
Pro charter school forces plan a rally tomorrow but the Supreme Court ruling will cast a pallor over the event. (AJC photo)
In a long-awaited ruling released this morning, the state Supreme Court struck down a state commission that could approve charter schools over the objection of local boards of education and direct local funding to the schools. The vote was 4-3.
“No other constitutional provision authorizes any other governmental entity to compete with or duplicate the efforts of local boards of education in establishing and maintaining general K-12 schools,” the opinion states. “By providing for local boards of education to have exclusive control over general K-12 schools, our constitutions, past and present, have limited governmental authority over the public education of Georgia’s children to that level of government closest and most responsive to the taxpayers and parents of the children being educated.”
The decision is a major victory for school systems and local control but a setback to the burgeoning charter school movement in Georgia. Unclear is the fate of the charter schools approved by the commission, some of which are operating and some of which planned to open this fall.
The ruling has no impact on the 160 charter schools that were approved by local systems, only those 16 approved by the state Georgia Charter Schools Commission:
They include the Georgia Cyber Academy, Georgia Connections Academy, Cherokee Charter Academy (the county’s first charter school), Provost Academy Georgia, Heritage Preparatory Academy, Chattahoochee Hills Charter School, Atlanta Heights Charter School, Fulton Leadership Academy, the Museum School of Avondale Estate , Peachtree Hope Charter School, Coweta Charter Academy at Senoia, Heron Bay Academy, Pataula Charter Academy, Ivy Preparatory Academy in Norcross and the Statesboro’s Charter Conservatory for Liberal Arts & Technology
Charter schools receive public funds to operate under a board-approved charter, or contract, that spells out a plan for improving student achievement and provides benchmarks for measuring this improvement on a five-year time line. If those benchmarks aren’t met, the school is supposed to close.
Up until two years ago, school boards in Georgia had primary power to veto or promote charter schools, but lawmakers felt that the school boards were hostile to charter schools and turned down strong applicants. So, the General Assembly created a commission that not only could approve charters, but redirect monies so that the schools receive their share of local dollars.
And that was the issue that is before the Supreme Court after seven systems — Atlanta, DeKalb, Candler, Coweta, Bulloch, Gwinnett and Griffin-Spalding — sued to have the state law that created the Charter Schools Commission declared unconstitutional. The systems lost their case in Fulton County Superior Court a year ago, but appealed to the Supreme Court in October. (Not all the systems were part of the appeal to the high court,)
The Supreme Court focused on two issues in its ruling: Does the state constitution give the state the right to create charter schools over the objection of local boards of education? The state argued for a broad definition of state-sponsored “special schools,” which have historically been limited to the state-run schools for the blind and deaf. The second point of contention was whether the seven-member Charter Schools Commission was a device for the state to divert local money to charter schools.
In its decision, the court sided with the systems, but now the question is what becomes of the charter schools already approved by the commission. Please note, the majority of charter schools in Georgia were approved by local boards of education and are not affected by this court ruling. This ruling is limited to the 16 approved by the now defunct commission.
However, in the larger picture, the decision ruling undermines the charter movement as it returns control to local boards and reduces the flow of dollars to charter schools approved at the state level.
The state Board of Education can still approve charter schools that were rejected by local boards, but those schools get only state money, no local funding. Consider that local systems provide on average about 45 percent of what it now costs to educate a child. So, it’s a dramatic drop if a charter school loses its local dollars. Without that local funding, it is unlikely that the commission charter schools can pay their bills.
So, will local boards of education step in and “adopt” those schools to maintain the stream of local funding?
The problem is that some of the charter schools approved by the now illegal commission are regional, and thus would require several school boards to “adopt” them. They are the most imperiled by this ruling.
According to the court’s statement this morning:
The Supreme Court of Georgia has struck down as unconstitutional a 2008 Act that authorized creation of a new kind of state charter school called “commission charter schools.”
With today’s 4-to-3 decision, the high court has reversed a Fulton County court decision and ruled in favor of local school boards, finding that the state-established schools authorized by the 2008 Georgia Charter Schools Commission Act do not fit the definition of “special schools” as envisioned in the state Constitution.Under the current Constitution, which voters approved in 1983, local school boards have exclusive authority to create and maintain K-12 public education, Chief Justice Carol Hunstein writes for the majority. The Constitution only allows the state government to create “special schools.” Yet in the 2008 Act, the State authorized the “Georgia Charter Schools Commission,” whose members are appointed by state officials, to approve petitions for a new type of general K-12 public school known as a “commission charter school.”“Because our constitution embodies the fundamental principle of exclusive local control of general primary and secondary (“K-12”) public education, and the Act clearly and palpably violates Art. VIII, Sec. V, Par. VII (a) by authorizing a State commission to establish competing State-created general K-12 schools under the guise of being ‘special schools,’ we reverse,” the 24-page majority opinion states.
Charter schools are a relatively recent phenomenon, according to briefs filed in the case. The first opened in 1992 in St. Paul, MN. Georgia’s first, Addison Elementary School, opened three years later in Cobb County. In general, charter schools receive public funds but are not subject to all the rules and regulations that apply to other public schools. Rather, they are held accountable for producing academic results, which are laid out in a performance-based contract, or “charter.” Georgia law in 1993 authorized existing locally-controlled public schools to convert to charter schools and permitted the creation of “start-up charter schools.” Both are now referred to as “local charter schools.” In 1998, the Georgia legislature amended the statute to authorize the creation of state charter schools that are approved by the Georgia Board of Education. In 2008, the legislature passed the Georgia Charter Schools Commission Act, creating the “Georgia Charter Schools Commission” and “commission charter schools.” (A footnote in today’s opinion states that “state chartered special schools” established by earlier legislation are not at issue in this appeal, and “we intimate no opinion as to their status under the 1983 Constitution.”)
