The study, conducted and published by the National Alliance for Public Charter
Schools (NAPCS), measures the progress of the public charter school movement in
the 26 states from which it has collected data.
Illinois finds itself directly in the middle, ranking 13 out of 26 and scoring
60 points out of a possible 116.
The annual study evaluates public charter school performance based on indicators
including charter school facility growth, percentage of charter schools to
traditional public schools, diversity of charter school enrollees and other
factors. It also offers suggestions for how charter school growth can continue
its upward trend in each state.
According to the numbers from NAPCS, Illinois scored well relative to other
states in terms of new growth rate in 2013-2014 as well as academic performance
within charter schools.
Fifty-seven new public charters opened last year in Illinois, a 9-percent growth
rate from the previous year, according to the study, which also said that on
average, public charter school students exhibited higher academic competency
compared to their traditional public school counterparts.
The study also found Illinois ranked relatively low in total charter school
facilities and attendance — 3 percent of the state’s public schools are charters
and 3 percent of the state’s public school students attend charter schools.
One community in the state had more than 10 percent of its public school
students attending charter schools last year.
“There are small proportions of public charter schools and public charter school
students in Illinois,” the study says. “Such students are achieving better
reading and math student outcomes when compared with their peers in traditional
public schools.”
The NAPCS addressed public policy when it comes to charter schools, saying “We
encourage the state to enact policies to increase the impact of such success,
including lifting its caps on charter school growth and ensuring equitable
operational funding and equitable access to capital funding and facilities.”
Lindsey Burke is an education policy fellow at the Heritage Foundation and said
the increasing popularity of public charter schools is a good thing for
educational improvement.
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“Increasing charter school options and attendance
growth benefits students and their families for a variety of
reasons,” Burke said. “It provides an alternative option when the
traditional school in a family’s district doesn’t perform well or
doesn’t offer advanced opportunities for gifted students. It also
creates competition amongst educational options, which makes
everyone strive to perform at a higher level.”
While the total charter school student percentage is low at 3
percent, the Illinois Network of Charter Schools (INCS) notes that
that is a number on the rise, especially compared to Chicago Public
Schools enrollment.
Jodie Cantrall is the communications manager for the
Illinois Network of Charter Schools. She said progress for charter
schools in Illinois is essential to ensuring successful educational
experiences for the children in the state.
“It’s important that the trend of increased charter school
accessibility continues,” Rogalski said. “Increasing school choice
options gives more kids and their parents an avenue for success they
might not have had otherwise.”
There is still room for improvement, Cantrall says, but the
consistent rate of growth is a good thing.
“Each year there is more interest and applications to public charter
schools across the state,” she said. “There is obviously a demand
for this product and it’s vital that we continue the work necessary
to meet that growing demand. This isn’t about an ‘us vs. them’
mentality, it’s about providing parents the power determine what the
best fit is for their children.”
In 2004, 2.5 percent of public school students in Chicago attended
charter schools. In 2014, that number has increased to 14.3 percent,
according to the INCS.
Charter school campuses have increased by more than 90 since 2004.
The study found Illinois’ public charter schools are more diverse,
enrolling 47 percent more students of a racial and ethnic minority
when compared to traditional public schools.
As a suggestion for improvement, the NAPCS noted that Illinois has
no virtual public charter schools – high school-educational
equivalency available through online means – and that the state
could benefit from pursuing that option as well.
[This
article courtesy of
Watchdog.]
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