1) Map by National Alliance for Public Charter schools that provides a look at how many charter schools exist in the United States and per state for the school year 2009-2010. It also provides a timeline for the inception of charter schools since 1991.
2) Chart by Layman, 2006 that graphs the public school enrollment and charter school enrollment for the D.C. School Districts from 1996 to 2006. The graph shows that as the charter school numbers increase the traditional public school enrollment numbers decrease.
3) The table from Charter Schools Finding, 2010 that is from the CREDO study on how charter schools are stacking up to public schools in 15 states based on their standardized test scores in reading and writing.
4) The Graph from the KIPP foundation (a charter school in low income districts) study that shows how well KIPP is stacking up to the national average for students who graduate high school and college as apposed to those in traditional public schools.
Saturday, December 1, 2012
RJA 13a: APA-Style Annotated Bibliography, Part 2–
Winerip, M. (2006, Mar 22). Nytimes. Retrieved from
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/22/education/22education.html?pagewanted=all
The author Michael Winerip has been a reporter for New York
Times for over 30 years. He has been a staff writer, investigative reporter, and
national political correspondent. He is also won the Pulitzer Prize Award for
an article on a man that pushed a woman to her death on a subway. This article
is about how public education is reliant on the companies that make standardized
tests. The author takes a look at how overextended and under regulated the
testing industry is. He talks about how the states are needing to “dumb down”
their tests because it is more expensive to grade essay tests than to grade multiple
choice exams. This is because they need to meet federal requirements but the
federal government is not doing its part to pay the costs of the tests. This
forces the schools to have to use cheaper alternative methods in their testing.
He argues that it is more useful to evaluate a child based on evaluating
information rather than recalling facts. Connecticut has filed law suite
against the Federal government claiming that they are not doing their part to
pay for the costs of the No Child Left Behind Act in order for schools to
maintain their testing standards and most states are just succumbing to the
financial constraint and switching to a testing standard that is less telling
of it’s students actual learning progress.
Kohn, A. (2000, September 27). Alfiekohn.org.
Retrieved from http://www.alfiekohn.org/teaching/edweek/staiv.htm
Author Alfie Kohn is a speaker and an author. He has
authored 12 books and speaks publicly at national education seminars and staff
development seminars about topics relating to behavior, education, and parenting.
In this article Kohn reviews what he terms “indisputable facts” about
standardized testing. He talks about our children today being subjected to more
testing than any other generation in Americas history and that few other
countries use multiple choice testing. He explains that “noninstructional
factors explain most of the variances in test scores” between states. These
include number of parents living at home, parents' educational background, type
of community, and poverty rate. He points out a study by the Journal of
Educational Psychology that measured “superficial thinking.” It showed that
students who were actually engaged and in learning did poorer on tests than
those students who exhibited the superficial learning approach and just copied down
answers or guessed. He points out that virtually all professionals in the field
condemn the giving tests to children under the age of 8 or 9 years old and they
do not believe on basing important decisions off of test scores alone. He
points out that schools are cutting back in arts and activities that promote
moral learning in an effort to raise funds in order to keep up with and pass
tests. He also points out that many of the best teachers are leaving the
profession due to the high stakes of good test scores in the current climate.
He drives home his main point that “failure is not an option….looks good on
bumper stickers….or for politician” but it that “…high-stakes testing marks a
major retreat from fairness, from accuracy, from quality, and from
equity." He points out that the corporations looking to profit from the
testing industry are selling test prep material to schools who are from high
influential communities and can afford the material. Lower income districts are
not able to afford the best teachers and the latest material and are falling
behind on their scores. His main point is that the people being left out the
most are the ones that can’t afford it and that it would make more sense to equally finance
schools in both low income and affluent neighborhoods to ensure they are all
able to equally meet the growing demands and needs.