In this high-profile case, seven local school districts – Gwinnett, Bulloch, Candler, DeKalb, Atlanta, Griffin-Spalding and Henry – sued former state Superintendent Kathy Cox, the Department of Education, the Charter Schools Commission and three charter schools approved by the Commission. The school districts challenged the 2008 Act claiming, among other things, that the Georgia Legislature lacks constitutional authority to create the “commission charter schools” because they are not “special schools.”
In May 2010, the trial court ruled in favor of the charter schools on the constitutional claims and dismissed other claims. The judge found that the Act is constitutional and that commission charter schools are “special schools.”
Today’s opinion reverses that decision. The Georgia Constitution states that, “[a]uthority is granted to county and area boards of education to establish and maintain public schools within their limits.” This language, the majority opinion states, “continues the line of constitutional authority, unbroken since it was originally memorialized in the 1877 Constitution of Georgia, granting local boards of education the exclusive right to establish and maintain, i.e., the exclusive control over, general K-12 public education.”
“No other constitutional provision authorizes any other governmental entity to compete with or duplicate the efforts of local boards of education in establishing and maintaining general K-12 schools,” the opinion states. “By providing for local boards of education to have exclusive control over general K-12 schools, our constitutions, past and present, have limited governmental authority over the public education of Georgia’s children to that level of government closest and most responsive to the taxpayers and parents of the children being educated.”
The current Constitution also states, however, that “[t]he General Assembly may provide by law for the creation of special schools in such areas as may require them…” At issue in this case is whether “commission charter schools” qualify as “special schools.” Today’s majority opinion says they do not.
“As the language in the Act and the record in this case reflect, the commission charter schools established by the Commission pursuant to the Act are created to deliver K-12 public education to any student within Georgia’s general K-12 public education system,” the majority opinion says. “Commission charter schools thus necessarily operate in competition with or duplicate the efforts of locally controlled general K-12 schools by enrolling the same types of K-12 students who attend locally controlled schools and by teaching them the same subjects that may be taught at locally controlled schools.”
Conditions existing at the time of the adoption of the 1983 Constitution “reflected that ‘special schools’ were those that enrolled only students with certain special needs, e.g., adults, deaf or blind children and those that taught only certain special subjects, e.g., vocational trade schools with jobs-oriented curricula.” The consensus among the drafters of that Constitution was that special schools “were indeed those schools that enrolled only students with certain special needs or taught only certain special subjects,” the majority opinion says. The late House Speaker Thomas B. Murphy, who was a member of the Select Committee on Constitutional Revision, said in reference to the special schools provision: “The reason for this paragraph in the Constitution is it allows the General Assembly to establish schools for the blind, deaf, or people of that nature.”
To interpret “special schools” under the Constitution “as including those schools that are indistinguishable in every constitutionally significant manner from general K-12 schools established and maintained by local boards of education would render the ‘special’ in ‘special schools’ meaningless,” the majority states.
Today’s opinion concludes that, “[t]he record establishes uncontrovertedly that the Georgia Charter Schools Commission Act and the schools established thereunder represent the efforts of well-intentioned people, motivated by their genuine concern over the current condition of this State’s general K-12 public education, to provide the children of this State with an alternative and, in some cases, a superior educational opportunity. In holding the Act unconstitutional under the unique provisions of this State’s Constitution, we do not in any manner denigrate the goals and aspirations that these efforts reflect. The goals are laudable. The method used to attain those goals, however, is clearly and palpably unconstitutional.” Joining the majority are Justices Robert Benham, Hugh Thompson and P. Harris Hines.
In a dissent, Justice David Nahmias writes that “[c]ontrary to the majority’s untenable opinion, the 1983 Georgia Constitution does not prohibit the creation of the Charter Schools Commission or commission charter schools.”
Calling the majority’s reasoning “illogical” and its conclusion “overbroad,” the dissent says that today’s ruling effectively abolishes not only commission charter schools as unconstitutional but also the “state chartered special schools” created by the Charter Schools Act of 1998 and “any other ‘special school’ the General Assembly might dare to create.”
“Today four judges have wiped away a small but important effort to improve public education in Georgia – an effort that reflects not only the education policy of this State’s elected representatives but also the national education policy of the Obama Administration,” says the 75-page dissent. “That result is unnecessary, and it is unfortunate for Georgia’s children, particularly those already enrolled and thriving in state charter schools. It is equally unfortunate for this Court’s reputation as an institution that fairly and accurately interprets the law and exercises the judiciary’s most awesome power – the power to nullify laws enacted through the democratic process – only when that result is clearly and palpably dictated by our Constitution.”
References to “special schools” first appeared in Georgia law nearly a century ago. “What is notable about all of these references – by the General Assembly, the Justices of this Court, and the Judges of the Court of Appeals – is that they all equate ‘special schools’ to schools or school systems established separate from the statewide, county-based common school systems,” the dissent says. “Not once is there a suggestion that a ‘special school’ is defined by its students or curriculum.”
