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What's Public About Charter Schools?

Lessons Learned About Choice and Accountability

Charter schools are a vibrant and widely discussed school reform issue, but how much do we really know about how they measure up in terms of student achievement, choice, innovation, and accountability? Esteemed charter school researchers, Miron and Nelson, have boiled down the results of their in-depth study of charter schools and present answers to some of these central questions:

  • How do students in charter schools perform compared to students in non-charter schools?
  • Have charter schools succeeded as labs of educational innovations?
  • What types of professional development enhancements and teaching environments do charter schools provide for their teachers?
  • How do the costs of charter schools compare with non-charter schools?
  • What effect have for-profit charter school operators had on charter school students and operations?

Full description


Product Details
  • Grade Level: PreK-12
  • ISBN: 9780761945383
  • Published By: Corwin
  • Year: 2002
  • Page Count: 256
  • Publication date: April 02, 2002

Price: $40.95

Price: $40.95
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Description

Description

"What's Public About Charter Schools? by Gary Miron and Christopher Nelson deserves to be cited repeatedly as the debate about charter schools continues. The researchers' careful and balanced analysis of the situation in Michigan has much to say about the charter school movement across the country and leads to important cautions about whether and how the movement should proceed. These recommendations provide concrete and practical solutions for improving charter schools by addressing some of the shortcoming that the authors have uncovered."
—Education Review
, October 2002

"What's Public About Charter Schools? provides valuable insights for charter school operators and advocates, school administrators, community members, politicians, and policy makers looking for data upon which to base decision making. Miron and Nelson have lived school reform evaluation for years, and their experience shows in this thoughtful and useful book."
Kyle L. Peck, Charter School Founder and Professor of Education
Pennsylvania State University

"This is the most comprehensive book that I have seen on charter schools. Both the descriptive data and the analysis are an important contribution."
Henry M. Levin, Director
National Center for the Study of Privatization in Education
Teachers College, Columbia University

"Miron and Nelson make a significant contribution to the debate about school restructuring reforms provide a strikingly balanced look at the charter school movement in action. Their conclusions and recommendations offer important lessons to school reformers, researchers, and policymakers both in the United States and internationally."
Priscilla Wohlstetter, Director
Center on Educational Governance
Rossier School of Education, University of Southern California

"This book covers essential material and will be of interest for classes on education policy and educational administration and will command an audience among school reformers and policy analysts."
William L. Boyd, Distinguished Professor of Education
Pennsylvania State University
University Park, PA

How much do we really know about the quality of education in charter schools?

Here are the documented answers to the questions we all have about student achievement, choice, innovation, and accountability:

    • How do students in charter schools perform compared to students in public, non-charter schools?
    • Have charter schools succeeded as "laboratories" of educational innovation?
    • How do the costs of charter schools compare with non-charter schools?
    • What types of professional development enhancements and teaching environments do charter schools provide for their teachers?
    • What effect has privatization had on charter school students and operations?

Esteemed charter school researchers, Gary Miron and Christopher Nelson, have carefully examined a wealth of evidence about charter schools and boiled down the results in this insightful, accessible work. Policymakers, researchers, school administrators, parents, and others interested in school reform will find valuable information about school choice, privatization, and new forms of holding schools accountable—vital data on evaluating this new private/public hybrid and its success at serving the core purpose of public education.

Author(s)

Author(s)

Gary Miron photo

Gary Miron

Gary Miron has a diverse background in the field of education. He worked as a public school teacher in Michigan in the mid-1980s. Later he worked as an educational researcher and university instructor in the field of education. Currently, he is Principal Research Associate at Western Michigan University's Evaluation Center. There, he has completed or is working on a variety of school reform evaluations including evaluations of charter schools in Michigan, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Illinois, and Cleveland. In Connecticut and Cleveland, he has been involved in providing training and technical assistance to charter schools in terms of helping them develop and implement accountability plans and self-evaluations. He has also conducted a study of student achievement gains in schools operated by Edison Schools Inc. Before joining The Evaluation Center, Dr. Miron worked at Stockholm University where he had completed his graduate studies. While in Sweden he conducted a study on the national voucher reform in the early 1990s and later took part in a study of school restructuring in Europe. He has researched and written on such topics as educational evaluation, special needs education, educational planning and policy, multimethod research, charter schools, and school reform.
Christopher Nelson photo

Christopher Nelson

Christopher Nelson is Senior Research Associate at Western Michigan University’s Evaluation Center, where he works on large-scale evaluations of state charter school laws. He is project manager for evaluations in Pennsylvania, Illinois, and the city of Cleveland, and has contributed to evaluation reports on charter schools in Michigan and Connecticut. Before joining The Evaluation Center, Dr. Nelson was on the faculty of the H. John Heinz III School of Public Policy and Management at Carnegie Mellon University, where he taught courses on evaluation methodology, policy analysis, and public organizations. While in Pittsburgh, Nelson worked on a number of regional education policy studies,including a large-scale assessment of work force readiness among high school students, and a study of early-grade literacy. In addition, he played a leading role in the development of an education policy indicator system that is still in use today. Nelson holds an M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and a B.A. summa cum laude from the University of Minnesota, where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa.
Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Preface

Outline of the Book

Acknowledgments

About the Authors

Chapter 1: Charter Schools and Privatization

What Are Chater Schools? A Crash Course in the Charter Concept

Accountability to Whom? The New Politics of Education

What's Public About Charter Schools?

Formalist and Functionalist Views of Public-ness

Chapter 2: Shifting From Public to Private: Historical and Political Backdrop

Charter Schools in the National and International Context

The Public-Private Pendulum in Michigan

The Emergence of Michigan's Charter School Law

Chapter 3: The Charter School Reform in Michigan

The Charter School Concept in Michigan

The Growth and Development of Michigan Charter Schools

Chapter 4: Charter School Finance

How Michigan Funds Charter Schools

General Fund Expenditures

Case Studies of Charter School and School District Revenues and Expenditures

The Cost Advantage of Charter Schools

Chapter 5: Choice and Access

Distribution by Grade

Racial/Ethnic Composition of the Charter Schools

Income, Family Structure, and Other Characteristics

Special Education--or the Lack of It--in Michigan Charter Schools

Beyond Demographics: Reasons for Choosing Charter Schools

Chapter 6: Teachers' Characteristics and Working Conditions

Teacher Demographics

Certification and Qualification of Teachers

Reasons to Seek Employment at a Charter School

Working Conditions and Levels of Satisfaction

Chapter 7: Innovation and Impact

Impact on Surrounding School Districts

Impacts on Educational Practice

The Diffusion of Charter School Innovations and Practices

Chapter 8: Student Achievement

Michigan in National Context

Assessing Charter School Impacts in Michigan

A Summary of the Findings

EMOs and Student Achievement

Chapter 9: Customer Satisfaction

Nontest Indicators of Academic Performance

Satisfaction With and Accomplishment of Mission

Satisfaction With Curriculum and Instruction

Satisfaction With Facilities and Available Resources

The Relationship Between Market and Performance Accountability

Chapter 10: The Effects of Education Management Organizations

The Growth of EMO Involvement in Charter Schools

Roles and Types of EMOs

Ownership of Charter Schools and the Problem of Bundling

Control and Governance of Charter Schools: Is the Tail Wagging the Dog?

Operating Charter Schools for Profit: Strategies and Consequences

Chapter 11: Lessons in Choice and Accountability

What's Public About Michigan Charter Schools? A Review of the Evidence

Are Charter Schools a Good Public Investment? The Question of Efficiency

Diagnoses and Prescriptions for Charter School Laws

The Future of Choice and Accountability

Appendix A: Key Historical Developments in Michigan That Have Affected the Public and Private Nature of Schooling

Appendix B: Background and Supporting Documentation for Analysis of Student Achievement

Appendix C: List of EMOs and the Number of Schools They Operated in 2000-01

References

Index

Reviews

Reviews

Price: $40.95
Volume Discounts applied in Shopping Cart

For Instructors

Request Review Copy

When you select 'request review copy', you will be redirected to Sage Publishing (our parent site) to process your request.