Valerie Strauss- The link between charter school expansion and increasing segregation [View all]
One thing that proponents of the broad expansion of charter schools never talk about is the evidence of how charters are leading to increasing segregation by race, ethnicity and income. Here George Washington University Research Professor Iris C. Rotberg explores this connection. She is the co-director of the Center for Curriculum, Standards and Technology at George Washington Universitys Graduate School of Education and Human Development, and she focuses on teacher development, national certification of teachers, national standards, and the problems of violence in schools. This first appeared in Kappan magazine, a publication of PDK International, a professional education association.
By Iris C. Rotberg
In remarks at the 2013 annual meeting of the American Educational Research Association, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan emphasized the importance of compelling educational research and expressed concern that today educators and policy makers still have a large unmet need for relevant research. . . . Sadly, school leaders and educators too often have to guess when they make education policy.
The fact is we dont have to guess about the consequences of one of the Obama administrations most visible policies: the national expansion of charter schools. We need only turn to a large body of relevant research showing that charter schools, on average, dont have an academic advantage over traditional public schools, but they do have a significant risk of leading to increased segregation.
In spite of this, the policy on charter schools remains a centerpiece of the administrations initiatives (as it was, in a different form, in the Bush administration), despite abundant evidence that the policy is inconsistent with the longstanding goal of promoting school integration.
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http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2014/03/13/the-link-between-charter-school-expansion-and-increasing-segregation/