“The ordinary meaning of the constitutional text, its context and history, prior usage, and basic language and logic all support the conclusion that ‘special schools,’ as that phrase is used in the 1983 Constitution, are simply individual public schools that are created by the General Assembly separate from the general county and area school systems,” the dissent says. “Special schools certainly may include schools for students with special needs, like the existing area schools for blind and deaf children, and schools that teach special subjects, like vocational trade schools. But the Legislature’s authority is not limited to creating those two types of special schools.”
The majority’s “assertion that ‘local boards of education’ were given exclusive authority over public schools under our constitutions beginning in 1877 is simply inaccurate,” the dissent says. The 1877 Constitution contains no mention of local school boards, which are not mentioned until the 1945 Constitution. Furthermore: “The General Assembly has created schools and school systems independent of the common county systems since the early years of this State, and the 1983 Constitution restored its power to create such special schools (but not school systems) without any local system approval or participation.” Local school boards have never had exclusive control over general K-12 public education, “because that control has always been shared with and regulated by the General Assembly and, since 1870, by the State Board of Education and State School Superintendent as well,” the dissent says. “The majority may be able to change our law, but it cannot change our history.”
The majority’s concern that commission charter schools duplicate the efforts of local school boards in creating general K-12 schools is also misplaced, the dissent says, given that less than 1 percent of the state’s nearly 2,300 public schools are commission charter schools, state charter schools established by the 1998 act, or area schools for the deaf and blind.
The dissent says “[t]he majority is cagey about exactly what it is holding.” The majority argues that commission charter schools cannot be considered “special schools” because they do not differ in their student bodies or curricula from general public schools. Yet, “there are very few public schools that enroll a student body consisting only of girls, like Ivy Prep,” one of the three charter commission schools being sued. “If such an obvious factor as gender does not differentiate a student body, then what factors do?” the dissent says. “The majority does not say.”
According to the majority, the baseline to which a “special school” must be compared “is not the average or ordinary local school in Georgia but any local school that exists or might ever be created in our State – that is, any school that ‘local boards of education are also authorized to create,’” the dissent says. “Indeed, in rejecting the suggestion that a state chartered school’s unique operating charter is relevant, the majority says that, like the children in Lake Wobegon, in Georgia no public school is average.” The majority’s conclusion that a special school “must enroll students categorically different from those at a locally controlled school or teach subjects wholly unlike those that may be taught in locally controlled schools,” renders the Constitution’s special school provision “a dead letter,” the dissent says.
In conclusion, the dissent says that “the policy position that the majority of this Court reads into our Constitution today contravenes the education policy established by both our State’s Republican Governor and Republican-majority General Assembly that passed the 2008 Act and our nation’s Democratic President and the Democratic-majority Congress that funded the ‘Race to the Top’ Program from which Georgia has received $400 million in funding, in part due to the State’s multiple charter school authorizers.”
Judges have no special competence in education policy, and “litigation is ill-suited to gather the sort of information and make the sort of nuanced and balanced assessments required for good social policy,” the dissent says. “Courts should strike down education-related legislation only where the Constitution ‘clearly and palpably’ prohibits the policy determination at issue. That is not the case here.”
“But the policy debate and the political process no longer matter,” says the dissent. “The majority of this Court has announced the new policy and removed the issue from the political process, unless the General Assembly and the people of our State bear the delay and enormous burden required to correct the Court’s error through a constitutional amendment.” Joining the dissent are Presiding Justice George Carley and Justice Harold Melton.
Justice Harold Melton writes a separate dissent “to emphasize the fundamental principles at play in this case.” He writes that “even under the majority’s faulty constructs and its incorrect definition of ‘special schools,’ these principles, which the majority fails to apply, require a finding that the Charter Schools Commission Act of 2008 is constitutional.”
“Two bedrock rules of statutory construction govern in this matter,” his dissent says. The first is that “we must presume that the statute is, and was intended to be, constitutional.” The second is that short of a claim that the statute improperly impinges upon a First Amendment right, such as free speech, “the statute cannot be struck down unless it is unconstitutional in all of its applications….”
As to the first principle, even a cursory review of the Act supports the presumption it is constitutional, this dissent says. For example, in provisions related to cosponsors, the Act suggests that cosponsors should be sought out to maximize “access to a wide variety of high-quality educational options for all students regardless of disability, race or socioeconomic status, including students who have struggled in a traditional public school setting.”
“Even if one applies the majority’s definition of ‘special schools’ as those that ‘enrolled only students with certain special needs or taught only certain special subjects,’ these provisions unequivocally support a conclusion that the Act was not “unconstitutional,” the dissent says.
As to the second principle, “it is untenable to argue that the Act is unconstitutional in all of its applications or lacks a plainly legitimate sweep.” The existence of Ivy Preparatory Academy, an all-girls charter school and one of three sued by the local boards, “proves that the Act meets the majority’s constitutional test, as it has been properly applied to create a special school.”
The Georgia Legislature “created a law to provide for special charter schools to enhance our educational system, and it included evidence on the face of the statute supporting such a constitutional intent,” the dissent says. “Nevertheless, the majority looks beyond this basic principle to reach a result that simply cannot be explained in the context of the applicable law and the undisputed facts.”
Attorneys for Appellants (school districts): Michael J. Bowers, T. Joshua Archer, Joshua Moore, Thomas Cox, Gerald Edenfield, Susan Cox, Charles Aaron, Timothy Shepherd, A.J. Welch, Jr.
