Posted: 6:00 p.m.
Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2014
Reports pan charter schools, call for change
State senator aims for full
rewrite of Ohio
charter school laws.
By Jeremy P. Kelley and Rick McCrabb
Staff Writer
MIDDDLETOWN —
A
national education group called for comprehensive changes to Ohio’s
charter school laws on Tuesday, just one week after a multiyear study from
another agency described Ohio
charters’ academic performance as “grim.”
Bellwether
Education Partners said Ohio’s charter school law too often “protects powerful
vested interests, smothers schools with red tape … and tolerates academic
mediocrity,” rather than protecting students’ best interests.
Bellwether’s
report recommended multiple changes. Among them were prohibiting school
sponsors from selling services to schools they oversee, creating stronger
conflict-of-interest provisions for charter school board members, and
increasing funding to charter schools by allowing all state and local
funding to follow the student if they go to a charter school.
“Fixing
Ohio’s
charter law is no easy task,” Bellwether’s report said. “The law itself is
roughly 40,000 words and has … many peculiar exceptions, loopholes, and
restrictions.”
State
Sen. Peggy Lehner, R-Kettering, agreed, adding that she’s had a working group
of educators, industry experts and state leaders examining potential changes to
the law for months. Lehner, chair of the Senate Education Committee, said most,
if not all of Bellwether’s recommendations on school sponsors are issues her
group has discussed.
“We’re
not looking at just tweaking current law. That’s happened 19 times in 17 years
and as a result, we have a lot of provisions that don’t align or that
contradict each other. So we’re going to be drafting it fresh,” Lehner said,
adding that the process could take a year or two. “This is not going to be an
easy lift. There are high stakes for so many people in the charter world, or in
opposition to the charter world.”
Ohio
Department of Education officials say they’ve already been taking some of the
steps Bellwether suggests during the last year – mostly via tighter controls
aimed at keeping subpar sponsors from opening new schools.
“We’re
well aware of the shortcomings of (charter) schools in Ohio and we’re trying to improve that,” said
ODE spokesman John Charlton. “We’ve improved the regulations and hope that will
help improve the performance.”
Report on academics
Stanford University’s
Center for Research on Education Outcomes reported last week that Ohio charter school
students, as a whole, perform worse on state reading and math tests than
comparable students at traditional public schools that share the same student
base.
Dom
Williams, president of the Middletown Teachers Association, addressed the board
of education at its meeting this week. He said Middletown area charter schools are
performing “worse” than the public schools and spending at least $2,000 more
per student.
“Our
teachers are doing an outstanding job,” Williams told the board.
According
to the Ohio Charter School Accountability Project, Middletown City Schools
received a C on its performance index while spending $3,960 per student.
Williams
and board members said they were concerned that $6.8 million of taxpayers’
money is transferred to charter schools.
The
Middletown Prep and Fitness
Academy scored a C on its
performance index, while spending $6,814 per student, according to the report.
The academy receives $1.6 million in funds from the district. But Myrrha Satow,
performance academies president, contends MPFA outperformed the local public
district and said the numbers reported were inaccurate.
She
said her school performed better than Middletown
with key demographics, including African-American students and students with
special needs. Her school, she said, provides “a great education” for Middletown families and
is “a consistent performer and has the best middle school in the area.”
She
said MPFA achieves this despite receiving 29 percent less funding per pupil
than the public option.
At Marshall High School, the performance index
wasn’t available, and the charter school spends $8,090 per student and receives
$1.2 million from the district, the report said.
Chuck
Hall, Marshall’s
principal, said the school isn’t competing with public schools. Instead, he
said, Marshall
provides another option for students, who for various reasons, didn’t fit in
public schools.
Marshall held its third
graduation ceremony Wednesday night and Hall said 21 students received their
diplomas.
Summit Academy
Community School for Alternative
Learners of Middletown received a D for its performance index. The school
spends $14,232 per student with the financial support of $735,000.
Both
the Bellwether and Stanford reports had ties to the Fordham Institute, a group
that sponsors charter schools itself, and advocates for better oversight of
charters.
The
Stanford study measured charter schools’ lower performance in terms of how many
fewer days of academic gain students made, based on a 180-day school year. The
study reported a statewide average that Ohio charter students had 14 fewer days
of learning in reading and 36 fewer days in math compared to similar
traditional public schools. A multiyear 2009 Stanford study found similar results.
Ron
Adler, president of the Ohio Coalition for Quality Education, a charter school
advocacy group, questioned whether the study sufficiently accounts for how
often students in urban settings switch schools. The Stanford study does show
that students who are in their first year at a charter school score much worse
than those who stay with that charter school for multiple years.
“Our
feeling is that it is impossible to measure those results without taking into
account student mobility,” Adler said. “When a student has been to six
different schools, it changes the whole dynamic.”
The money factor
David
Taylor, principal of the high-performing Dayton Early College Academy charter
school, said some charters’ struggles have to do with their focus.
“Some
are built to be profitable, and to appeal to parents in nonacademic ways, like
that it’s safe, and personalized to our community,” Taylor said. “But
academically they’re failing the kids. … With our structure here, everything is
about how we move students forward.”
One
of the biggest controversies in Bellwether’s report is their call for all state
and local per-pupil funds to follow the student if he or she goes to a charter
school. Currently, a voucher of about $5,800 follows the student, regardless of
whether the home school district gets more or less than that in per-pupil state
funding.
Taylor
argued that it can be hard for a charter school to educate a child for
thousands less than the surrounding public district gets, asking why it’s fair
for two students who are neighbors to have different funding rules. But other
groups such as Innovation Ohio and the Ohio Education Association argue that
some districts get far less than $5,800 per pupil from the state, meaning they
have to cover the difference with locally generated funds.
“I
don’t think anyone votes for a school levy with the intent that that money is
going to go somewhere other than their specific local school district,” said
Damon Asbury, director of legislative services for the Ohio School Boards
Association.
Lehner
said she took one clear positive from the Bellwether study — that charter
schools are “knocking it out of the park” in urban areas of some states.
“If
it said charter schools were failing everywhere, that would be different,” she
said. “But other states with better or different policies are doing very well,
while Ohio seems to be really lagging. Our students aren’t different, but our
policies are, and that’s what we have control over, so that’s the first place I
would look.”