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School Choice And Segregation In Charter And Regular Public Schools

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Abusive charter school application process is so common that we made mocked it http://studentslast.blogspot.com/2013/03/cherry-picking-isnt-just-for-fruit.html

Good post. I'd add this perspective: 1. A kid in Boston is forbidden from attending the nearby suburban public schools. Sometimes these suburban schools are actually closer to home. 2. So then the Boston Public Schools has 3 exam schools. Over 10% of secondary kids attend these. Most of the attendees are white, Asian, and middle class. 3. So then there are district's pilot schools. Billed as "alternative to pilots." Some of them use pure lottery admissions. Others use auditions, interviews, recommendations, and essays to screen students. [I'm curious: do you oppose these schools' admission processes?] 4. Then there are the pure lotteries of the charter public schools. That's where you zoom in. But we shouldn't forget the 3 steps that come before, for context.

Many American parents do not have the luxury/privilege/freedom to "choose homes (or relocate) based in part on the quality of the schools in a given district (or neighborhood)". They live where they can afford to live, where they can find work, where they have family. Many parents, who love their children just as much as more privileged parents, don't have the time, the skills, the background knowledge to navigate the complex application processes for many charter schools.

What is cloaked as a good thing (choice for parents) is really schools fighting over the last limited resources like dogs over the last bone. It does not serve students well or make parents more pleased in the end. I am a public school teacher in a county that touts choice and wrote this on the subject this week: Vol.#22: The Dark Side of Choosing School Choice | Teaching Speaks Volumes http://bit.ly/VGjM2a

It is refreshing for a blog addressing charter schools to include a discussion of the parent-wealth driven selectivity and segregation that constructs the demographics of most suburban schools. And to the discussion of the selectivity that dominates many urban school districts, I would add New York City's "choice" model that begins in middle school and operates through high school as a counter to the notion that traditional public schools admit all who apply. New York City public school students' 4th grade report cards, attendance records, and test scores (along with interviews, auditions, essays, and letters of recommendation) determine which middle school they attend. The same process then occurs again for high school, but with 7th grade outcomes as the focus along with the specialized high school test, an audition, or a "portfolio." By contrast, charter schools must use lotteries. Choice is a concept with a great deal of appeal for many people - but implementing a choice program that serves all students seems to elude many jurisdictions.

Maryal, In Boston the district application process is, if anything, a bit more complicated than the charter application process. See for yourself. http://www.bostonpublicschools.org/howtoregister versus http://roxburyprep.uncommonschools.org/rpc/enroll

It's always mysterious to me when charter opponents use that talking point, as if public schools just automatically enroll all children within the zone while charter schools go out of their way to make it difficult. In my experience (which includes signing up for two different charter schools as well as signing up for six different public schools in two states), registering for public school is by far harder and more demanding of the parent, just as Mike's links confirm to be true in Boston. Public schools demand all kinds of information and documentation and proof, probably because (unlike charter schools) public schools want to be sure that you really do live in the place you say.

There is a difference though between public schools and private schools, charter schools and parents doing it. Screening and excluding is something public schools don't do.

unless of course those public schools are magnet schools. Then it's ok.

This post seems somewhat beside the point to me. We know that public schools heavily segregate based on race and income. That's been the American norm. But the false promise of charters and choice is to undo that harm. And we know they don't. What works is for communities to enact policies that promote desegregation and equity. That can only work in a situation where democratically elected governance and a degree of regulation can promote that approach. Charter schools are currently outside the realm of such an equity-promoting approach because of their independence from regulation and their abilities to game the system with lotteries and other selection methods. Sure, we need traditional public schools that are not fraught with screening and exclusion. But let's be clear that charters, in their current form, are not the viable solution they are trumped up into being.

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