Attorneys for Appellees (charter schools): Bruce Brown, Jeremy Berry, E. Claire Carothers, Thurbert Baker, former Attorney General, Dennis Dunn, Dep. A.G., Stefan Ritter
–From Maureen Downey, for the AJC Get Schooled blog
259 comments Add your comment
Cindy Lutenbacher
May 16th, 2011
11:23 am
I’d like to respond to a number of different threads in this conversation.
First of all, in deciding whether or not we think our public schools are failures, we should not look at AYP, which is based on a set of standardized test scores. These test scores are flawed in the extreme and do not show learning or ability or knowledge. They have been created by corporations (and ETS is, by all measures, a corporation) whose sole interest is in selling their products. They have to sell the IDEA of these tests, AYP, etc. to us. Our first task is to reject this standardized absurdity that masks itself as “accountability.” As Kohn notes, “Standardized exams serve mostly to make dreadful forms of teaching appear successful.”
Secondly, even if one likes standardized testing, a recent study by Stanford University found that 17% of charter schools have higher test scores than their public school counterparts. 46% of charter schools perform the same as their counterparts, and 37% perform WORSE than the other public schools. So, to imagine that charter schools can fix Georgia’s test scores is to ignore the research.
Thirdly, charter schools actually consume fewer taxpayer dollars than regular public schools. Charters receive the same per-student allotment, but they receive no funds for buildings, utilities, and other facility oriented needs of a school.
I have mixed feelings about charters because I’ve seen the impact of two really magnificent charters: the International Community School and the Kindezi School. Both are doing a beautiful job of keeping children central in all decisions. I’ve also seen corporate “ventures” creating charters as a way of, yes, snagging taxpayer dollars without giving a rip about kids.
Find the root of the problem
May 16th, 2011
11:24 am
Its funny to me to see people living in expensive school districts thinking they are public when only the wealthy can afford to live there. We will fight for our children and to have a choice…
____
Great statement, time to wake up to the de facto seperate but equal educational system that has been re-created over the last 20-30 years. Just look at the recent battle over the Duluth redistricting which the GCPS says that “socio-economic factors have no bearing on how district lines are drawn”; yeah right!
Northside APS Parent
May 16th, 2011
11:25 am
I don’t know enough about the specifics of its charter, but Georgia Cyber Academy may be the only state charter school with a legitimate claim to “special” status under the law. If it can make a case that it offers services no one else provides, it could possibly retain its status even under the Supreme Court’s ruling.
Folks, the Supreme Court did not outlaw all charter schools! The opinion addresses the constitutionality of what amounts to a parallel state school system, operating in competition with local systems and using co-opted local dollars. It’s clear that many posters don’t know whether the charter school in their neighbohood is even at issue.
All charter schools are not evil, just like all public schools are not evil. The issue is whether the General Assembly should be able to trump local school boards.
Philosopher
May 16th, 2011
11:27 am
“Get involved with school board meetings and elections. This will make a difference that you seek. ” Are you kidding???!!! Well, I’m not laughing any more. Ineffective, politics-driven school boards who ignore the interests of the public it is supposed to serve are the REASON for the discontent and emergence of charter schools…What do you think has changed that would suddenly have faith in my school board?
Philosopher
May 16th, 2011
11:29 am
correction- ’suddenly make me have faith in….”
Reaction to charter schools decision: State pledges flexibility but don’t schools really need money? | Get Schooled
May 16th, 2011
11:30 am
[...] When the Supreme Court ruling was issued this morning striking down the state Charter Schools Commission in favor of local control in creation of charter schools, I sent out e-mails seeking reaction from key players. (Read about the decision here.) [...]
N GA Blues
May 16th, 2011
11:33 am
“The state can take over full funding for this and the other 16 commission charter schools that are open or about to open. I don’t think that “full funding” would be as high as some of these charters are getting in those counties with high per-pupil funding, but the state could use the state average to determine its per-pupil allotment to each of these schools.
Maureen”
Maureen, I may have been reading the comments made by one of the plaintiffs’ lawyers wrong, but there was certainly an implication that as a result of the decision ONLY local boards could approve charter schools, period. Therefore, under this ruling does the state even have power to approve the funding or allow the schools to function?!?
Maureen Downey
May 16th, 2011
11:35 am
@N GA, Yes, the state board has had the power to approve charters and, in fact, approved two of them before the creation of the Charter Schools Commission,
However, those state board charters cannot command local dollars, so those schools will get half what they would be getting had the Supreme Court not ruled against the commission.
The question is whether any of the 17 schools, both those already opened and those planning to open, can operate under such reduced funding.
Maureen
Ed Johnson
May 16th, 2011
11:38 am
“‘Today four judges have wiped away a small but important effort to improve public education in Georgia – an effort that reflects not only the education policy of this State’s elected representatives but also the national education policy of the Obama Administration,’ says the 75-page dissent.”
Appealing to the Obama Administration – actually, the Gates-Broad-Obama-Duncan Administration – is down right heinous.
And Eli Broad and his foundation may be none too pleased with especially Gwinnett after this.
j nes
May 16th, 2011
11:41 am
Someone please inform me if I am completely off-base, but..
