A better question might be, why do conservatives hate public education? |
and the same research also shows that charters greatly underperform the public |
The best charters are better than the worst publics by a country mile |
That is the crux. |
This is so well argued. I like the conservatives on this issue because they don’t pretend to care about special needs (and do very little) like the Dems. |
Your Larla is EXACTLY the case I was saying a charter school would take. A child with a light IEP who doesn’t really need sped that much, but a few light accommodations. The kids I”m talking about are the ones who won’t be going to college because they are severely disabled. They are in wheelchairs, or learning life skills curriculum. These are the heavy hitters monetarily who need so many services. That number you hear when they say how much per pupil within a county isn’t really spent per pupil. There are kids who have to have 1 on 1 and need their diapers changed well into middle school. Those kids get more of the per pupil spending that the average kid. The busing, the caretaking, the ABA therapy, the speech, OT and PT services are expensive. Those kids NEED those services and they NEED to be paid for. You kid is a light case particularly when you are talking money. Charters have corporate backing and will just not take those cases on because they are so intensive. |
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I’ll add that in FCPS alone, almost 20% of the budget is spent on Special Education, and of that most of it isn’t spent on kids like your child.
We pool resources to care for the neediest kids. Charter schools take away from that. "The test of our progress is not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much; it is whether we provide enough for those who have too little." -FDR |
We don’t pool those resources enough. I’d like all the FARMs kids to go to their own school that can provide wrap-around services (including after school childcare & housing nearby), and the special education kids to also go to their own school. Bright middle class kids are mostly ignored in traditional public schools. |
| The vast majority of charter schools are frauds. And it siphons taxpayer dollars away from true public education. See the first sentence. The amount of fraud in charter schools is just absolutely staggering. |
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In theory, I think charter schools are fine. My understanding is that they were originally justified as places to test experimental ideas to see whether they would work before used in larger settings, or to use a different approach with traditionally more challenging populations who were not being served well in typical public schools.
In practice what I see happening: 1) Truly needy low income kids cannot go because charters are exempt from providing transportation or F/RL. 2) SPED services are almost always inadequate 3) Charter schools can 'expel' or push out kids who they don't want. They then get to keep the $$ from those kids while the public school is stuck picking up the pieces with no funding for that student for that school year 4) for profit schools... 5) UMC people use certain charters as de facto privates when they don't feel like paying for actual private school and don't like their public option; there's no incentive to improve the existing public schools while also taking funding away (which wouldn't happen if these people just went with privates) |
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The best speech I’ve heard about this was from a dad whose own kids went to private who was against charters for many of the reasons listed above. It was like he’d listened to NPR and wanted only straight public schools… for someone else’s kids.
In a meritocracy, the highest performers rise and the lowest fall to the bottom. America is presumably a meritocracy, only in America’s version, the reward for the highest performers is to also give their child a boost. +90% of parents are looking out for his or her own. |
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1-pulls resources from public schools
2-wont take all kids, like the publics have to, which means the trouble-makers, the special ed kids, etc., all end up in the public, all needing more resources (which the public now has less of) 3-little to no oversight, which means sometimes, no, frequently, these private charters abscond with public money and DO NOT educate children |
Pretty sure the bolded is incorrect. Per-pupil funding is based on enrollment in the public school, and if the school’s enrollment dips too low, it’s going to consolidate schools and layoff or reassign teachers. What it isn’t going to do is just let kids enjoy uncrowded, small classes. |
DC Charters are fine. The issue is that nationally, the charter school movement is about draining public dollars to cover costs for parochial schools disguised as charter schools. |
This is segregation by another name.
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