[Reformers] do not complain when for - profit
corporations run charter schools or when educational services are outsourced to for - profit businesses.
Not exact matches
This vision differs somewhat from that of the management of
charter schools by privately
run corporations, a trend that the AFT has opposed in recent years.
The proportion of
charters that get amazing results is far smaller than 17 percent.Why did Davis Guggenheim pay no attention to the
charter schools that are
run by incompetent leaders or
corporations mainly concerned to make money?
But by 1993, he said
charters are no different from vouchers, because they both open the door to
corporations coming in and
running public schools.
Questions about the legal status of
charter schools — which receive taxpayer money but are privately
run, usually by nonprofit
corporations — are broad, existential ones in Texas, where disputes over school funding are among the Legislature's most contentious.
A group calling itself the Mount Vernon
Charter School
Corporation has proposed
running a school for 80 to 100 students in kindergarten through third - grade...
In the case of the few
charter schools not
run by nonprofit
corporations, the legal waters are even murkier.
Charter schools are
run by private
corporations that are often more interested in generating profits than in empowering parents.
There's the explosion of for - profit
charter school companies that
run what are supposed to be public schools that serve students and communities not out of state
corporations and their shareholders.
She (and you) claim that
charters are for - profit enterprises
run by
corporations.
They support vouchers that would allow public funds to be spent on private schools — even those with religious orientations — and
charter schools, which are frequently
run by private
corporations.
Lets say Jeb Bush and his friends win this fight and turn all of our schools into private
charters and private schools
run by
corporations.
And thanks to Presidents George W. Bush and Barak Obama, federal law provides that failing schools can be handed over to
charter school management companies... and with it hundreds of millions of dollars in taxpayer funds going to private
charter school
corporations to
run public schools.
In state after state,
charter schools are proving that it is downright risky to turn public money over to deregulated
corporations and unqualified individuals to
run schools.