Let's Look More Closely at the Anti-Charter Arguments

By Alison Leach

Dear Legislators:

I am a Washington resident and an educator with a graduate degree in education from Stanford University who has worked in district, charter, and international schools. I am a lifelong Democrat who cares deeply about public education.

I find the arguments against charter schools among the public and bloggers to be largely misinformed and apparently based on fear. I was surprised to hear what appeared to be a lack of information in the anti-charter testimonials and even statements from members of the House during charter school hearings. Thank you for considering my response.

1) It is a fact that if we close out any possibility of charter schools, low-income kids will largely end up trapped in their local schools.

Similarly, kids who are misfits and harshly bullied — they too must show up, day after day. They must go to school with their tormenters, which can lead to depression, anxiety, drug abuse, and even violence or suicide. It is not always easy or possible for families to transfer or move.

The fact is that many of these local schools are not serving their kids. It is disingenuous for anti-charter advocates to point to a handful of one-off district initiatives and say that, therefore, the district schools are just as innovative as charter schools. Or that they are the only and the best way to educate every child. The lack of open eyes here about how district schools actually work in these types of anti-charter arguments is astounding.

The so-called “evidence” presented by opponents about a charter school students being below grade level actually makes the argument for charter schools stronger. These students didn’t fall way below grade level during the 3-4 months enrolled at a charter school. They came to the charter school after years of falling behind in regular district schools.

Recently released test scores show that charters in WA are helping their kids catch up. In only a few months, they are making up for years lost in the district schools. This is a boon not only to these kids and their families, but to the state of Washington, which can now look forward to productive citizens rather than citizens who would have been more likely a strain on their communities and the state’s finances.

Seemingly lost in this debate is that Washington’s, and in particular Seattle’s, population is growing at a very fast pace. With all the concern about charters taking away students and funds from district schools, no one mentioned that thousands of new students will need to be taught over the coming few years – and class sizes are already too full. From this standpoint, how are charters not being seen as useful partners in handling the explosion in the public school population?

I noticed, too, that every single person who testified against charter schools at the House hearing I attended last month appeared to be white, while many of those who testified in favor of charter schools were people of color. The demographics of most of the charter schools match this trend. The fact is that wealthy people, largely white, in our state have access to private schools, whereas low-income people, many of color, do not. In Seattle, we have one of the highest rates of private school usage in the country. Families who are able to pay are opting out.

How can we argue with a clear conscience for taking options away from families who cannot pay, including many families of color?

I am a reasonably well-off, white liberal. It is easy to be a wealthy white liberal taking a stand against charter schools out of a sense of liberal tribalism and internet-spun fear about a Republican takeover of education. It is harder to actually work in the trenches of public education, including charters, and listen to those voices that are desperate for change for their kids or to open one’s mind towards the possibility of a new solution. It is easy to slam something just because it’s different and some Republicans (the horror!) like it.

Would we rather go back to the days of arguing about vouchers, where public dollars would go to religious private schools with little/no oversight?

Those who want to argue that the students are being served, or could be served, in regular public schools, but it’s just an issue of needing more money? We all agree schools need more money. But we can argue with the Republicans about raising money for education until we’re blue in the face – and another generation of lives has been wasted in underperforming schools. We fail the kids who are just not finding success in our current system.

Let’s put down our pitchforks and realize that charter leaders are potential allies in the fight for better public education in Washington. A unified front of district and charter schools, union and non-union teachers, that share resources and best practices and together advocate for more resources, better training programs, greater respect for teachers, and so on – what a force that could be for the kids, families, and educators of this state.

For what it’s worth: I have taught in district, charter, and in private schools in Mexico. House Education Vice-Chair Rep. Chris Reykdal’s statement during the hearing that the failures of district schools are “either a policy or a personnel” issue seems to miss the point, which made me wonder if Rep. Reykdal is either sadly misinformed or just playing politics. Since he’s been an educator, it’s hard for me to believe he’s so misinformed as to believe that the problem comes down to such a simple dichotomy.

The fact is that there are structural pressures on district schools that prevent them from being able to reach every kid, to be as innovative as people might like – even if, technically and according to the law, they could. For instance, the inertia and status quo of the culture in district schools can be stagnant and even poisonous. Tell me, Rep. Reykdal, is a school’s culture determined by purely “policy” or “personnel”? Is it a coincidence, just a matter of personnel, that low-income schools across this state (and our country) suffer from the same types of problems?

