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School Choice & Charters

Scholars Compare 2 Kinds of 69传媒

October 10, 2006 1 min read
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Are charter schools all that different from regular public schools?

That鈥檚 one question scholars examined at a Sept. 28-29 conference in Nashville, Tenn., hosted by Vanderbilt University鈥檚 new National Center on School Choice.

Ron Zimmer of the RAND Corp. in Santa Monica, Calif., said the issue of differences in operation and how those affect student achievement are often neglected in charter research.

California charters generally have more autonomy, more parental involvement, and a greater focus on particular student groups, but those factors don鈥檛 seem to translate into better achievement, a study he co-wrote found.

On average, the charters performed on a par with or slightly below the state鈥檚 regular public schools. Still, charters have posted comparable test results with fewer public resources, the study notes.

Ellen Goldring, a Vanderbilt professor, found the differences between charters and regular schools to be 鈥渜uite inconsequential鈥 for teachers鈥 level of focus on student learning, in a study she co-wrote on schools in four states.

鈥淐hoice-based systems do not in and of themselves seem to lead to more of [the] in-school conditions鈥 that produce higher performance, that paper says.

Economist Michael Podgursky, from the University of Missouri-Columbia, said teacher pay and personnel policies are more market- and performance-based in charters, as well as in private schools.

As a result, he concludes in a study, charters recruit teachers with better academic credentials than those of their peers in regular public schools, as measured by the selectivity of the colleges they attended.

But Joe Nathan, a participant at the conference who heads the Center for School Change at the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities, questioned the value of grouping charters en masse for comparisons.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a little bit like saying, 鈥楶lease describe restaurants in Nashville or Minneapolis,鈥 鈥 he said in an interview. 鈥淭rying to lump charters together is pretty difficult, except that in pretty much every state 鈥 [they] are getting less money鈥 than regular schools.

The conference papers will be published as a book next year.

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A version of this article appeared in the October 11, 2006 edition of Education Week

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