On Thursday, as the NY Times revealed, Eva Moskowitz closed her Success Charters for the day, and told parents that they had to accompany their children to a rally near City Hall or find alternate baby-sitting for them. NY1 reported that all 32 of her schools had the morning off and parents got a wake-up call reminding them to attend. She bussed parents, students and staff to the rally; as did Achievement First charters. One can only imagine the criticism in the media if any public school had called off classes and demanded that parents do the same for a political rally.
Here is an analysis of Victoria Frye, parent and CEC member in District 6 in Washington Heights on the claims of those who support Success Academy and charters more generally, with data and links for those who want to explore the issue further.
-- Victoria (Tory) Frye
Here is an analysis of Victoria Frye, parent and CEC member in District 6 in Washington Heights on the claims of those who support Success Academy and charters more generally, with data and links for those who want to explore the issue further.
Waitlists
Looking at “demand” data for schools
is obviously a market-based approach to education. Even if one does
believe that market or business models are ideal for educating children,
waitlists prove nothing. Guess how many kids are on the wait list
for District 6 schools? Over 3,000. How is that possible? The same
families applied to multiple schools, probably including charter
schools.
Charter school waitlists are equally
inflated. Even a D6 elementary school that is labeled as failing by
“Families for Excellent Education” in their laughable “research” report TheForgotten Fourth,
PS 132 (The Juan Pablo Duarte School) had 152 applicants for just 50 seats;
what does that demonstrate? Some D6 schools had hundreds of students
wait listed last spring. School acceptance rates were 18 and 14% for PS 311
and 314 -- both smaller than the acceptance rates of 19% percent claimed by Success Academy in its SUNY application, asking for the authority to establish 14 new charters across the city.
Data on enrollment at the Success Academies in D2 shows that good
portions, from a quarter to a third of students, come from outside the district. How
does that demonstrate “demand” within D2 for a Success Academy? So
the “evidence” (if you choose to interpret it that way) is clear: the demand
for public schools eclipses the demand for charters. So, no,
charters should not get space or resources until we replicate the "high
demand" and "high performing" public schools in our
city. For more on this see this analysis.
Apples to Apples Comparisons
Luckily
some serious researchers have looked at this issue. Bruce Baker, a
professor Education at Rutgers, for example put together this chart:
According
to 2013 school report cards, “PS 149 has nearly double the number of special
needs students compared to Academy 1: 20.6% compared to 12.6%, and more
than four times the number of English Language learners --18.9% compared to
only 4.1% at Success Academy.” (As described here: ) Success
also suspends students at double the rate of their local public schools, for
example Harlem Success 1, 2, 3, and 4 suspended students at a rate of 22, 15,
14 and 19% as compared with 6, 7, and 9% in Districts 3, 4, and 5. And again
the IBO reports that special needs students leave charters at a much higher
rate than comparable public school students ().
And when charter students leave or are counseled out of a charter they do not
go to another charter, they go to a public school. Even SUNY, as the
charter authorizer, acknowledges that attrition at Success is
problematic.
Regarding inclusion at public schools, we have a
citywide policy of inclusion that mandates that local neighborhood schools must
accommodate special needs students. Budget realities constitute real
barriers to schools being able to do this, so there is a tension between the
relatively new inclusion policy and years and years of budget
cuts. The Chancellor has acknowledged this issue; but as of yet, I
have heard of no solution to it.
Space
Our D6 public schools do not have
space – FULL STOP. We are over 90% capacity district-wide with the faulty capacity formula and we
have numerous schools that are desperately in need of new facilities. We
have the largest average class size in D6 since 2006. Last year, 6 D6 schools
have K class averages of 25+. Ten D6 schools had grade 1-3 class averages of
25+. Five D6 schools had at least one 1-3 class with 30+. 14 D6 had at least
one 4-8 class with 30+. PS 366 had a K class with 28 students. PS 153 had a 1st grade
class with 32 students. PS 28 had a 2nd grade class with 31
students. PS 132, a struggling school, had a 3rd grade class
with 29 students. The average D6 utilization rate is 94%.
Thirteen
schools are over 100% utilization, including PS/IS 187, which is blocks away
from the Mother Cabrini High School, which the DOE handed over to Success
Academy. D6 also has 19 “TCUs” (aka trailers) at 3 schools, not
including the “mini buildings” at schools like PS 192/325. Mott Hall
is in a building that is dilapidated and dangerous; it ought to be condemned.
So someone please explain to me how our D6 public schools have “space” for
charter schools? Taking space from D6 schools will HARM D6 students.
