FOCUS DC News Wire 5/26/2015

Friends of Choice in Urban Schools (FOCUS) is now the DC Charter School Alliance!

Please visit www.dccharters.org to learn about our new organization and to see the latest news and information related to DC charter schools.

The FOCUS DC website is online to see historic information, but is not actively updated.

NEWS

 
New data could help poor kids gain access to nearby charters [Center City PCS, Washington Latin PCS, E.L. Haynes PCS, KIPP DC PCS, Eagle Academy PCS and Two Rivers PCS mentiond]
Greater Greater Washington
By Natalie Wexler
May 22, 2015
 
A new report showing where students at each DC charter school live could breathe new life into an old idea: changing the law to allow charters to give an admissions preference to neighborhood residents. The new data could help officials pinpoint situations where a neighborhood preference would help rather than harm low-income students.

In the past, some have objected that giving charters the option of a neighborhood preference would exclude disadvantaged students from high-performing schools in gentrifying neighborhoods. Now the DC Public Charter School Board has mapped the geographic distribution of students at every charter campus in DC, revealing which schools attract students who live nearby and which draw them from all over.

Students at almost half the charter schools in DC have an average commute of one to two miles. But the distance students travel can vary widely from school to school.
Those at the Brightwood campus of the Center City charter network have the shortest median commute, at half a mile. (On the maps below, the red dot indicates the school and the blue dots indicate students.)

Those at Washington Latin Middle School have a median commute of 4.7 miles and come from all over DC.

Within DC's traditional public school system, the vast majority of schools are required to admit all students who live within certain geographic boundaries. As a result, over 60% of DC Public School students live within a mile of their schools.

But DC law bars charter schools from giving a preference to neighborhood residents. They must take all applicants on a first-come, first-served basis. If they have more applicants than spaces available, a random lottery determines who gets in.

If a charter were able to use a neighborhood preference, neighborhood residents would still need to enter the school lottery to apply, but they would get bumped ahead of applicants from outside the neighborhood. Those outside the neighborhood could still gain admission, especially if the school applied neighborhood preference to only a percentage of its seats.

At the same time, neighborhood preference wouldn't guarantee admission to those who live nearby. If a school got more applications from neighborhood residents than it could accommodate, some would lose out.

Task force recommended against neighborhood preference

In 2012, the DC Council appointed a task force to study changing the law to allow a neighborhood preference for charters. At the time, some charged that those in favor of the idea were catering to white parents in gentrifying neighborhoods who wanted easier access to high-performing charters, like E.L. Haynes in Petworth.

The task force recommended against neighborhood preference, in part because its members wanted to guard against that possibility. None favored requiring charters to give a preference to neighborhood residents. And the majority feared that even allowing some charters to adopt a voluntary neighborhood preference could shut disadvantaged students out of high-performing schools.

Only one member of the task force, the Deputy Mayor for Education, thought a charter should be allowed to opt for a neighborhood preference, "provided that safeguards are put into place to ensure that doing so does not adversely impact students who live in under-served neighborhoods."
 
It's not clear why the rest of the task force didn't support that view, but some charter leaders have expressed fears that even a voluntary neighborhood preference could be a slippery slope leading to a loss of autonomy. At the same time, charter leaders at some schools located in low-income neighborhoods, like KIPP DC and Eagle Academy, have argued they should be able to give a preference to nearby families.

Recently there have been signs that opposition to voluntary neighborhood preference is softening. Leaders of some 30 charter schools have signed a document saying they're willing to consider the idea, as long as it's on an "absolutely voluntary basis."

Data could help protect disadvantaged students

Now, with the new data in the PCSB report, it's also possible to determine exactly which charters are drawing students from disadvantaged areas beyond their own neighborhood or ward. Officials could use that data to decide which schools should be allowed a neighborhood preference and which shouldn't.

There's no bill pending before the DC Council that would change the law on neighborhood preference. But the PCSB's executive director Scott Pearson told the Washington Post that the new report could "offer useful information" to District leaders on the issue.

When I asked a PCSB spokesperson to elaborate on that statement, she directed me to Pearson's remarks on a recent Kojo Nnamdi Show on WAMU.

On the show, Pearson suggested that with a new mayor and new DC Council members, it might be time to take another look at neighborhood preference. "I hear from parents and I hear from many charter schools," Pearson said. "They would love a neighborhood preference. But I want to make sure as we do, that we keep in mind the least advantaged children in the city and make sure that this isn't hurting them."

Neighborhood preference would likely be limited to low-income areas

It can be frustrating for parents to live near a desirable charter school and not be able to get their child admitted. More generally, parents say the lottery system is too unpredictable and gives them only a chance, not a choice.

