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School & District Management

With Little Debate, L.A. High School Gets New Charter

By Joetta L. Sack 鈥 May 19, 2004 1 min read
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A high-performing Los Angeles high school was granted a five-year extension as a charter school with little fanfare last week, after its conversion last year had triggered debates and fear.

Granada Hills High School had one of the best academic records in the 750,000-student Los Angeles Unified School District last year when it sought to become a charter school. The school board, fearful that other large high schools in the district would follow suit, granted it a one-year charter after much debate. (鈥淩omer Raises Stakes in L.A. Charter Fight,鈥 May 21, 2003.)

This year, with most of those fears put to rest, there was little debate or discussion on granting the extension at the May 11 meeting. The seven-member board鈥檚 vote was unanimous.

Superintendent Roy Romer, who said last year that he saw Granada Hills鈥 conversion as a 鈥渟erious threat鈥 to the district and called for creating a 鈥渃harter district鈥 rather than piecemeal charter schools, expressed no objections to the extension at the board meeting last week, said his spokeswoman, Stephanie Brady. Mr. Romer was unavailable for comment last week.

Caprice Young, the chief executive officer of the Los Angeles-based California Charter 69传媒 Association, said Granada Hills had 鈥渨orked very hard鈥 to persuade the board to approve the five-year extension.

鈥淭hey鈥檝e been able to be successful because of the freedom allowed as a charter,鈥 she said.

Ms. Young was president of the Los Angeles Unified school board when the charter was approved last year, but was defeated in her re-election bid in part because of her support of charters. At more than 3,800 students, Granada Hills is believed to be the largest charter school in the nation.

Ms. Young predicted that, because of the state鈥檚 recent cuts to its education budget and stringent rules on spending money, more California high schools will seek conversion to charter schools. 鈥淐alifornia has become a state of rules and not a state of student achievement, and it鈥檚 frustrating to work in that environment,鈥 she said.

A version of this article appeared in the May 19, 2004 edition of Education Week as With Little Debate, L.A. High School Gets New Charter

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