This has opened my eyes to something big. The local boards oppose charter schools because funding for the students that attend the charters is diverted from the public school. The schools (Charter and public) get their money based on FTE numbers–basically money per student. So if the public school loses a student, they lose the money allocated for the student as well. So why does the school board care? If they don’t have to educate the student, they don’t need the money—right? This could only mean one thing: the money a school receives to educate a student is not going to educate the student!!–the school system profits from having more students. School boards with more money have more power (like to awarding county contracts to their family and friends). And that is what it is all about: more students=more money=more power for school boards=more corruption and nepotism=status quo for school systems. I have never realized what a crooked business public education is until now.
Kathy II
May 16th, 2011
11:47 am
The Georgia School Board and Superintendent Associations are probably celebrating right now as their lobbying paid off BIG Time for them.
Today’s decision didn’t surprise me given the fact that the Georgia Constitution gives LBOEs the sanctioned power to do whatever they want with the schools and children in their jurisdiction. Now, why would they give all that centralized power up? This is not only a defeat for parents and children, but for law makers who are so naive to believe that LBOEs actually will give up power, control, and MONEY to do what is best for children and their parents. Give us VOUCHERS so we can have some leverage…as it is now LBOEs gerrymander, decide what kids get what classes, what schools offer what programs, what text books will not be replaced, what waivers the schools can get to avoid implementing laws…..We need to amend the Constitution to include parents at the local decision making table…and then let the public decide if parents should be involved….I hope everyone can finally SEE THE REAL POWER each Local Board Member has…over your child’s fate.
Statement On Today’s Supreme Court Ruling re: Charter Schools | Buzz Brockway
May 16th, 2011
11:48 am
[...] Charter schools around the State leaving those students in limbo. As Maureen Downey writes in her “Get Schooled” column: The decision is a major victory for school systems and local control but a setback to the [...]
Teacher Reader
May 16th, 2011
11:53 am
@ j nes You’ve got it. Most school boards are more interested in the jobs that they can make for friends and family members than the education the children are receiving.
Public education, is just another government entity that creates job and doesn’t have to have a good product. Sad, but true. We wonder why our children keep slipping down the rings of our global society, well this is one huge reason. Teacher’s Unions are another. Even states without unions are effected, because of their involvement in politics.
justbrowsing
May 16th, 2011
11:55 am
I hate this for those parents who are truly concerned with their child’s education. It is just so sad that they are not in the majority. I have come across manipulative parents only interested in grades for underperforming children. These are the types of parents I would worry about in the decision making process. The leverage given to THESE TYPES of parents could be ultimately abused.
Rod Johnson
May 16th, 2011
11:57 am
Teacher Reader: You’re exactly right. “Public Education” serves only to empower LBOEs whilst keeping our children ignorant so that they too can suck off the teat of gov’t when they get old enough to not find work in the private sector. Hell, at this rate, most kids won’t be qualified for private-sector work anyway, since the private sector isn’t interested in one’s “feelings” or “self esteem” but rather, what one can do.
This, of course, is anathema to gov’t education.
Kathy II
May 16th, 2011
12:00 pm
I would blame the “failing education system” on the US DOE….the Federal government supplements the education process with BILLIONS of $$$ to go toward schools that produce ignorant and poor populations. The More POOR and uneducated, the MORE MONEY a school gets.
That is NOT right…so what is the incentive to educate when the Federal Government is there to give money to local systems and state systems?
Let’s get rid of the USDOE Title I funds and let’s start making every community fully fund the education process…In 2009 Georgia Received almost 1/2 BILLION dollars in Title I funds…yet we are scraping the bottom of the SAT and ACT barrel. Title I schools are the most likely to fail to meet even minimum standards on a watered down curriculum…..yet the vicisous cycle continues…
Kathy II
May 16th, 2011
12:04 pm
just browsing…what difference does it make if parents abuse the $$$ toward the education process, or if school districts use the system to affect more kids?
I’m not sure what abuse parents would try to pull, but you are right and there probably will be some…however, to deny us the opportunity just because a few will find a loop hole????? I’d like to get real imperical evidence that shows abuse with vouchers…..
Ed Advocate
May 16th, 2011
12:05 pm
@PHLASH
“using it to privatize schooling and education in the country, turning a public institution into a market-driven one.”
1. Charter schools are public schools. 2. They have widespread support across the political spectrum, including from smart education minds on the left side (e.g. Arne Duncan supports charter schools with initiatives like Race to the Top). 3. The “market-driven” concept is part of the point: Multiple choices may spawn competition, may spawn better results.
I say “may” because conservatives need to acknowledge that many charters (like most new businesses) also fail. But the experimentation and laboratory for innovation is the point. Try new things, see if they work, if they do (schools like KIPP, Ivy Prep) emulate them. If they don’t close them. But its much harder to try new things in traditional public schools.
HS Public Teacher
May 16th, 2011
12:06 pm
@Philosopher – I never said for you to “have faith” in your school board. I said to become INVOLVED with your school board because this is where education decisions are made.
If you think they are corrupt or are not doing what you think is best, attend the meetings and speak up! If you totally disagree with your representation on the school board, run for office yourself!
Rather than ‘fixing’ the school board, it is wrong to create a separate path of charter schools through the State – per the State Supreme Court. Simply work to change your school board!
