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Tuesday, August 28, 2012

New study: Urban charter schools draw nearly a third of their students from private schools | Get Schooled

New study: Urban charter schools draw nearly a third of their students from private schools | Get Schooled:


New study: Urban charter schools draw nearly a third of their students from private schools

A new study released today by the Cato Institute Center for Educational Freedom examines a question that hasn’t garnered any attention in the charter school debate here in Georgia: Where do public charter schools get their students, from traditional public schools or private schools?
I hope to talk today to the economist who authored the Cato study, Richard Buddin with the RAND Corporation, but here is the essence of his surprising findings: Despite their intention to target poor and under-served students, charters schools draw nearly a third of their elementary school enrollments from students who would have attended private, not public schools. This exodus from private schools to public charter schools costs taxpayers $1.8 billion a year, according to the study.
The study found: