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The Unfortunate Truth About This Year's NYC Charter School Test Results

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Many charter schools notoriously turn away SPED students and students with disciplinary problems. Before judging performance between charter schools and public schools that issue must be statistically-neutralized somehow or you will not be comparing apples to apples.

Are there any conclusions that could be drawn from looking at the demographics of the students? ie. if the rate of low-income students remained consistent, is there some validity we could draw from that?

Matt, Good question. The short answer is no (at least not in this case). For one thing, standard educational variables (e.g., lunch program eligibility) are notoriously inept. They’re just “yes/no” variables, and ignore all the variation within these groups. Looking at subgroups is helpful, and, in certain cases, when increases are very large and shared by subgroups, I think you can cautiously conclude that there has been some “real” improvement between years among students in the overlapping groups (though the magnitude of that improvement, as well as its causes, would remain open). In this instance, given the growth of city’s charter enrollment, the small size of the changes, and the other factors involved (e.g., new tests), there’s no way to draw any conclusions about the overall sector. By the way, this is a great paper on this topic, one that I should have cited in the post: http://www.mathematica-mpr.com/publications/pdfs/Education/False_Perf.pdf Thanks for your comment, MD

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