Hi Karen,

Thank you for posting the Newsweek article. It gets us a little more
up-to-date on what is going on in America. Over here the idea of charter
schools is now official policy of the Tory Party but the Labour Government
is still mounting a last-ditch battle against them -- supported by the
teaching unions and training colleges, central and local bureaucracies,
examination boards and all sorts of other bodies which are dependent on
government funding. Experimentally, the government is getting close to the
idea by allowing business sponsorships of special schools (about
half-a-dozen of them). It won't be long before charter schools (or
vouchers) are allowed here because the present state-wide system is now
only hanging by a thread.

What is going on in America is very exciting indeed.

Keith  


<<<<
Attack of 'The Blob: Why are teachers unions and school boards trying to
kill charter schools?

By Jonathan Alter

There's no silver bullet.  That's what everyone in education says, and it's
true.  But certain types of schools are what might be called silver arrows
in the quiver of reform.  The charter school movement, which began ten
years ago this fall with just one school in St. Paul, Minnesota, is quietly
changing public education, especially in inner cities.  With 2,400 such
schools in 40 states, charters represent a workable and often inspiring
form of public school choice. So of course mindless boards of education and
reactionary teachers unions are trying to smear them.

This month, for instance, the Illinois Board of Education released results
showing that the state's 23 charter schools had performed no better than
the state average on tests.  But many of those charter schools are for
troubled kids who fail in regular public school settings, so the
comparisons are meaningless.  That didn't stop the teachers unions in that
state from telling the press that this was some kind of black eye for
charter schools.

Charters don't always hit their target.  More than 150 of them have been
shut down, the victims of poor fiscal management or even criminality.
Maybe you heard about the Los Angeles principal who took $90,000 in
taxpayer money meant for kids and used it to buy a sports car.

Forget the horror stories.  Despite this year's Supreme Court decision
legalizing them, vouchers are too toxic politically to have a real impact
beyond talk TV.  Charter schools, by contrast, go down much easier.  They
offer choice and healthy competition in a public setting.

A Matter Of Choice

The whole idea of "charter schools" is still confusing for most people
(sort of like "fast-track authority" or "tort reform"), in part because the
rules governing these independent public schools vary so much state by
state. Basically, we're talking about a genuine grassroots movement for
small, non-religious, taxpayer-funded alternative schools.  They're
sponsored by idealistic educators, parents, non-profits, or businesses that
win the freedom to try something different and avoid silly union work rules
-- all in exchange for accountability.

Instead of creaming the best students from the top, admission in most
states is by lottery.  More than half are in poor areas, where waiting
lists are especially long.

The critics make sure you hear about the failures, but the successes
receive less attention.  Boston boasts the "Academy of the Pacific Rim"
that gets some of the highest test scores in town using Asian instruction
techniques with black kids; Mesa, Arizona, opened an Arts Academy in a Boys
and Girls Club that has local gangs on the run and academic results
surging.  Whenever I visit Newark, New Jersey's North Star Academy I'm
amazed by how much learning is going on.  The level of enthusiasm and
commitment by teachers and students is phenomenal.

Beware The Blob

Charters represent a good compromise between status-quo mediocrity and
vouchers.  But fearful of losing control, "The Blob" -- the education
establishment -- is trying to strangle the movement.  Some states are
refusing to expand the number of charters they grant in certain areas.
(Chicago, for instance, is allowed only ten).

School boards have conned pliant legislatures in 18 states into stipulating
that they (the boards) alone can sponsor charters, thereby defeating the
purpose.  "It's like letting McDonald's decide where Burger King can open,"
says Joe Nathan, director of the Center for School Change at the University
of Minnesota.

Now the American Federation of Teachers, whose late president, Albert
Shanker, once championed charter schools, has launched a vicious frontal
assault against them.  I'm not sure why anyone would believe a report on
charters by a teachers union, but this one deserves some kind of chutzpah
award.  The report complains that not enough charter schools have been
closed for poor academic performance.  (More than 150 have been shut,
mostly for financial mismanagement).  Funny, the AFT doesn't say that about
the thousands of lousy conventional schools where their members teach.  And
as the Center for Education Reform notes, the report neglects to mention
that charters usually have to raise their own money for their buildings
(covered by the public in conventional schools), which contributes to their
financial shakiness.

Paying Lip Service

Instead of judging by results, some states (under pressure from "The Blob")
have started heavily regulating charter schools, trying to make them more
like the ordinary schools they are meant to challenge.  Republicans
nationally are generally more open to the movement than Democrats, who
remain in bed with teachers unions.  But at the state level, GOP lawmakers
are also thoroughly compromised by the vested interests of the "educrats."

The Blob's new game, at work now in Illinois, is to pay lip service to
charter schools by allowing them for special ed or disruptive students.
Then the school boards get to boast that the test scores of their own
conventional schools have gone up (because they don't have to average in
the weakest kids who've been put in charters), but the charter school
scores have not.  When some of these charter schools close, the
establishment can say, "See! They don't work!"  Of course the fact that six
percent of charter schools have been shut down, cited by critics as a sign
of failure, is actually an indication that the idea is working.  Unlike
most conventional schools, charters actually have to perform to survive.

Taking The Next Step

The critics aren't completely crazy.  Like all social movements, this one
has had growing pains.  Arizona added charters too quickly and got several
shoddy ones; Texas and California didn't screen the founders well enough
and have ended up with some crooks.  Most states need better auditing of
the financial performance of charters, a process that could weed out the
poorly conceived ones more quickly.  The next phase is to figure out why
some charters work and others don't, and improve the batting average.  (The
Gates Foundation and other non-profits are investing in that process).
Then charter schools can make the leap from intriguing reform to major
American social movement.

A decade ago, just 90 students at St. Paul's "City Academy" comprised the
first charter school in history.  Now, there are 650,000 students in
charters.  But that's out of 46 million school-age children in America.
Fortunately, the groundswell will likely continue in the next decade.
Charter schools are modern-day barn raisings.  They tap something deeply
democratic in the culture: local citizens, fighting the power structure,
taking matters (legally) into their own hands, committed to market choice
but in a public sphere, still dreaming the ancient dream of a better life
for their children.
>>>>

NEWSWEEK WEB EXCLUSIVE -- November 27 @
http://www.msnbc.com/news/840765.asp


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Keith Hudson, General Editor, Handlo Music, http://www.handlo.com
6 Upper Camden Place, Bath BA1 5HX, England
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