Anonymous wrote:Ugh. This just reinforces why I won’t watch the show. Read the room - a show with public school teachers as heroes was not exactly on my to-watch list after school shutdowns. And now anti-charter propaganda? No thanks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I loved the episode and for those who don't think that the same problems are happening in DC are just blind. Charters regularly take a select population of students and kick out those who require more resources, leaving DCPS with more students who have more needs. At the same time, the charters erode neighborhood schools leaving them with too small of a population to provide robust offerings.
meanwhile, actual data shows that is untrue
https://dcpcsb.org/dc-public-charter-schools-serve-higher-percentages-risk-students-and-high-needs-special-education
Anonymous wrote:I loved the episode and for those who don't think that the same problems are happening in DC are just blind. Charters regularly take a select population of students and kick out those who require more resources, leaving DCPS with more students who have more needs. At the same time, the charters erode neighborhood schools leaving them with too small of a population to provide robust offerings.
Anonymous wrote:The New Yorker article captures the issues perfectly. Charters are a way for political actors, billionaires, and scammers to undermine public schools to achieve their own ends—and to give elected officials an excuse to let public schools wither on the vine.
Good for Quinta Brunson.
Anonymous wrote:I love Abbott Elementary and am wary of public schools run by multi-state private operators, and I have been wondering if the charter takeover thing is specific to Philadelphia or other districts where local or state laws cover that kind of thing.
I'm aware of DCPS taking over 2-3 failing DC public charter schools, but the idea of the reverse -- a school district wanting a charter operator to take over one of their schools -- was new to me. Public charter schools have taken over former DCPS buildings, but only after DCPS had decided to close them, is that correct?
Does anyone have experience with the Philadelphia school system or another place where hostile takeovers by charter operators happen?
I still love the show, but I fear people who are anti-charter will use the storyline to stir up a fear of something that isn't a universal threat. I do wish people will be informed and be vocal to prevent the spread of the legality of that kind of public school district/public charter school operator takeover activity. And support of public charter schools only for filling in gaps and to offer special programming isn't that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love Abbott Elementary and am wary of public schools run by multi-state private operators, and I have been wondering if the charter takeover thing is specific to Philadelphia or other districts where local or state laws cover that kind of thing.
I'm aware of DCPS taking over 2-3 failing DC public charter schools, but the idea of the reverse -- a school district wanting a charter operator to take over one of their schools -- was new to me. Public charter schools have taken over former DCPS buildings, but only after DCPS had decided to close them, is that correct?
Does anyone have experience with the Philadelphia school system or another place where hostile takeovers by charter operators happen?
I still love the show, but I fear people who are anti-charter will use the storyline to stir up a fear of something that isn't a universal threat. I do wish people will be informed and be vocal to prevent the spread of the legality of that kind of public school district/public charter school operator takeover activity. And support of public charter schools only for filling in gaps and to offer special programming isn't that.
Same poster. I should say, But support of public charter schools only for filling in gaps and to offer special programming isn't the same as that.
Anonymous wrote:I love Abbott Elementary and am wary of public schools run by multi-state private operators, and I have been wondering if the charter takeover thing is specific to Philadelphia or other districts where local or state laws cover that kind of thing.
I'm aware of DCPS taking over 2-3 failing DC public charter schools, but the idea of the reverse -- a school district wanting a charter operator to take over one of their schools -- was new to me. Public charter schools have taken over former DCPS buildings, but only after DCPS had decided to close them, is that correct?
Does anyone have experience with the Philadelphia school system or another place where hostile takeovers by charter operators happen?
I still love the show, but I fear people who are anti-charter will use the storyline to stir up a fear of something that isn't a universal threat. I do wish people will be informed and be vocal to prevent the spread of the legality of that kind of public school district/public charter school operator takeover activity. And support of public charter schools only for filling in gaps and to offer special programming isn't that.
-the-charter-school-movement/amp