(n.d.). Public vs charter schools. Retrieved from
http://www.differencebetween.net/miscellaneous/career-education/difference-between-public-and-charter-schools/
This article does not list an author. It is published by
differencebetween.net. This website gives you information that allows you to
differentiate between two similar topics. This article is talking about the
main differences between public school and charter schools. The article points
out that the main differences can be found in five areas. One is that they are
both publicly funded but charter schools also receive funds from other sources
and sponsors. Another difference can be seen in that a charter school has a lot
more autonomy but still held to government standards. Attendance is mandatory
in public schools but students have to enroll and be accepted into charter
schools. Public schools are stable and remain in operation for years while
charter schools are held to stringent accountability and review by government
standard tests and are at risk of being closed down if they do not meet the
standards. Lastly public schools are established by the government and charter
schools can be established by private entities. The helpful part of this
article is to help me categorize some main talking points and objectives that
could explain some of the key components and reasons that charter schools are
seeing a higher number of college graduates than traditional public schools.
Dwyer, L. (2011, April 29). [Web log message]. Retrieved
from
http://www.good.is/posts/kipp-s-graduation-rate-stats-spark-charter-school-debate
Liz Dwyer is a blogger on the Good website. She talks about
a recent report released by KIPP, an charter school organization. She gives
many links and provides the information about her sources. The article looks at
a study that KIPP did with their first graduating charter school class in New
York and Houston. The two schools KIPP low income student body surpassed the
national average for high school and college graduation rates. KIPP charter
schools have a longer day and their teachers are required to carry cell phones
and be available to students after hours. It points out that a lo t of the
success of charter schools may revolve around highly motivated parents because
they are required to sign a contract and give time to the school. The author
voices her opinion that certainly politicians will use studies like the one
done by KIPP in order to justify funneling money away from public schools. This
article is good for me because it provides me with good statistics, numbers,
and fact based opinions on how charter schools are doing and why they may be
doing so well. It also provides me with the sources used.
Wednesday, November 14, 2012
RJA 12b: APA-Style Annotated Bibliography, Part 1
Booker, K., Sass, T. R., Gill, B.,
& Zimmer, R. (2010). The unknown world of charter high schools. Education
next, 10(2), Retrieved from
http://educationnext.org/the-unknown-world-of-charter-high-schools/
Although I could not find any information about the authors of this article, it is a peer reviewed journal from Stanford and Harvard College. The article looks at long term achievements and the effects that charter school attendance has on high school graduation and college completion. They use data from Chicago and Florida charter and public schools to conduct their study. Their research found evidence that attending charter schools had significant positive effects on students. The study found that that students attending charter schools as apposed to traditional public schools were more likely to graduate high school and attend college. The information in this study is valuable because it is looking at the long term results of the effects educational choices are having on students as apposed to the short term results of standardized test results.
Abdul-Alim, J. (2011, July 29). Charter
schools and college access. Retrieved from
http://diverseeducation.com/article/16142/
Jamaal Abdul-Alim is a freelance journalist.
His research covers a variety of topics for several different journals. In this
article Abdul-Alim researched the subject of charter school access and college
graduation rates of a Washington D.C. based charter school known as SEED. Abdul-Alim
takes a look at the admission process for SEED charter school. Families are
accepted into the charter school based on a lottery system. This lottery system
is designed to give all families an equal opportunity to attend the charter
school. Abdul-Alim shows statistics from SEED and RAND Corporation that show a
trends in the number of students enrolling in and graduating from four year
universities after leaving charter schools. His research shows a significant
increase in college graduation for those students who attended charter schools
as opposed to their public school counterparts. The argument is made in this
article that it’s not about the test scores but the real measure of success for
charter schools is their ability to prepare children to be successful in completing
a four year college degree.
Author Grace Chen is a public school educator, activist for
reforming traditional public schools, education researcher, and writer. This
article talks about the battle of charter schools verse public schools. It
brings to light that most charter schools are not outperforming public schools
in the area of standardized testing in Math and Reading. The article then goes
onto state there is an exception to these scores with lower income families and
English learner families in charter schools. These students are outperforming their
public school counterparts. The article goes on to say that the charter schools
were originally designed for these lower income families but that charter
schools are underserving the lower income families because they are unable to
meet the needs of special needs or at risk children and because attending a
charter school has to be by choice. They argue that the very families that
would benefit from charter schools are the same families that are drug addicts
and abusers and unlikely to take the time or attention in registering nor
researching a better schooling option for their children. This article takes a
good look at the objections to charter schools and where they are lacking.
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