Wall Street Journal
June 25, 2019
Wall Street Journal has words for the Mayor and advice for Congress
The Washington, D.C. City Council on Wednesday is meeting to discuss charter schools. Let’s hope someone asks Mayor Muriel Bowser why her administration is denying space to charters—at the same time it plans to spend millions to refurbish under-utilized traditional schools.
The most glaring example is the decision to evict AppleTree Early Learning Public Charter School from the campus of Jefferson Middle School, a traditional public school in the city’s southwest. AppleTree is a top performing charter serving pre-K students with the aim of closing the achievement gap before these children get to kindergarten. For five years it has operated out of portable classrooms on the Jefferson Middle School campus while it looks for more permanent space.
But city officials now say AppleTree needs to be out by July 31 because they want to refurbish Jefferson. The eviction notice was signed by Deputy Mayor for Education Paul Kihn. The city plans to spend $80 million to modernize Jefferson and expand its capacity to 540 kids when it reopens—though there are only 340 kids enrolled now.
Meanwhile, the city has a waiting list of 11,000 children for charters. The advent of charters has been one of the great reforms of the D.C. school system, giving parents more good schools to choose from and providing competition for traditional schools. But as in New York, they often find themselves hostage to officials who deny them space.
If Mayor Bowser won’t find space for well-performing charters such as AppleTree, maybe Congress—which passed the reform that led to charters opening in the district—should take steps to make it harder for city officials to jerk these charter kids around.
Picture of Jefferson Middle School |
Picture of Appletree |
















Anti-charter groups should stay out of debate
Jeanne Allen: Anti-charter groups should stay out of debate (Opinion)
Charlestion Gazette-Mail | June 26, 2019
By Jeanne Allen, Founder and CEO of CER
Monday night, the West Virginia Legislature passed a bill allowing for the very limited operation of charter schools. It won’t be enough in a state struggling to pass most of its students.
But just the other week, New York-based union president Randi Weingarten was in Charleston, pounding her chest about how great West Virginia public education was doing and how little support charter schools had in the state.
Really Randi?
As John Adams said, everyone’s entitled to their own opinion, but not to their own facts. The state’s education system is rated second to last, and for good reason.
Here are the most recent facts from the National Assessment of Education Progress scores for West Virginia. Only 35 percent of fourth-graders, 24 percent of eighth-graders and 14 percent of high school seniors were rated “proficient” in math. For reading, the “proficient” scores were 32 percent, 28 percent and, again, 28 percent, respectively. Only one grade had 7 percent of its students rated as “advanced.” All the others had “advanced” scores of 1 to 2 percent.
Randi Weingarten thinks those scores are just fine. Do you?
Weingarten says the union “has actually done things” for public schools, and that’s hard to argue with. What they’ve done is keep West Virginia students trapped in underperforming schools with no hope for escape. As the NAEP summation for the state says: “Average scale score for West Virginia is significantly lower than national public schools.”
Weingarten also makes the absurd assertion that most residents oppose charters. She needs to get out of her union-dominated show meetings and talk to real people. There were elections in November 2018, and West Virginians elected legislative majorities strongly supportive of charters and of choice. Vox populi, Randi Weingarten.
Charters are public schools, and they by and large serve students who are economically disadvantaged or are minorities.
Of course, all public schools need sufficient funding. Of course, competent teachers should be paid — and the best ones highly paid. The solution to failing public schools is not in punishing successful public schools, which happen to be charters, but lies in strengthening them all. West Virginians know how to do that better than New York union organizers.
Randi Weingarten needs to butt out of the Mountain State and let its people decide what’s best for their kids. A large charter school network would provide great opportunity for students throughout West Virginia. Unfortunately, the restrictive new bill won’t be able to offer nearly the type of innovative education the students of West Virginia deserve.
Follow Jeanne on Twitter or LinkedIn or some of her other work here.
Founded in 1993, the Center for Education Reform aims to expand educational opportunities that lead to improved economic outcomes for all Americans — particularly our youth — ensuring that conditions are ripe for innovation, freedom and flexibility throughout U.S. education.