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Thursday, April 26, 2018

Fordham Reports On Ripe Charter Markets

Today the Fordham Institute released what it calls a report on "charter deserts." I think it could be more accurately called an aid for targeting ripe and ready charter school markets, but it comes equipped with some interesting a potentially useful data tools, and so may still be worth a look.

"Charter desert" is the term Fordham uses for "areas of relatively high poverty where there are no charter schools." In other words, places that are ripe for charter picking.

We could put a new charter right next to that cactus
Fordham offers this as a solution to the "problem" of slowing charter growth. Charters have achieved "market share" of over 20% in more than three dozen cities, so maybe it's time to look for "new frontiers." Sure, the report acknowledges, "one option is to start more charters in affluent communities," but, well, let's change the subject and rather than discuss the many reasons that affluent communities have no real interest in charter schools, let's change the subject to market opportunities we may have missed.

Are we overlooking neighborhoods in America that are already home to plenty of poor kids, and contain the population density necessary to make school choice work, but lack charter school options? Especially communities in the inner-ring suburbs of flourishing cities, which increasingly are becoming magnets for poor and working-class families priced out of gentrifying areas?

To that end, a research team at Miami University of Ohio has assembled an interactive map, and that map is pretty cool. It shows broad blocks of poverty and gives the location (with info) of every charter and every public elementary school. You can zoom in and out and generally swoop around, and while you may not learn anything new, you get a real sense of charter school distribution. Clustered around certain cities in certain states, right where the poverty is. If you ever needed a visual confirmation that charter schools are largely a method of using the urban poor as a mans of extracting money from the government, here it is.

The report duly notes that some of those blocks of poverty are too sparsely populated to offer real charter marketing opportunities. But the rest as just waiting. The two "key takeaways" mentioned are that charters need to move beyond city boundaries, and that states need to be convinced to open up markets to charters.

The whole framing of the document is what you get when your priority is "expanding charter schools reach" and not "improve education for students in poor regions." The map could just as easily be called a map to places where states should be investing extra resources to help combat the endemic poverty of the region. But the goal here is "to provide more charter options" and not "to make the best use of tax dollars" or "to insure that every US student gets a great education." This is a document aimed at people who are advising investors, not at people who are serious about improving US education.

Instead, we ought to go back to the part about wealthy neighborhoods not being great charter markets (or being labeled charter deserts, either) and consider what it tells us-- that when public schools are properly funded and resourced, few people are interested in having choices. If someone is providing you with all the food and water you need, it's less worrisome to be in the middle of a desert.

2 comments:

  1. What drove me nuts about this piece was the jaunty, we're-all-pursuing-the-same-goal language. Remember when charters were the answer to providing 'civil rights' for poor, minority children?

    Like this seemingly tone-deaf bit:
    "Are we overlooking neighborhoods in America that are already home to plenty of poor kids, and contain the population density necessary to make school choice work, but lack charter school options? Especially communities in the inner-ring suburbs of flourishing cities, which increasingly are becoming magnets for poor and working-class families priced out of gentrifying areas?"

    "Plenty of poor kids" driven out of "gentrifying areas"--and don't forget the working class! Go where the action is!

    My take on the spread of charters also uses fruit as metaphor--the low-hanging kind. What Fordham seems to be overlooking here is the combination of factors that have made charters attractive. There are, of course, the poor-kids, urban-density charter landscapes they're referencing with such glee.

    But in addition to poor kids with low test scores (a.k.a 'the Fordham Model') you also need a certain kind of political leadership, private side money to launch or tide charters over when establishing them, a compliant / frustrated /low-information parent base, plus context-sensitive marketing.

    There are, in charter-saturated states like Michigan, charters in wealthy communities where the public schools are well-regarded. Betsy DeVos's husband started one for prospective pilots. There's one in my highly functional local district, which targeted disaffected parents (and there are always disaffected parents, in every district). That particular school was founded by a man who stole $3.5 million and is now in prison. But it was established because a handful of parents had the idea their kid was getting enough attention, and marketed its way to 1200 kids, upsetting the public school ecology around here, probably permanently.

    So I guess it's fun when you have swoopy maps that tell you where the poor (and presumably easy to fool) folk live. But I find it interesting that the noble language about saving one kid at a time has vanished.

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  2. Why does a "desert" have to be in a poor area? I'm not seeing any charters in Lake Forest, Vernon Hills or other swanky North Shore Chicago suburbs. Why aren't those places considered "deserts"? Aren't those parents clamoring for "choice" to get their kids out of "failing government schools"? Enquiring minds want to know.

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