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Education
Related: About this forumThe Games Charter Schools Play.
Crossposted in General Discussion where it is in need of a rec or two.
The Games Charter Schools Play
Frank Breslin is a retired high-school teacher with 40 years of experience in the New Jersey public school system, where he taught English, Latin, German, and social studies.
The first game is cherry-picking.
Rarely, do they accept students with learning disabilities, emotional disorders, autism, ADHD, speech or language impairment, behavioral problems, or immigrant children still learning English, since these students tend to test poorly and would lower a charter's overall average.
.....However, sometimes, a few students who do test poorly are accepted, and only later then asked to leave after a charter has received the public-school money that comes with these students.
The other game is trickier.
Charters play a second game. They seem to have a curious split-personality whenever it suits them. In one breath, they claim to be public schools entitled to taxpayer money, while, in the next, they claim they are not, being private schools exempt from public-school accountability.
This seems a bizarre self-contradiction. Charters claim that they're private schools in being able to admit only certain students, yet when they do accept taxpayer money, they're legally bound to accept everyone! But when they, in fact, accept only certain students, they are not entitled to taxpayer money! Is this legal or logical?
In fact back in 2011 one charter school claimed to be private, but still got 23 million dollars.
Chicago charter school claims to be private so teachers won't unionize. Got 23 million public money
Charter schools: Public or private?
Another Chicago charter has claimed it's a "private" school in order to stop its teachers from unionizing. The school has received $23 million in public funds since it opened in 2004. But eight months ago, a solid majority of the school's teachers voted to organize. The school's board, with backing from the charter school association and the Civic Committee, decided to spend tens of thousands of dollars in legal fees in hopes of stalling off union certification.
"In papers filed with the National Labor Relations Board, attorneys for the Chicago Math and Science Academy on the city's North Side say the school should be exempt from an Illinois law that grants employees of all public schools the right to form unions for contract negotiations. -- Tribune"
In 2013 NCLB decided Chicago charter school is really private, subject to private sector laws.
The National Labor Relations Board gives its verdict: charter schools are NOT public schools!
Teachers at a Chicago charter school are now subject to private-sector labor laws, rather than state laws governing public workers. The move could impact how public schools are run down the road.
The ruling, made by the National Labor Relations Board last month, said the Chicago Math and Science Academy is a private entity and therefore covered under the federal law governing the private sector.
The decision overrules a vote taken by teachers last year to form a union in accordance with the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Act. At the time, two-thirds of teachers at the school approved the union and it became official under state law.
The author decides the charters can get away with these games because after all:
And that, more importantly, charters were here to stay with no need of any legal justification whatsoever because, in the end, Big Money talks!
Also linked to my Twitter feed.
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The Games Charter Schools Play. (Original Post)
madfloridian
Sep 2014
OP
Scuba
(53,475 posts)1. K&R
FloriTexan
(838 posts)2. Kick
greatlaurel
(2,010 posts)3. Kick
theaocp
(4,366 posts)4. Kick and I'm starting my standard response to anyone who
complains about public schools: no class should have more than 15 students per teacher. Period. Tax the rich to get the funds and just do it. You will witness miracles.