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Wednesday, February 1, 2017

What About Rural Charters

In a recent panel discussion, Nine Rees, the head honcho of the National Alliance of Public [sic] Charter Schools observed that "It is actually quite hard to expand charter schools in a lot of rural communities because there's no political base of support for those kinds of changes." And then she was on to other stuff (I'm working my way through that video and will have commentary on the whole thing some day, soon).

But I think that's a statement worth examining, both because I'm in a small town/rural community, and because that lack of a rural political base tells us something about the problems of the modern charter movement.

Part of the rural charter problem isn't political support at all-- it's market. My district, for example, has roughly 150 students per grade level, which means that there's not a lot of market here to tap. A charter would have to really hustle to round up enough students to make business sense, and certainly compared to a customer-rich urban environment it's a tough challenge. On top of that, those few students are spread out geographically, and while the "Getting the kid to school is the parents' problem" may fly in urban districts, out here, folks expect schools to provide transportation. Want to figure out the costs of sending a school bus an extra thirty miles every day to pick up one kid? Why try to set up your ice cream stand at a remote Antarctic outpost when you can set it up on a busy street corner in Miami?

But there's also a lack of political support because of the money.

A big urban district is swimming in so much money that we can shuffle some around and it may not be super-obvious how much money was lost when a charter opened. It's significant, and it's damaging, but it's also hard for the average citizen to notice or track.



But in rural areas, money is already stretched tight, and while a loss of a half million dollars is a minor inconvenience in big districts, in a small rural district it can be crippling.

We do have one kind of charter in rural areas of PA-- cyber-charters. And they are hurting us. A few dozen students gone to cybers don't make the slightest difference in district expenses, but they cost the district a half-million dollars and that has translated into program cuts and closed buildings (there is also an impact in PA from the mismanagement of the pension fund). It is not hard for even the least attentive taxpayer to follow this conversation:

Taxpayer: Why did you close our elementary school?

School board: We needed to save a half a million dollars. Also, in other news, this year we had to pay half a million dollars out to cyber schools.

Charter schools hurt public schools. Charter schools drain resources from public schools, resources that they need to maintain their current level of service. In big busy setting, with lots of numbers and schools and students flying about, it's possible to generate enough smoke and mirrors to obscure that simple fact, but in a rural area, it is not.

Granted, it doesn't have to be true. States could choose to say to taxpayers, "We can have charter schools, but we'll have to raise school taxes to pay for them." So far, no politician seems interested in making that pitch.

There are other reasons that rural areas are not ripe charter markets. For instance, rural schools identify pretty strongly with their communities. Pennsylvania is a prime example. We have about 500 school districts which is, honestly, nuts. There should be fewer. But every time anyone starts a conversation about merging districts, there is a prodigious amount of noise about community and heritage and tradition and why students don't want to stop being a Humbletown Husky in order to become a Vistaville Viking.

Nor do I see taxpayers wanting to trade a school board run by neighbors that you see in the store, talk to at church, yell at at a public board meeting, or just call on the phone with whatever is bugging you about the schools-- well, who would wants to trade that for a board of strangers that meet in secret in some other city?

There is no mystery in why charters have not been driven to pursue rural markets, and there's no mystery in why rural communities lack the political motivation to pursue modern charter businesses. But it's important to remember that there isn't anything wrong with rural charters that isn't also wrong with charters in every other location.

2 comments:

  1. The other option is what we do in Wisconsin - district sponsored charter schools. My rural district is smaller than yours (around 110 students per grade). However, we have a public project based charter school that is housed in one of our district buildings, is supported entirely by the district and outside donations and is open to all students. If the number of applicants exceeds the open slots, students are chosen by lottery. The school has its own advisory board which is required to have a school board representative. While is sounds like the school-within-a-school model, as a charter it is released from some of the requirements of a traditional public school. Our district charter is well supported and seems to be meeting a need.

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  2. Yep. I had the honor of working for several years in a tiny school district. We had about 200 students total in K-12. The school district included 3 little towns, and it is the heartbeat of the community. This was in the days before WIFI, and having internet access at home was expensive, so the school computer lab was open 3 nights a week for anybody who wanted to use it. The library was as well, and local citizens had check-out privileges. Any municipal or social gathering that needed space for more than a dozen or so people used the school cafetorium. Except for one year when the 8th grade class had 12 students, I never had more than 8 students in a class. We had an excellent Agricultural vocational program, AP & dual credit courses, sports & fine arts for every student. A couple of times a year we'd have a district-wide ice cream party, and all the local people were welcome to attend, whether or not they had any kids in school. Any charter programs would be looked at with suspicion in a place like that.

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