Unless we’re planning on firing every leader and most of the teachers at all underperforming schools and somehow coming up with incentives to keep the new leaders and teachers fresh, positive, and innovative — shoving the issue to the side as a “personnel” issue is, to me, blind and frankly useless. It is important to know what it’s like working in district and charter schools, like I have, to know the differences that can’t be seen on paper.

For instance, I’ve never heard more teachers say ignorant and bigoted things about students than I have at the three district schools in two different states I worked at. I’ve never been more embarrassed for my profession as a teacher than when working with some district teachers who appear to have chosen education for the stability and the paycheck. I’ve been a liberal Democrat for as long as I’ve been political, but working in district schools has made me reconsider some of our arguments about keeping public schools the way they are.

A few examples:

At one large urban high school, I was told by one mentor teacher that he got into teaching entirely for the pension after he realized his seasonal job wouldn’t cover his retirement. He used to call his “low-track” classes filled with largely African-American boys his “bonehead” classes. His lesson plans routinely involved him standing at the front of the room and reading the textbook out loud – to his seniors.

Another one of my district mentor teachers told us proudly that she kept the room ice-cold to keep her 6th graders from falling asleep. She believed that screaming was a perfectly acceptable form of classroom management when working with “those kids” (the students of color who were in her class), and it was good if you could make the boys cry.

District lunchrooms were often toxic. Teachers routinely gossiped about families and complained about students, often the African-American and Latino boys who were “acting up” and “horrible” and “ruining it for everyone.” Students who were wrestling with serious emotional trauma were talked about as if they were mere annoyances in the day, rather than students to be especially looked out for and treated with respect and love.

One district principal was hired by the school board in what was seen as a highly political decision, against the wishes of almost all of the teachers and many others. While a nice enough man, he was almost universally despised for his ineptitude and lack of interest in or support of the school. The faculty's anger and sense of powerlessness permeated the culture. At staff meetings, teachers ignored the principal and other speakers, gossiped about each other, and mastered the art of passive aggression. Collaboration or innovation were nonstarters, as teachers were too frustrated to do anything beyond tend to their classes and leave the building as soon as they could.

While there are many hard-working and creative leaders and teachers at district schools, the experiences I have had working at three different district schools – not to mention the data – strongly suggest that there are structural factors that are hindering these schools’ abilities to create classes and cultures that serve every kid. In some areas, these schools aren’t even serving most kids.

We have to ask ourselves:

Are we being realistic with our expectations of public district schools and what they can deliver? Can they truly reach and serve every single student?

Are we being realistic in our hopes that a school board is always the most useful way of conveying democratic oversight that benefits kids?

For instance:

How many people in a community are actually qualified and informed enough – about education and the candidates – to make meaningful decisions when voting in a board member? How many people actually vote?

What do board members actually do in terms of helping, changing, and being accountable to parents and community members of a specific school?

If a school board position is inherently political, what is the effect of politics on the teaching and learning happening in the schools? Is it:

best for kids?

conducive to rapid and effective innovation?

9) I’ve never seen the power of culture be more positive and transformative than at the two charters, and the private international school, where I worked. Both charters had different educational models but the cultures were similar: high energy, positive, relationship-based, and 100% respectful of students and their families. Staff was not hired without demonstrating alignment with the mission of believing in every child and working hard and working smart to help the kids get there. Teachers were treated like professionals and played a role in the governance of the school. Empowerment among staff and students was noticeable.

In these diverse schools, students were not separated in classes by race or class but taught to work with and respect those who were different from them. While no school is a panacea, the positive culture and high standards set by and for administrators, teachers, and students was unlike anything I ever saw at any of the three district public schools. I saw these charters change lives. Students who entered as freshmen full of rage, defiance, or indifference became the kind of open and positive young adults who are hopeful about their futures and whom you would trust to take on any project.

There are benefits to decreasing the influence of politics and bureaucratic inertia in a system and allowing innovative education professionals to do their jobs: educating and nourishing kids.

There are benefits to allowing parents to feel they have some control and some choice in the matter of how their children are educated, and for kids to feel as though they, too, have a choice.

