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Charter Schools: Lessons From New Orleans

Mallory Falk
/
WWNO
This year's National Charter Schools Conference kicked off New Orleans style, with a Mardi Gras parade.

Charter schools are changing American education. Some say for the better, some say for the worse. This week the Southern Education Desk looks at the charter school movement throughout the south: the similarities and differences between states, and a glimpse at what's ahead. The series starts in New Orleans, the testing ground for the charter movement. Nearly all the city's public schools have been converted into charters: publicly funded, but privately run. Since then, a major lesson has emerged.

This summer's National Charter Schools Conference kicked off with a Mardi Gras-style parade. Local charter school leaders rode by on floats. They tossed plastic cups and beads to the crowd, made up of educators and policymakers from around the country. It was a festive start to a conference partly focused on what other school districts can learn from New Orleans.

There are many lessons. but perhaps one of the largest: even in a decentralized system, schools need oversight.

"You can't have a completely unregulated system and expect to have every child educated in the way that they deserve to be educated," says Joshua Perry, Executive Director of the Louisiana Center for Children's Rights. "There need be system-level checks on school behavior."

One hallmark of New Orleans reform is a heavy focus on testing. That's brought gains: test scores, graduation and college entry rates have improved, according to state data.

But it also creates incentive for schools to push out low-performing students.

"When the only thing that's important are scores," Perry says, "you can unfortunately start to see bad behavior in service of getting scores up. And I think there's no doubt that we did see some of that bad behavior. Young people pushed away from school and out of the school system, in the service of a pursuit of scores."

That can happen on the front end, when students apply to schools. Tulane University's Education Research Alliance (Era) found some charter schools tried to steer away undesirable students.

Huriya Jabbar is a researcher with Era and an assistant professor of education policy at the University of Texas at Austin. "Even after the student was admitted," she says, schools might have "an interview process, or some other process, where they made sure that they were a good fit. That they could meet the high expectations of the school. And students who they didn't think could meet those expectations, they suggested that they go somewhere else."

She found schools used other tactics to recruit the right kinds of students and keep out the wrong ones. Like holding invitation-only promotional events, or not reporting open seats.

The big takeaway, Jabbar says: "Schools need to have some kind of centralized oversight to make sure that parents are able to access schools, that there is a fair marketplace."

And that once students are in school, they can stay. Until recently, each charter school held its own expulsion hearings. That left room for them to skirt the law. Some had shockingly high expulsion rates.

But there's been a shift in the past few years. Now the state-run Recovery School District oversees enrollment and expulsions. There's a central application for most schools, and a central hearing office for expulsions. Both are praised as key steps toward a more equitable system, where schools can't cherry pick or easily kick out students.

"It's incontrovertible now that the percentage of youth expelled in New Orleans is lower than the state-wide percentage and that's something that New Orleans should feel really, really good about," says Joshua Perry.

As for parent satisfaction with the landscape, it depends who you ask.

Martesha Lancaster chose a KIPP school for her son. She likes the early emphasis on college. The fact that her third grader can rattle of his top five college choices.

"When I was eight, I didn't even think about college," Lancaster says. "It's good that they're instilling it now. It gives them a focus. It gives them a goal."

Lancaster's son got into - and is thriving at - his first choice school.

Ashana Bigard and her eight-year-old daughter had a different experience. They didn't get into their first choice, an A-rated, high demand Montessori school. And Bigard wasn't thrilled with most of her other options. Her daughter just started her third school, hoping to find the right fit.

"It does feel painful when you're sending your child to a school that you know is not healthy for them," Bigard says. "And when my child comes home from school and she's miserable and doesn't want to go back, it hurts."

New Orleans rebuilt its school system in a rush, after a disaster. For other districts, moving at a slower pace, there's a critical lesson. Create incentives, and provide oversight, so schools educate all students.

This report was made possible through a grant from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Local support for education reporting comes from Baptist Community Ministries and Entergy Corporation.

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