But a neighborhood preference along the lines envisioned by Pearson would provide predictability only for a subset of parents: those in low-income neighborhoods where there's a charter school. For schools located in gentrifying areas, a neighborhood preference could result in excluding low-income students from areas with low-performing neighborhood schools.

If the DC Council passed legislation with safeguards to ensure that kind of exclusion doesn't happen, those schools wouldn't be eligible for neighborhood preference. And it's not clear they would want the option in any event.

One example is Two Rivers, which has the longest waitlist of any school in the District, with over 1,300 names, and employs an expeditionary learning approach that appeals to many middle-class parents. The school is in NoMa but draws students from all over the District.

The school's executive director, Jessica Wodatch, says she wouldn't want a neighborhood preference because it would exclude many disadvantaged students, and the school is committed to serving a diverse population.

On the other hand, she thinks neighborhood preference would have been "a good idea" at the campus Two Rivers is opening this fall in Trinidad, which she says is surrounded by low-income residents who lack access to a high-quality school. Two Rivers has made an effort to recruit neighborhood families, but, given the number of applicants from all over, it's possible few neighborhood children will end up being admitted.

Wodatch says she would support giving the option of neighborhood preference to charters that take over shuttered DCPS buildings, as Two Rivers is doing in Trinidad. That's a position the 2012 task force endorsed as well.

But if a school like the new Two Rivers campus adopted a neighborhood preference, middle-class families might well move into the neighborhood to benefit from it. And that could have the effect of pushing out disadvantaged students, the very thing the task force wanted to avoid. So, as the task force recommended, a neighborhood preference would probably need to be time-limited to protect the interests of low-income families.

It makes sense that a low-income family that wants their child to go to a KIPP school should be able to send her to the one around the corner rather than the one several miles away. It's also important to ensure that some charter schools have diverse populations, especially when the student bodies of many traditional public schools reflect the homogeneity of their neighborhoods.

But if DC officials want to keep more affluent families in the District, they'll need to figure out a way to make high-quality school pathways more convenient and predictable for them as well.

The District of Columbia’s congressional representative thinks charter schools do a better job of educating students than private schools in the city’s voucher program.

Others aren’t so sure.

“If Congress sincerely wanted to help students in the district, it would direct the voucher funds to D.C.’s robust home-rule public school choice, our publicly accountable charter schools,” U.S. Rep. Eleanor Holmes Norton said at a congressional hearing May 14.

The D.C. Opportunity Scholarship Program is a needs-based voucher program for students from low-income families to attend a private school of their choice.

The Obama administration — and Norton — want the program dead, but Republicans and school choice advocates hope to continue funding the voucher program.

Nationally, 27 states and Washington, D.C., have private school choice programs.

Norton, a Democrat, worked with then-House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Georgia, to create the School Reform Act of 1995, which established charter schools in the city.

Norton said parents whose students have a scholarship told her they tried to get into charter schools, but couldn’t because of long waiting lists.

Overall, charter school demand has risen, with a 15 percent increase in the citywide open enrollment application.The wait list for charter schools also rose, with an increase of 18 percent this year. About 44 percent of students in D.C. attend a charter school.

Voucher support

Students, parents and school choice advocates say the voucher program is working.

Seferash Teferra, a parent of an OSP recipient, said without the scholarship, her daughter, Yalemwork, would never have been able to attend Sidwell Friends School, a highly selective private school. The school educates the children of many politicians, including President Barack Obama’s two daughters.

“Because of the OSP, Yalemwork is in an academic community where she is thriving,” Teferra said at a House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform hearing. “She not only loves the school immensely and is so passionate about learning, but she is head of three clubs and started one of her own.”

In 2014, 89 percent of the students in the OSP program graduated high school. In comparison, charter school graduation rates dipped to 69 percent last year as schools focused on rigorous academics. The number of students who graduated from a public high school rose 2 percentage points, to 58 percent, while the national four-year high school graduation average is at an all-time high of 80 percent.

Through a lottery, only 258 new students out of 1,700 applicants received the scholarships for the 2014-15 school year. Scholarships range from $12,572 for high school to $8,381 for elementary and middle school. Currently, about 1,500 students are enrolled in 48 schools across D.C.

Patrick Wolf, a University of Arkansas professor who conducted a 2010 Department of Education study of the program, testified at a congressional hearing that students benefit from the OSP.

“Parents have been empowered by the OSP and report that their children are in better and safer schools,” he said.

Megan Gallagher, senior research associate at the Urban Institute, testified there was not enough evidence to support the OSP.

“We don’t know enough about how the vouchers affect outcomes like grade retention, graduation and college enrollment,” she said.  “And while the D.C. school system continues to improve and offer expanded school choices, it isn’t clear that OSP has benefited the D.C. school system.”

