Truly Accountable
As of January 2001, 86 charter schools had been forced to shut their
doors for financial, academic, and other reasons.
Number of
Reason for Closure Charters Closed
Financial 32
Management 34
Academic 7
Facility Problems 12
Other 1
Note: Figures do not include charters that consolidated with district or
private schools (26 as of January 2001) or charter schools that never
opened (50 schools).
SOURCE: Center for Education Reform
Note: Table made from bar graph
Bruno V. Manno is senior associate for education at the
Baltimore-based Annie E. Casey Foundation and coauthor, with Chester E.
Finn Jr. and Gregg Vanourek, of Charter Schools in Action: Renewing
Public Education (Princeton University Press, 2000).