A charter school incubator grows mom-and-pop schools
Seated before an audience of people hoping to become charter school founders, Dirk Tillotson delivered a piece of advice: “You’ve got to be crazy to do this.”
It was early spring, and Tillotson, who founded a program to help mom-and-pop charter schools open, was offering this line as both a warning and a challenge. His audience didn’t hail from the KIPPs or Harlem Success Academies of the charter world and they didn’t have millionaires in their corners, which is why they’d come to him.
Charter schools were created as a way to test out new educational ideas, but the barriers to opening an experimental school are formidable. Some schools open as franchises of charter school networks, which often help principals through the application process by providing support and greasing political wheels as needed.
David Cantor, Department of Education press secretary, resigns
David Cantor, head of the Department of Education's press juggernaut, is leaving. (Courtesy of Cantor.)After five years of taking our phone calls and returning most of them, Department of Education Press Secretary David Cantor is moving on.
He had the job longer than any of his predecessors, overseeing both periods of high-frequency press outreach and long droughts of stay-the-course defense.
His departure will make it even harder for reporters to extract information out of an opaque organization,
It was early spring, and Tillotson, who founded a program to help mom-and-pop charter schools open, was offering this line as both a warning and a challenge. His audience didn’t hail from the KIPPs or Harlem Success Academies of the charter world and they didn’t have millionaires in their corners, which is why they’d come to him.
Charter schools were created as a way to test out new educational ideas, but the barriers to opening an experimental school are formidable. Some schools open as franchises of charter school networks, which often help principals through the application process by providing support and greasing political wheels as needed.
David Cantor, Department of Education press secretary, resigns
David Cantor, head of the Department of Education's press juggernaut, is leaving. (Courtesy of Cantor.)
He had the job longer than any of his predecessors, overseeing both periods of high-frequency press outreach and long droughts of stay-the-course defense.
His departure will make it even harder for reporters to extract information out of an opaque organization,