It really can be that simple.
justbrowsing
May 16th, 2011
12:06 pm
@Kathy II- remember- we cannot continue to throw money at the problem. All parents are not as concerned as you are as a parent. This stifles student achievement as a whole. The system is made up of all these dysfunctional parts. As uncomfortable as it seems, I understand why parents would want an alternative. I just feel that at this point, we have got to hold parents- ALL parents including those in low SES places- accountable like parents of charter school students. If we did this- would we really be in need of alternatives such as charter schools anyway? If they want the latitude to operate in a fashion different from schools governed by LBOE’s, then they should pay for it separately. Lots of edu-preneurs out there.
Money Follow Kids
May 16th, 2011
12:12 pm
This is terrible news. We love the GA Cyber Academy and were happy to have the Georgia Connections Academy as an option too. We need more options for kids. Georgia will always be behind as long as politicians do not move education options foward. When I moved out of Georgia for college, I saw firsthand how behind our education was in comparison to other states. It is sad that charter schools are expected to get approval from local boards that don’t want to share their revenue. Who can blame the local boards? It is time to change the laws. Wake up GA Legislature and step up to the plate! Healthy competition would be good for education in GA because the current system is failing our kids.
Video News Blog » Breaking news: Supreme Court strikes down Charter Schools Commission in 4-3 vote. – Atlanta Journal Constitution (blog)
May 16th, 2011
12:13 pm
[...] Breaking news: Supreme Court strikes down Charter Schools Commission in 4-3 vote.Atlanta Journal Constitution (blog)In a long-awaited ruling released this morning, the state Supreme Court struck down a state commission that could approve charter schools over the objection of local boards of education and direct local funding to the schools. The vote was 4-3. …and more » [...]
Philosopher
May 16th, 2011
12:13 pm
“The leverage given to THESE TYPES of parents could be ultimately abused.” Well, yeah..but right now, the leverage is in the hands of the politically motivated LBOEs whose interest has little to do with ANY child’s education…We can talk all we want to but the LBOEs and their puppeteers, the superintendents, have us all by the proverbial balls once again. Without competition and alternative schools to show the public that it can be done and done well in a different manner, there is no incentive to change the status quo…As I said, there is dancing in halls of the school board offices today!
Teacher Reader
May 16th, 2011
12:16 pm
@ HS Public Teacher
It is not as simple as speaking up. As a classroom teacher, I spoke up about the injustices to our children constantly, because the district I was working in was failing children left and right. I was labeled a trouble maker.
At our last school board meeting, we had 8 of the 10 spots allotted for public comment taken up by children and teachers saying how good their school was. School boards do not care what parents want. Local schools/principals who care about what is happening in their district, need to tow the line if they want to keep their job. Most school board members don’t want to hear what parents want to say or think, they want to do what is in their own best interest to continue getting high paying jobs for under qualified friends and family members.
I realize that many public school teachers don’t like charter schools or vouchers, but it is time for public school teachers to take a long hard look at what is really happening in their districts. Look at the wasteful spending. Look at the corruption. Look at the under qualified leaders in charge of our schools from the Assistant Principals on up. A teacher does not have enough experience to run a school or district or to make education decisions with a few years of teaching experience. Too many of our principals and administrators have less than 5 years of experience in the classroom.
Be real. What school boards do you know that have the interest of the children first? I can’t think of any in the Atlanta metro area.
Disappointed
May 16th, 2011
12:18 pm
@HS Teahcer, just because 4 misguided people made this decision does not mean it is right. read the dissenting opinion, they hit the points on the head.. The public school system has failed a lot of students, there are too many administrators in each school and school system.
You are right it is time to get involved… but at the legislature level, it is time to ammend the laws to allow the parents to have more of a say and allowing charter schools is one way..
The earlier post about the funds is correct, they don’t care about the children, it is about keeping those funds in the system for them to do with what they will, just Look at Gwinnett and it’s own charter schools and it new;y expanding online school, just another way to raise money and keep money in the district.. It is not about choice for the parents, it is about control for the LBOE’s..
And if you want to look at politics and economics, look at what Gwinnett did to North Gwinnett/Lanier when they split that… you have a middle school 8 miles from the high school when a newer one would have been 3, you have a subdivision 2 miles from the new high school but still goes to North, Thee are several subdivisons that still go to North and should have gone to Lanier, but ti was all about economics, and now Lanier has an extremely high amount of low income students, and North has very few… the Rich subdivisions complained and stayed in North, the others just got left behind..
Dr. Craig Spinks/ Augusta
May 16th, 2011
12:21 pm
The educ-rats are fighting over the cheese. But who’s fighting for the kids?
Teacher Reader
May 16th, 2011
12:23 pm
@ Dr Speaks Unfortunately our children have long been forgotten. Education has become big business and job maker-on many levels starting locally and going up to the DOE and Corporations.
I wish that the media would publish the amounts of money that the large education companies make the way they do the oil companies. This would open people’s eyes to the money that is involved in education.
Kathy II
May 16th, 2011
12:36 pm
@ Dr. C. Spinks…I am one, and realize that advocating for an equitable education for ALL Georgian’s kids is NOT a one day, one week, one month, or even a one year commitment…IT is a LIFE of advocacy due to the evolving processes, along with the social, political, and economic changes in our communities….
Dr. Craig Spinks/ Augusta
May 16th, 2011
12:38 pm
Teacher Reader:
Good points!
By the way, do the GSBA, PAGE and GAE publish annual income and financial statements? Do local school board attorneys publish annual statements showing the fees they’ve collected from their respective local boards?
