Friday, October 28, 2016

Mike Klonsky's SmallTalk Blog: New study provides more good reasons to vote NO on 2 in Massachusetts

Mike Klonsky's SmallTalk Blog: New study provides more good reasons to vote NO on 2 in Massachusetts:

New study provides more good reasons to vote NO on 2 in Massachusetts



On Tuesday, voters in Massachusetts will decide whether or not to lift the cap on their state's privately-run charter schools. I hope they will consider the findings in a newly-released studydone by Michael Robinson, who describes himself as a concerned parent, taxpayer, and private citizen, and vote NO on Question 2.

Like Mr. Robinson, who has children of his own with disabilities, this issue is more than academic for me, both as an educator and grandparent of a Chicago student with disabilities. The unconstrained expansion of charters has not only drained badly-needed resources from our city's public schools, it has led to further segregation of special-needs and disabled students and less than adequate services delivered to those students within the charters themselves. 

Robinson's study confirms a pile of anecdotal evidence showing that MA charter schools underserve students with disabilities and attempt to improve standardized test performance by using discipline (especially suspensions) as a punitive lever, which many of these schools use to encourage attrition for this resource-intensive population. 

This new report on Massachusetts charters, released today, found "91.3% of districts with highest discipline rates for special education students are charter schools" and 25% of charters have no full-time special educators.

The movement against raising the charter cap is growing. Recent polls show the ballot Mike Klonsky's SmallTalk Blog: New study provides more good reasons to vote NO on 2 in Massachusetts: