About Contact Archives RSS Columns Photos

IF I MAY DO A LITTLE NEPO-BLOGGING…

By Betsy Newmark  •  November 17, 2005 10:00 AM

My daughter has a column up at Tech Central Station about good news from New Orleans concerning charter schools.

Katrina made the already-monumental task facing Alvarez & Marsal even more difficult and urgent. They may be able to improve the system in the long run, but certainly not with the speed that the post-Katrina reconstruction demands; in the short run, it’s likely to be the same bureaucracy in charge as before. And why would anyone want that? Indeed, private foundations, such as the Gates Foundation and the Aspen Institute, are reportedly willing to fund brand-new schools for New Orleans but not if the dysfunctional leadership remains in place.

Therein lies an immediate advantage of the switch to charter schools: charter schools sidestep the management mess because, to a large degree, they are self-governing. They handle their own budgets, manage their own personnel, and organize their own curricula, schedules, and policies. The role of the school district bureaucracy shrinks to handing out money and administering the accountability program.

Furthermore, the site-based management at charter schools makes them more flexible, a quality that will be particularly important in the uncertain environment of post-Katrina New Orleans. It will be difficult to predict how many students will come back, when and where they will show up, what their needs will be, and what sort of schools they will prefer. A system of many independent schools will be better able to adapt to a changing, unpredictable situation than a system of centralized control.

Another advantage of charter schools in New Orleans is that they may be able to, over time, improve the system’s miserable academic performance. Recently-released 2004-05 test score data show that 170 Louisiana public schools were rated “academically unacceptable,” and 68 were in Orleans Parish — over half of the district’s schools. On the Spring 2005 Graduate Exit Exam, high-schoolers in the district received “unsatisfactory” scores at a rate twice the state average; in many New Orleans high schools, over half of test-takers scored in the “unsatisfactory” range. The high-stakes tests for fourth and eighth graders had similar results.

While these poor-performing schools have been allowed to muddle on for many years, a charter school that consistently posted such low test scores would likely be shut down. The difference in consequences faced by charter and regular public schools gives charter schools much more powerful incentives to achieve. In addition, because charter schools are free to innovate — by trying out a new curriculum or experimenting with longer school days, for instance — they will bring fresh ideas to the table.

Posted in: Uncategorized

Add your opinion

Note from Michelle: This section is for comments from michellemalkin.com's community of registered readers. Please don't assume that I agree with or endorse any particular comment just because I let it stand. A reminder: Anyone who fails to comply with my terms of use may lose his or her posting privilege.

Trackbacks

  1. The Cassandra Page
  2. Don Surber
  3. aciyclovior

Trackback URL

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Where in the world

January 9, 2009 03:03 PM by Michelle Malkin

18 Comments | 0 Trackbacks

Where in the world

January 8, 2009 05:14 AM by Michelle Malkin

20 Comments | 0 Trackbacks

The MSM, Gaza, and PJTV

January 7, 2009 11:31 AM by Michelle Malkin

21 Comments | 0 Trackbacks

First hate mail of 2009

January 1, 2009 12:04 PM by Michelle Malkin

191 Comments | 7 Trackbacks

See-Dubya’s New Year’s Resolutions

January 1, 2009 12:59 AM by see-dubya

34 Comments | 4 Trackbacks

Help a brother out.

Predictions for the New Year

December 31, 2008 06:16 PM by Michelle Malkin

87 Comments | 1 Trackback

Where in the world

December 31, 2008 12:50 PM by Michelle Malkin

40 Comments | 0 Trackbacks

President Chesty McCheesecake

December 29, 2008 07:10 PM by Michelle Malkin

87 Comments | 7 Trackbacks


Categories: Uncategorized