As my Choice Watch report (Cotto & Feder, 2014) demonstrated, charter schools in Connecticut tend to serve a relatively more advantaged group of (mostly) Black and Latinx children including fewer children with disabilities, emerging bilingual children, and children eligible for free and reduced priced meals compared to the students in local public schools in the same cities as the charter school
As my Choice Watch report (Cotto & Feder, 2014) demonstrated, charter schools in Connecticut tend to serve a relatively more advantaged group of (mostly) Black and Latinx children including fewer children with disabilities,
emerging bilingual children, and children eligible for free and reduced priced meals compared to the students in local public schools in the same cities
as the charter school
as the charter schools.
Yet, no charter school was revoked because it didn't include
emerging bilingual students, children with disabilities, or because it was racially segregated,
as state law would suggest.