CHARTER SCHOOL LEGISLATION:
DISASTER, DETOUR, IRRELEVANT, OR REFORM TOOL
By
John Merrifield
University of Texas - SA
COB - Downtown Campus
501 West Durango Blvd.
San Antonio, TX 78207
Jmerrifield@utsa.edu
Legislation allowing chartered schools appears to be the
school reform debate's path of least resistance.
But
is the concept up to the Reform Challenge?
The answer to the question implied in the title could be that the United States includes some charter legislation that will fit in each category.
Analysis of charter laws, not chartered schools.
The first is the definition of appropriate reform: Policy changes that maximize the rate of improvement in what children know and what they can do.
May not be possible to change existing schools and systems enough to constitute appropriate reform.
·
Not
Ideology and Cynicism
·
Huge
Body of Evidence
The Disaster Scenario:
·
charter
laws hurt traditional public schools because budget cuts exceed the schools’
savings.
·
The
private school sector shrinks in size and quality.
·
Reform
efforts neglect better long-term strategies.
·
Gains
by chartered school users aren’t large enough to offset the damage to the
private school sector and traditional public schools.
·
Rivalry
between chartered and traditional public schools is not that productive,
perhaps even harmful.
BASIS
·
Chartered
Schools are Typically Few, Small, and Draw from Multiple Attendance Areas +
Private Schools.
·
Small
enrollment changes would not lower traditional public school costs very much.
·
Public
School Dominance Creates the Potential for Destructive Responses.
·
Shrink
Private School Enrollments
·
Reform
Detour Effect
The Detour Scenario: Just the reform detour effect
The Irrelevance Scenario: Just the reform detour effect
·
No
Catalytic Impacts
·
Charter
Laws Pursued only as a Limited Escape Hatch
The Reform Agent Scenario: The Fast Track Scenario
·
Modest
Rivalry Effects and New Choices Enough to Prompt Major Improvements in Some
Schools and Replacement of Others.
·
Significant
CopyCat Pressures to Upgrade the Weakest Laws
· Conversions Not Necessarily
Bad
Public School Systems: Some Modest Productive Responses, Some
Indifference, and Some Destructive Responses
·
Ability
to Make Positive Responses Faces Many More Barriers
·
Easier
to Harass, Misinform, and Sabotage and those responses exist.
·
Helps
by Removing Outliers
·
Helps
by Easing Growth Pressures
Little Replacement: Slow Rate at Most
·
Would
Replacement Even Do That Much Good
·
Significant
and Growing Restrictions
·
Little
Potential for Genuine Market Forces
·
New
Zealand Experience
Price
Controlled
·
Price
Change is a Key Entry-Exit Regulatory, Surplus-Shortage Eliminator
· Key Incentive to Improve and
Facilitator of Innovation
Open Admissions Requirement Inhibits Specialization
Revenue, Cost, and Longevity Uncertainty
Financial Handicaps
Non-Profit Only Usually
Less
Money per Child Than Traditional School
Access
to Fewer Centralized Services