Teferra said she hopes all government officials will support the continuation of the voucher program.

“I cannot believe there are some people who do not support this program and would doubt its ability to help families choose a path best suited to their individual child’s education,” she said.

 
The Washington Post
By Emma Brown
May 21, 2015
 
The Common Core-aligned tests that made their debut in 11 states and the District this spring will be approximately 90 minutes shorter next year, a change that comes after parents, teachers and school administrators expressed frustration with the amount of time devoted to the new exams.

The governing board of the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC) voted Wednesday to shorten the tests. The board, made up of state superintendents, also voted to give the exams during one 30-day testing window near the end of the school year.

This year, the tests were split between two time periods, one in early spring and one in late spring. Many teachers and parents said that testing twice was more disruptive to children’s regular classroom instruction.

PARCC officials said the changes won’t affect the ability to measure student achievement.

“Next year’s PARCC tests will take less time away from lessons, and cause less disruption to school schedules, while still keeping students on track for college and careers,” Lillian M. Lowery, Maryland’s state superintendent of schools, said in a statement.

Chris Minnich, executive director of the Council of Chief State School Officers, said he expects to see more such moves to reduce testing time. “It’s the type of thing we need to be doing to respond to the environment we’re in right now,” Minnich said. “We’ve got to be better at making sure the amount of time we’re spending on testing is the right amount.”

PARCC is one of two groups of states that received funding from the Obama administration to create new assessments aligned with the Common Core State Standards Initiative. The common tests are meant, in part, to make it easier to compare student achievement across states.

But PARCC’s membership has dwindled since 2010, when 26 states were aligned with the consortium. This spring, there was a wave of protest in some of the remaining PARCC states when a growing number of parents refused to allow their children to take the exams.

The PARCC tests are given to students in grades 3 through 8 and once in high school. The length of the tests varies by grade level. For third-grade students, testing times should drop from 9.75 hours this year to 8.25 hours next year, according to PARCC officials. High school students’ testing time should drop from 11.1 hours to 9.7 hours.

PARCC officials said the changes are based on feedback from teachers and school districts. Many others nationwide, including President Obama, also have called on states and schools to reduce the amount of time spent on standardized testing.

“This is very much driven by what the states have been hearing from their schools and districts,” PARCC spokesman David Connerty-Marin said. “The test still measures far more than other tests, so there is plenty of material to maintain the reliability of results.”

 
The Current Newspapers, pg. 10
By Davis Kennedy and Chris Kain
May 20, 2015
 
Two reports released in recent weeks examine D.C.’s educational offerings for 3- and 4-year olds, and both are largely positive. The most exciting news is that the city ranked first on both spending and enrollment — over all 50 states — in a report by the National Institute for Early Education Research. Also welcome is the institute’s assessment that D.C. met nine of 10 benchmark standards for quality.

A local report by the city office charged with overseeing pre-K offerings found that D.C. is meeting its goal of providing universal access (meaning programs are availableto all 3- and 4-year-olds, even if not all enroll). The report, released last week by the D.C. Office of the State Superintendent of Education, says the majority of pre-K classrooms in 2014 met thresholds for emotional support and classroom organization, but most didn’t meet markers for instructional support.

The value of high-quality early-education programs has been established: The D.C. report states that they can “significantly influence a child’s cognitive, linguistic, physical, and social-emotional development, providing a solid foundation for school success and improved outcomes later in life.” It notes that every dollar invested in pre-K yields about $8.60 of improved educational, health and social outcomes and reduced spending on special education, incarceration and public assistance. We see particular value in pre-K for at-risk children and kids whose parents aren’t already exposing them to a wide variety of language.

We’re pleased that D.C. has made such a major push to improve access to these programs, spurred by 2008 legislation championed by then-D.C. Council Chairman Vincent Gray. Eighty-six percent of 3- and 4-year-olds attended a publicly funded program last year, at either a D.C. Public Schools site, a public charter school or a community-based program. And some parents whose kids don’t attend undoubtedly opt out in favor of private programs, partly because there’s no guarantee of access to a particular school.

There’s certainly still more to do. While the national study seems to deem D.C. programs high quality, it notes that its benchmarks are “primarily indicators of the resources available to programs, not whether these resources are used well.” In addition, the local study found some areas that need improvement, particularly in terms of “supporting children’s higher-order thinking skills and language development.” It also shines a spotlight on Ward 7, saying scores there lagged notably behind other wards. The office calls for a strategy to address this disparity, and we’ll be watching for progress there. But overall, there’s much to cheer here. We hope the city will continue to improve this crucial element of its overall educational mission, even studying whether similar programs could benefit 2-year-olds.

 

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