Hedge Fund supporters
Hedge fund people do not donate to
systems that educate the masses; if they did, they would have been donating to
public schools all along and/or advocating for increasing taxes on capital
gains and investment incomes to levels that would fund public schools at the
same levels of private schools. Why have they not been doing
this? I thought they cared deeply about public school
students? Why do they only donate to charter
schools or PACS that advocate vouchers and charters? They see a
business opportunity wrapped in a bogus charitable donation; they are about
creating new “markets” and the best way to do this is to engage in
"disruption," which is exactly what charters do. The fact
is they see public education as a 700 billion dollar (now 1T?) industry waiting
to be privatized; and they need an education "crisis," a
private-public "solution" (created by ALEC) and then lobbyists and
politicians to pave the way for them. This is well documented, for example here.
Just
a taste of what they have in store for children in the future: virtual schools.
“Baird Equity
Research, in a giddy note to investors this year about the potential growth of
K12 Inc., noted, “capturing just two million (3.5%) of the addressable market
yields a market opportunity of approximately $12 billion … Over the next three
years, we believe that the company is capable of 7%+ organic revenue growth
with modest margin expansion.” How will it achieve this growth? According to
Baird, K12 Inc.’s “competency in lobbying in new states” is “another key point
of differentiation.” The analyst note describes “K12’s success in working
closely with state policymakers and school districts to enable the expansion of
virtual schools into new states or districts” as a key asset. “The company has
years of experience in successfully lobbying to get legislation passed to allow
virtual schools to operate,” Baird concludes.”
Funding
The Independent Budget Office, which
is just what its name says, reports that charters get more money per student
than public schools.
As well, each new charter gets $500K to start up, along with renovations
etc. This new round will cost us a cool 7M just to start. If we
accept that a competition-/market-based model of education is the way to go,
and schools should be marketing to and competing for students, then we need an
even playing field where public schools can offer the same programs and
resources that charters do, with their hedge fund donor-money and extended
days.
Eva
Moskowitz earns 475K per year and according to Wikipedia has 4
assistants. She runs 22 schools. The NYC schools
Chancellor earns $200K. Eva also moved her offices to Wall Street recently.
So let's start paying public school teachers and administrators similar
salaries and see what happens. The truth is that Eva is getting paid
this much because it is expensive to be the face of the destruction of the
public education in the US, which is what she will go down in history as, if we
let her do it.
Quality Schools
First, I have to point out that one
of the schools included in The Forgotten Fourth report is D6’s Harbor Heights middle
school, which is a school for new arrivals to the US. The research
was so sloppy that they did not even eliminate schools where students who just
arrived in the US and do not speak English AT ALL attend and - as would be
expected - do miserably on the state ENGLISH tests. It’s also
incredibly disrespectful to the educators and students in the
school.
According to CEC1 President, a D1 school for new arrivals
was also included in the report. Ignoring this, but accepting charters’
definition of “success,” if they are doing something unique, why is it not
being replicated in public schools? If some children flourish under this model,
then we do not need to remove the charter school cap statewide; we can just
start doing what charters do. If it is the longer school day, then
lengthen it and pay teachers for their time. If it is instruction
that has been replicated many times over at various charter schools, then teach
public school teachers to do it and implement it in magnet public schools to
which parents can choose to send their children.
But the truth is
that this is not about implementing successful strategies in a public system to
the benefit of all public school students. It is about privatizing
public education in the US and opening up a trillion dollar market to
investors. And the best way to go about this is to make it look like
and to help public schools “fail” and that there is a “demand” for charters and
thus we should just turn the whole system over to charters. That’s
what today’s rally was about; next is to try to lift the charter
cap.
And, finally, teacher
attrition…
Teacher attrition at Success is
stunning. As noted in this recent article:
“In Harlem
Success Academies 1-4, the only schools for which the state posted turnover
data, more than half of all teachers left the schools ahead of the 2013-14
school year. In one school, three out of four teachers departed.” The
model is clearly unsustainable and obviously not “family-friendly” (which may
explain their relatively young and inexperienced teachers and principals), but
then again they only have to sustain it long enough to disrupt the system, buy
the politicians, pass the legislation and open the market…
Plenty of NYC public schools stink
and need very serious attention - don't get me wrong. The current state
of racial, ethnic and social class-based segregation must be addressed.
School funding must be addressed and child poverty must be addressed.
And no we cannot wait to get all of that right before we implement
evidence-based education strategies that drive student achievement, like
integrated schools and small class sizes (both shown to drive performance).
And if the research shows (using apples to apples comparisons) that some
charters use techniques that improve achievement that public schools do not, given the
same students, resources and environments, then we should implement the
techniques in public schools.
Great Post Tory.
ReplyDeleteJust to clarify- as I may have misspoken. Included in the list of schools that were winnowed by only two metrics- conveniently the ones that make charter schools appear to measure up to district schools- are some D1 schools that serve hugely disproportionate numbers of at risk students:students with disabilities, English language learners, students in temporary housing and newcomers.