There are structural reasons why charters work for some kids — often the most vulnerable kids. It’s not just policy vs. personnel — it’s both, and more.

Why not let them try?

Thank you for your time and consideration, and for your work on behalf of our community,

 

Alison Leach

An Open Response to Rep. Noel Frame

This rolled through my Twitter feed during the height of the charter school political advocacy campaign during this most recent legislative session.

I shared it with the 24 other "people" following me on Twitter at the time. I also tagged Rep. Noel Frame (D-Seattle) in replies making clear that this was not an acceptable response.

I also left her a phone message a couple nights later as part of phone-banking for charter schools. I made sure to mention this Tweet then, too.

She sent me a message on Twitter the next day asking for my email address, and a day or two later I had a note in my inbox:

Hi Matt,

Thank you for sending your email over.

In response to your phone message stating:

"And the lack of foresight that she is showing and this is really troubling me and I am also seeing someone who doesn’t understand her privilege she told one of our parents to just consider enrolling her child in private because students in public school often get the short end of the stick.  And the idea that a legislator is going to recommend private school to a parent who is trying to keep her kid in a functional public school is really hard to stomach."

I absolutely did not tell a parent to "consider enrolling her child in private school." I told her in-person that I respect her right as a parent to do what is best for her child, reiterated this on Twitter, and added on Twitter that I respect her views and advocacy, but we have to agree to disagree.

Two Charter School parents who have been in touch with me before this were so embarrassed by this parent's mischaracterization of my words on Twitter that they came to apologize to me personally yesterday.

Also, today I met with three students and a staff member from Summit Sierra. I took the time to hear their views and shared mine in a very respectful and encouraging way.

I hope you'll take it upon yourself to let your Twitter followers know I responded and correct this misinterpretation.

Thank you,

Noel

 

Below is my response:

 
Noel,
Thank you for your email.
If my phone message was overly zealous, it was only because I feel such a sense of urgency about the issue of charter schools. I only hoped to get your attention and urge you to reconsider your position.
My Twitter followers are few. That aside, I've given this a lot of thought, and I have not "corrected my misinterpretation." Unless some significant new information comes to light, I do not plan to do so.
For starters, unless you are accusing this parent of intentionally lying or misrepresenting you, then even if your words meant something different to you, that parent is summarizing what you communicated to her. She is free to do that even if you wish she had understood you differently.
Perhaps more importantly, though, I don't believe your position on this issue has been misrepresented. Whether or not you specifically said those words, they do summarize the effect your beliefs and your actions on the matter of charter schools have had on this parent and many like her. Even if the story isn't true, per se, the message is accurate.
Roughly 30 percent of school-age children in Seattle attend private school. Typically, this is done in pursuit of a better education than they believe their neighborhood school can offer. But most private school parents, of course, have to pay tuition, so it’s a school choice that’s not available to everyone. Unless there is similar free option for all parents, then school choice has become a privilege.
But that’s okay, right? Even without a second option, all parents are still being offered a free education for their children. Why do they need another option? After all, the system works for many students.
The problem is that it’s also failing many students, and you can identify who those kids are most likely to be based on their race and their families’ income. That’s a huge problem.
Just a few years ago, for example, Seattle Public Schools were the subject of a federal investigation into their disproportionate discipline of students of color.
If you’re raising an African-American boy, now you know both statistically and anecdotally that your son will be disciplined more frequently and treated more harshly in school because of the color of his skin. He is likely to be tracked into less-rigorous classes and taught by teachers who expect less of him because of how he looks.
So, while the system works for many, you know your son is particularly at risk of it not working for him. No matter what you do, the deck is stacked against him.
Imagine being a parent in this situation, knowing that you are being told to send your child into an environment like this, into a system built to work against him from the very beginning. It makes you angry. It makes you afraid of what that might do to your little boy. It makes you desperate to do something, to get your kid out of that school and out of harm’s way.
But instead, if you can’t afford private school tuition, you’re all but stuck in the system. You can try to choose a different public school in the same problematic district, but option schools fill up quickly, too. And in some ways, this just represents a new school that’s still inevitably playing by the same problematic rules, still part of the same problematic system. It's still a big risk.
So, given that it’s possible for an entire district to be impacted by the same problem, having some free public schools — like charter schools — that are allowed to be different, allowed to operate outside the norm of a system that is rigged based on race, allowed to hire people they believe will teach all students... I can see how that might be a good thing.
And this is the key to understanding charter schools as an issue of racial and social equity. Charter schools help extend that privilege of school choice — a privilege so many families of means are already exercising by moving to expensive neighborhoods with higher-performing schools or by enrolling in private schools — to all students and all families.
Let's be clear: charter schools aren’t perfect. They’re not The Answer. But if nothing else, they’re trying to be different, and that’s important, given the state of things.
This is about more than the 1,100 students currently enrolled in charter schools in Washington. This is an issue of equity. It is an issue of building a network of schools that can and will serve our most vulnerable and most oppressed populations as well as our most privileged are already being served. It is about extending school choice to all families, not just to those who can afford it. It is about putting some real weight behind your vote to "close the opportunity gap."
Thank you again for your email. I appreciate your engagement and your thoughtful reconsideration of this issue.
Best,