Does anybody think these organizations and attorneys are fighting for the kids- or for the teachers, for that matter?
Dr. Craig Spinks/ Augusta
May 16th, 2011
12:39 pm
Kathy II:
You are not alone. Our kids need more folks like you.
Kathy II
May 16th, 2011
12:40 pm
AMEN To Teacher Reader….yes, there is HUGE BUSINESS in targeting the poor and ignorant populations…..huge price tag products that promise the “magic bullet”. Decision makers being able to implement Home made remedies and piecing togehter different scinentifcally proven programs together to FIT the budget….
Without a Constitution amendment to bring more stakeholders to the education table….we will not see reform….If any of you have the opportunity. CHeck out CNN this Saturday at 8 p.m. it is documentary from Soledad O Brian in which the former governor of Tennessee COMES CLEAN about misleading the public about the education outcomes..
Alan
May 16th, 2011
12:45 pm
Does anyone agree that we need to address the over paid teachers in the Georgia?
Teacher Reader
May 16th, 2011
12:55 pm
@ Alan, It’s not the teachers that are over paid, it’s the assistant principals, principals, secretaries, administrators, Coaches who are not on the teacher pay scale, etc. Teachers are really the low man on the totem pole in most school systems. In DCSS we have many secretaries that make nearly $100,000. That is just ridiculous. The person running the cable access channel, who is a friends/family member, has no experience doing her job makes $10-15,000 more than a public sector job of the same kind.
Teachers are always blamed, but if one looks closely, they will see the smoke and mirrors game that is played. Don’t get me wrong in some districts up North, I know of teachers that have 20+ years of teaching experience that bring home $85,00-95,000 plus full benefits, but that doesn’t happen here in Georgia.
Kathy II
May 16th, 2011
12:55 pm
local attorneys are hand picked and paid by the BOE….The Georgia School Board Association is a LOBBYING group (that’s what associations are) and they do NOT lobby for students or parents or the community. In fact, the GSBA put out it’s “Vision for Education” for our children…and say that parents are NO different from joe blow down the street. To the GSBA parents are tertiary stakeholders…
Whereas, “The culture and climate of schools and school districts provide a sense of meaning for those internal members of the organizations as well as those external to the organization (Deal and Peterson, 1999). Groups that are considered internal members include school board members, district- and school-level administrators, faculty, staff, and students.”
Since when do students (all students mean 4 yrs -22) ever get to be “thought of as equals”? This is hogwash because most of us KNOW that NO contract is legally binding with anyone under the age of 18…so why did they NOT use language to include parents? I think we know the answer…
click around and check it out for yourselves…http://www.visionforpubliced.org/ProjectWork/CultureClimateandOrganizationalEfficacy/Documents.aspx
Charter Parent
May 16th, 2011
1:01 pm
Should’ve gotten out of this backward, good-old-boy state when I had the chance. All you local school board fans do realize the rest of the country (well…except Mississippi) laughs at the state of education in Georgia and basically thinks we’re a bunch of ignorants right off Hee Haw?
So…keep on chatting up Kathy Sue Boardmember at the local Publix….for all the goo it will do your child.
Remember folks….it’s all about the Power….not about the child.
Charter School Parent
May 16th, 2011
1:04 pm
I have been involved with a charter school for many years. Our school receives less money than any county school in the State of Georgia. The school receives less than half the money it costs a county school to educate one student, per student. If the school isn’t a county approved charter school, that is all the money they receive, unless they find a business partner to donate or any fundraising they do. To compensate for the smaller amount of money receive, the teachers work for less money, and at our school each teacher teaches two grade levels at once. They have two sets of standards to teach in the same amount of time a regular public school teacher has to teach one. They work at the school because they believe in the school’s mission. Our school has made AYP yearly and the schools CRCT scores are equal or above both the counties’ schools and the state scores. So it amazes me that some on here say give the county schools more money. The school systems can’t manage the money they have now to improve our student’s education. The whole education system needs to be revamped as a whole and the power given back to the states instead of the Federal Government. Since the Federal Government has taken over the DOE student’s grades haven’t improved, many states have decreased. It is time to revamp the system.
Elementary Teacher
May 16th, 2011
1:10 pm
I think this ruling is absolutely ridiculous. The problem with local school boards controlling the money is they can do things how they want to with no competition. The reason they are denying some of these charter schools is because they don’t want to give up any of their funding. Well, here’s a wake up call, there’s a reason the parents are looking to different avenues for their child’s education. The public schools are great for some students, and not for others. Each child is different and so are their needs. There are some students who do much better in a charter school, and some who do much better in a public school. It depends on the student. However, for us to say that students who are not doing well in a traditional public school just have to fail and flunk until they give up on themselves is cruel. By not allowing charters to exist without the approval of the local boards, there are going to be a lot more students who will get left behind, and there will be a lot more gifted students who are held back.
Public School Supporter
May 16th, 2011
1:18 pm
Our country will make it only if we have a strong public school. It behooves us to give all of our support to it. The voucher system and the charter schools program is an attempt to turn the clock back on desegregation. The politicians will continue to try to do this. It is sad. It is disappointing.
Teacher Reader
May 16th, 2011
1:33 pm
@ Public School Supporter
Our country will only make it if we hold our children to higher standards. Make them accountable for their actions. Worry less about how they feel, and more about what they do. Make sure that we give our children a strong foundation in basic education in the elementary school.
