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"There's a bell curve, if you will, a mixed bag," Wright said. "We've got some that are just performing out of the park, really educating students at the very, very highest levels, creating gains that not too far in the past people questioned if they were even possible. We've got some, unfortunately, at the other end of the spectrum." Robin Lake, associate director of the Center on Reinventing Public Education at the University of Washington, said the big expansion has come at the right time: Charter schools have matured and are paying more attention to effectively surveying and addressing the needs of special education, English language learners and other students. At the same time, the traditional public school system seems to have become more accepting of charters, seeing them as part of the fabric of education. She said there's also an increased focus on quality rather than quantity. "Early on people defined a strong law as one that was expansive, let new schools open," Lake said. "Now people recognize a strong law as one that creates autonomy to start up and do things differently, but are equally strong on accountability and oversight." In Florida, for example, a charter school law was passed this spring making it easier for charters deemed as "high performing" to expand. About 57 percent of Florida's charter schools were given an A by the state last school year. Six percent were given an F, including a new KIPP charter school in Jacksonville. KIPP, or the Knowledge is Power Program, has schools nationwide and is frequently cited as an example of a successful charter schools network, highlighting the difficulty of replicating good results. There are also concerns that charter schools could be exacerbating segregation in public schools. Some charters may not be truly accessible to the most disadvantaged kids, depending on transportation and proximity to the highest need areas, said Peter Weitzel, co-editor of the book "The Charter School Experiment." Weitzel said charter schools have not lived up to their expectation of being hotbeds for innovation in the classroom either. "Charter schools are frequently innovative outside the classroom," he said. "But once you get into the classroom, we're not really seeing the extent of innovation that people had hoped to see."
[Associated
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