Matt Halvorson

 

I have not heard back from her.

Senate Joins House in Voting to Save Charter Schools

By Matt Halvorson

Every day this school year, every kid in every charter school classroom in the state has studied and learned without knowing if his or her school would be allowed to stay open.

Every day this year, every teacher in every charter school classroom in the state has worked hard to teach every single kid, all while knowing the schools that pay them might be forced to shut their doors.

Every day this year, each one of the 1,100 charter school students in our state -- including some in my neighborhood, and probably in yours -- have heard the daily expressions of systemic and overt racism and classism directed at them and their school.

They have felt attacked and unwanted by their own communities and their own state, even as a wall of teachers, administrators, parents, friends, advocates and legislators did their best to shield them and fight for them.

But today, finally, we are on the verge of something different.

The Washington State Senate voted in favor of equity in education today, approving a bill by a 26-23 margin that will save public charters schools and create a long-term path for their success.

The vote comes on the heels of yesterday's bipartisan show of support in the House. The bill now heads to Gov. Jay Inslee's desk to be signed into law, finally putting to rest this last-ditch effort on the part of the state teacher's union and other stagnant education organizations to block charter schools from gaining a foothold in the state.

“We expect Gov. Inslee will respect the bipartisan legislature’s vote, respect the will of the voters, and most of all," said Tom Franta, CEO of the Washington State Charter Schools Association, "respect the parents and students who worked so hard for this victory today on behalf of not just their schools, but every kid statewide.”

Advocates mounted a powerful grassroots campaign which, coupled with a paid effort, called steadily on legislators to reinstate the 2012 law overturned by the State Supreme Court last fall.

More than 1,100 families already benefitting from public charter schools were joined by many more voices from Yakima to Walla Walla, Spokane to West Seattle, all advocating for equity in education.

The bill that passed today reflects that effort but does contain some clear compromises that differ from Initiative 1240. The bill eliminates charter school access to local levy monies, and it removes provisions authorizing the conversion of traditional public schools into charter schools.

Still, this bill's passage represents a resounding success for low-income families and families of color in Washington State. And we may see the charter school movement bloom even brighter for having gone survived this assault.

Many, many of those 1,100 students and parents and siblings became activists and advocates in recent months. At first it was simply a fight for themselves and their own schools, but they became part of something much bigger.

For all the dark sides this unconstitutionality business has evoked, and for all the ignorance and fear it has revealed, this is at least one glimmer of a silver lining. In the midst of its shadowy maneuvering, maybe the WEA and its fellow clingers-on to the status quo accidentally activated the Puget Sound's next generation of homegrown advocates for equity in education.

I hope they did. It would serve them right.

Dear Rep. Santos: 'Why don't you care about my school?'

Dear Rep. Santos,

My name is Olivia Zilavy, I'm a ninth grader at Summit Sierra Public Charter School in the ID, I am one of your constituents, and I am angry.

I’m angry at the situation that the Supreme Court has put me and my family in. I am angry that we have to fight for our right to receive a good education. I am angry that a public school with an amazing track record is being questioned. I am angry that my representative isn’t supportive of something that my family and I believe in so strongly.