Right now education is being run by companies that make money off of the government mandates. Look at how much money the text book companies, testing companies, and packaged programs touted as the savior to our education system make. You will be shocked. Look at how much the NEA and AFL-CIO spend lobbying in Washington and state capitals around the country. Again, you will be shocked.
You do not understand that most making decisions about our public schools are people who have taught less than 5 years, who have on-line degrees from questionable “universities,” who worry more about the jobs that they can provide for people voting for them, than the children they are elected to educate.
Our public schools are failing our children. Parents should be able to look for alternatives for the failing education systems. Yes, there are some good schools, but not enough if we want our country to continue to make science innovations. Just look at the PhD students in our universities, very few are US citizens. Most come from China and India. Americans don’t have the test scores that these other nationalities do, or the drive to learn. Our children are all about money, however what we all fail to realize is that no amount of money can help you if the work force that you have to chose from is uneducated.
CherokeeCo
May 16th, 2011
1:37 pm
This decision undermines parental choice and sets Georgia back. In Cherokee 2600 families wanted a charter school and local school leadershp said, “There was no community support for charter schools.” They then voted no on the charter applicaton. It appears that the Cherokee County School System is happy to spend $600M a year be at the top of the bottom in school standing nation-wide. Concerned parents need to get active, speak up, and demand options for their children.
Philosopher
May 16th, 2011
1:41 pm
@Public School Supporter: throwing money at a ship with holes all through it while the captain and the mates are plugging the holes with bubble gum and covering over with paint is just plain stupid!! I do not believe in giving up on kids because they are challenged by their circumstances or because they are not white…It is not the purpose of charter schools to “turn back the clock on segragation”. Public schools, especially in the counties surrounding Atlanta are segregated… by wealth… and public schools do nothing to change that. It is not the idea of public schools that most of us object to but the reality of a broken, corrupt, entity not worthy of support in its present form.
News stories on the GA Supreme Court decision | G-PAN
May 16th, 2011
1:48 pm
[...] Victory for local districts. Setback for charter schools [...]
Edudawg
May 16th, 2011
1:55 pm
Folks, our decisions about public schools should be data-driven. As @Cindy Lutenbacher pointed out, public charter school results – in Georgia and nationwide – are mixed at best. We would expect charters, where the parents are more involved, to have higher student achievement but often they don’t.
Charter schools were conceived as incubators for innovation, not as escape routes from neighborhood schools. In my opinion, charters have failed in their mission to identify new best practices or innovative programs that can be adopted by all schools. What have Georgia’s charter schools taught us? They’ve shown that good schools – whether they are charter or traditional public schools – get the best results by emphasizing a commitment to academic achievement, appropriate discipline, and parental involvement.
Charters have also shown us that a high-quality education isn’t cheap. That’s why state policy makers created the commission that led to this lawsuit in the first place. The reduced funds going to charter schools weren’t enough to keep the doors open, much less provide a quality education. So the Commission was created as a way around locally elected school boards who were unwilling to fund incubator schools with scarce local resources.
I don’t see anything new here. Instead, I think that charter schools have validated what educators and average citizens have known about school for a long time. As a community, let’s use this knowledge to insist that every school board, every administrator, every principal, and every teacher in the state place the highest priority on academic achievement. Let’s also insist that every parent puts the education and welfare of his/her child as the first priority AND prepares the child to come to school every day ready to learn. Finally, let’s insist that our schools are adequately funded – not overfunded – but adequately funded.
Reactions to the decision | G-PAN
May 16th, 2011
2:02 pm
[...] When the Supreme Court ruling was issued this morning striking down the state Charter Schools Commission in favor of local control in creation of charter schools, I sent out e-mails seeking reaction from key players. (Read about the decision here.) [...]
Rallying charter supporters but to do what exactly? | Get Schooled
May 16th, 2011
2:27 pm
[...] is a passionate response from the Georgia Charter Schools Association to today’s state Supreme Court decision striking down the state Charter Schools Commission. It is from the head of the association, Tony [...]
B. Killebrew
May 16th, 2011
2:55 pm
http://blogs.edweek.org/teachers/living-in-dialogue/2010/11/you_say_charter_–_i_say_semi-.html
Disappointed
May 16th, 2011
3:08 pm
The link to the blog.. it is not surprsing that he takes that stance since he is a union activist. The Union is against anything that helps the kids and gets bad teachers out of the classroom… and since Ga has no teacher union, not really relevant here.
There are a lot of really good teachers, but there are also some that do not belong in the classroom. We need to stop teaching to the test and start teaching how to learn, get back to the basics and throwing more money at it is not the answer, all that will happen is that they will waste a whole lot more on administrators and less on students…
Teacher Reader
May 16th, 2011
3:12 pm
Well said Disappointed.
Back to Home
May 16th, 2011
3:34 pm
Guess I’ll get my homeschool catalogs out tonight and start looking over curriculum for next year.
Fayette Mom
May 16th, 2011
3:41 pm
To answer a question floating around…. the reason in some cases local school boards haven’t approved some of these charters is because many of these 17 charters cross over into several different BOE jurisdictions, making it very difficult. This is a sad ruling. These local, poorly run monopolies have no incentive to approve a charter school and invite competition. I can just see Wal-mart having a say in whether or not a new small variety store gets to open in town. Education should not be political and this is a clear cut case of just that…. politics.