Showing posts with label Crossways. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Crossways. Show all posts

Monday, May 21, 2018

Webcast Wed. May 23rd: America’s Charter School Deserts: Up Close in the Washington Metro Area featuring Joseph Hawkins (Montgomery County)

2016–17 was one of the slowest growth years for charter schools in recent memory. Nobody knows for sure why this happened, but one hypothesis is saturation: With charters enjoying market shares of over 20 percent in some three dozen cities, and almost 50 percent in Washington, D.C., perhaps school supply is starting to meet parental demand, making new charters less necessary and harder to launch. If so, perhaps it’s time to look for new frontiers.
One option is to start more charter schools in affluent communities, which we surely support. But we couldn’t help but wonder: Are we overlooking neighborhoods in America that are already home to plenty of poor kids, and that contain the population density necessary to make school choice work? Especially communities in the inner-ring suburbs of flourishing cities, which are increasingly becoming magnets for poor and working-class families priced out of gentrifying areas?
That’s the question addressed by Fordham’s new study by Miami of Ohio assistant professor Andrew Saultz, Charter School Deserts: High-Poverty Neighborhoods with Limited Educational Options. Saultz and his team found that thirty-nine of forty-two charter states have at least one desert each—and the average number of deserts per state is a worrying 10.8.
Consider how this plays out in the Washington, D.C., metro area. The District of Columbia is home to a thriving, high-quality charter sector that has benefited from supportive public policies and ample private philanthropy. That’s all well and good—but the city’s affluence has put residency out of reach for many poor and working-class families. The District is home to roughly 37,000 poor children and 120 charter schools. Yet neighboring Montgomery County, Maryland, has many more low-income students—some 55,202 of them—and exactly zero charter schools. And in chronically low-performing Prince George’s County, Maryland, there are 81,055 low-income students, but just eleven charter schools.
Join us on May 23 from 10:00 to 11:30 a.m. for a summary of Fordham’s new study, a discussion about the charter school deserts located in the shadow of the Washington Monument, and an examination what might be done by philanthropists, policymakers, and others to irrigate them.
You can also follow the conversation on Twitter with @educationgadfly and #CharterDeserts.

Moderator:
Michael Petrilli, Thomas B. Fordham Institute
Discussants:
Robin Chait, Center City Public Charter Schools
Joseph Hawkins, Retired (formerly Westat)
Kimberlee Sia, KIPP Colorado

This event will be webcast. Please visit the Thomas B. Fordham's event page, at 10:00 a.m. ET on Wednesday, May 23rd, to watch the proceedings live.

Friday, February 4, 2011

"we remind the local board that the General Assembly has determined that public charter schools shall exist."

The Washington Post: Montgomery County, it's time to embrace charter schools
By David Borinsky, Baltimore

...An Anne Arundel County charter middle school operates out of a $10 million facility, has the second-highest standardized test scores in the county, has a long waiting list and has eliminated the minority achievement gap. Montgomery County's most recent capital budget contemplates a $45 million middle school (as well as many other "additions" and "modifications" budgeted at millions more per school) and, according to the Maryland State Board of Education, has a significant minority achievement gap. Not only are Montgomery's budgetary impacts self-created, but the county also is missing opportunities that other jurisdictions have embraced to fix problems -- such as the minority achievement gap -- that go to its core mission...

Monday, January 31, 2011

The Washington Post: Montgomery County school officials to reconsider charter school applications


By Jenna Johnson Washington Post Staff Writer 
Sunday, January 30, 2011; 9:46 PM

A group of Montgomery County parents and education advocates poured hundreds of hours into a 350-page application for a charter school. Their dream: Global Garden Public Charter School, a primary and middle school with fewer than 420 students and an emphasis on foreign languages. The students would be a mix of the county's ethnic groups and economic levels...
...Joseph Hawkins was the president of a group that formed in the late 1990s to submit one of the county's first charter school applications. Plans for Jaime Escalante Public Charter School were denied twice. Hawkins now sits on the Global Garden board.
"Montgomery County has always said the right things, like, 'We support charter schools,' 'We would approve a charter school if the right one came along,' " Hawkins said. "Okay, then give us some clues to what the right ones are."

full article here.

Friday, January 28, 2011

The Washingtonians in headlines today we’d like to have dinner with tonight

Washingtonian.com Guest List: Today’s Newsmakers
• Christopher Barclay. The president of the Montgomery County Board of Education is facing an interesting challenge: the school system, the largest in the state, doesn't have any charter schools. But that could change soon: The Maryland Board of Education told Montgomery County to reopen its deliberations on two applications to open charter schools in the jurisdiction. With lawmakers in Congress working to jump-start DC’s lapsed school-voucher program, school-choice discussions in Washington are about to heat up.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Flypaper: The Henry Ford model of school choice

Flypaper: Ideas that stick from Fordham's Education Gadfly team
Referring to the Model T, Henry Ford famously said, “A customer can have a car painted any color that he wants so long as it is black.” It turns out that Dr. Jerry Weast, the superintendent in Montgomery County, Maryland, where I live, feels the same way about school choice — parents can send their kids to any school they want, as long as it’s part of the traditional public school system (or you’re wealthy enough to send your child to a private school)...


continues here.

Gazette: Opinions cite bias of county board members, violation of system regulations

State Board of Education directs Montgomery board to reconsider two rejected charter school applications

by Andrew Ujifusa and Jeanette Der Bedrosian | Staff Writers

...In separate decisions released today, the state school board told the county school board to reconsider applications from Global Garden Public Charter School and Crossway Community to build charter schools in Montgomery County...
...School system spokesman Dana Tofig said county lawyers were still reviewing the decision by the state board to determine what is required of the county, but he said he believes the state board is simply asking for clarification on why Global Garden application was denied.
"They asked the [county] Board of Education to put in writing their reasons for denial," he said in a phone interview this evening. "It doesn't ask for reconsideration."
In each of the conclusions to its two opinions, the state board said, "We reverse and remand this case so that the local board may reconsider its decision in light of the rulings we have made in this case. We expect that such reconsideration shall occur within 90 days of the date of this decision."

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Md. overturns Montgomery's rejection of charter schools | Lisa Gartner | Education | Washington Examiner

Md. overturns Montgomery's rejection of charter schools | Lisa Gartner | Education | Washington Examiner
The Maryland State Board of Education on Tuesday reversed Montgomery County Public Schools' decision to reject two charter school applications, charging the local school board's members with holding biases against charter schools and calling a memo from Superintendent Jerry Weast "vague and, at best, confusing."
Moreover, the state says Montgomery's board failed to comply with its own evaluation process, cutting the charter applicants off from important feedback.
In a 17-page verdict, the state board found that the Montgomery school board "failed to provide any rationale for its decision" to reject an application from Global Gardens Public Charter School Inc. On the same basis, the state board overturned Montgomery's rejection of Crossway Community Inc.'s application and gave the local board 90 days to revisit those decisions.


Read more at the Washington Examiner: http://washingtonexaminer.com/local/education/2011/01/md-overturns-montgomerys-rejection-charter-schools?sms_ss=blogger&at_xt=4d3f96345f7da8f2%2C0#ixzz1C6pABXTb