I understand that I am only one of the many students that you represent, but let’s just say I’m liking Rep. Pettigrew a whole lot more that I’m liking you right now. I understand that you are adamantly against charter schools, and have been since 2012. I am writing to try and sway your stance on this issue.

Your website talks about how much you care about quality public education, and how much you care about closing the achievement gap. I’m sitting here wondering, if you really care about these issues, why don’t you care about my school?

Despite the fact that nearly half of the freshman class started the school year an average of 3.5 years below grade level in both reading and math, my school, Summit Sierra, outperformed the national average in reading by 40 percent, and more than doubled the national average in math. Washington State has never closed down a low-performing public school, so why are you trying to shut down a school that has made such amazing progress toward closing the achievement gap?

Your website says, and I quote, that, “Washington state must strive for providing education excellence and opportunities for all students to learn.”

My school does that.

If traditional schools aren’t working for students, why shouldn’t they be allowed an excellent, free alternative? When a school has a 96 percent acceptance rate into four-year colleges, in comparison to the statewide high school graduation rate of 77.2 percent, why should it be called into question at all?

My school is effective in teaching its students, has high-performing test scores, and is successful in graduating 100 percent of its students. So why are you trying to take away such an amazing institution, opportunity, and community?

My school offers “level playing fields that allow those who work hard to succeed” (another quote from your website), and provides support for those that need it. If you truly care about the aspects of education that you claim you do, then I’m struggling to understand why you refuse to support a public school that succeeds in addressing all of your concerns about K-12 education in Washington.

I hope this gave you something to think about.

Sincerely,


Olivia Zilavy,
Founding class of Summit Sierra Public Charter School

 


    



Second Bill to Save Charters Proposed in Washington State Legislature

A second bill to save charter schools was floated in the Washington State Senate yesterday.

Proposed by Sen. Steve Litzow (R-Mercer Island) and Rep. Eric Pettigrew (D-Renton), the bipartisan bill would use state lottery earnings to fund charter schools. It joins a bill proposed earlier this week by Sen. Andy Billig (D-Spokane) and Sen. Michael Baumgartner (R-Spokane) that would assign more control over charters to local elected school boards, giving the legislature at least two options to consider to save the state's charter schools during the January session.

As reported by John Higgins of the Seattle Times:

"Their proposal would, among other things, direct charter-school funding to come from the state’s Opportunity Pathways Account, which uses state lottery money for early childhood education, higher-education grants, scholarships and other programs aimed at innovation.
The Washington State Supreme Court ruled Sept. 4 that the charter-school law is unconstitutional because charter schools aren’t “common” schools and therefore aren’t entitled to public money exclusively intended for those schools.
Lottery revenue isn’t restricted to common schools, but the high court also ruled that lawmakers couldn’t use money from other general-fund accounts because the state can’t tell which dollars come from which sources."

This bill has garnered significantly more support from charter school proponents because it offers a pathway to save the entire charter school system without sacrificing control over operations.

“We applaud Sens. Litzow, Fain, Mullet, and Hobbs for their commitment to reinstate the will of the voters by fixing the mess that threatens to close public charter schools," said Tom Franta, CEO of the Washington State Charter Schools Association (WA Charters). "Today’s proposal demonstrates legislators' commitment to Washington families and students. We are especially pleased to see lawmakers from both sides of the aisle come together around a solution that maintains the ability of all parents in Washington—not just those in some districts—to choose the public school that best fits the needs of every child.”

Litzow has been a steadfast champion of charter schools.

“Public charter schools provide a meaningful opportunity for students—especially minority children from low-income families—who are disproportionately failed by Washington’s inequitable public school system,” said Litzow, chairman of the Senate Early Learning and K-12 Education Committee, in his announcement of the bill yesterday. “Education quality—and inequality—is the paramount concern for students, parents, teachers and lawmakers, as well as voters, who made Washington the 42nd state to allow charter schools. No single reform will alone ensure we can meet Washington’s duty to provide a high-quality education to all children. Historic investments for public education in 2015, the expansion of charter schools and other research-based reforms supporting our most at-risk students will help close the state’s opportunity gap and strengthen the entire public education system.”

The proposed bill will receive a public hearing in the Senate Education Committee on Tuesday, Jan. 12, the second day of the 2016 legislative session, at 1:30 p.m.