And although charter administrators generally say that they rarely, if ever, expel students, staff at traditional schools say they periodically receive troubled students who have been
counseled out of charters.
Not exact matches
«She didn't allow him an in - country right
of appeal against his asylum refusal; at massive expense to tax payers she hired a private
charter plane to remove Mr Muazu to Nigeria today - no other returnee was on the plane; for the
out of hours injunction she instructed Queen's
counsel to make submissions.
Of course, we can not observe the reasons that students exit, and thus I can not say just how numerous are the incidences of charters (or district schools) counseling out students with disabilitie
Of course, we can not observe the reasons that students exit, and thus I can not say just how numerous are the incidences
of charters (or district schools) counseling out students with disabilitie
of charters (or district schools)
counseling out students with disabilities.
Critics often suggest that superior performance in the
charter sector is a result
of high levels
of attrition, caused by implicit or explicit efforts on the part
of school staff to «
counsel out» the students who are hardest to educate.
Charter schools have been known to
counsel out students with disabilities
out of school and private schools participating in voucher programs have dropped students that become too costly or challenging to serve.
It's never acceptable for
charters to refuse to provide special education services or to «
counsel out» or refuse to serve students with disabilities, but it's a particular problem when
charters comprise nearly half
of all public schools in a district.
There are, for example, no statistics on the percentage
of ELL students in the schools, no numbers on the privately raised funds the schools put to use, and only cursory gestures, in Kenny's book, to the controversy over students
counseled out of or removed from these
charter - school classrooms and to their teacher turnover rate.
Think
of the various educational crimes
charter schools are often accused
of: not serving an equitable percentage
of vulnerable populations over zealous test prep,
counseling students
out, unrealistic demands
of parents, and teaching to the tests.
An article published in yesterday's New York Times announced that the principal who had purportedly created a «got - to - go» list
of kids to be «
counseled out»
of a Success Academy
charter school in Brooklyn was taking a leave
of absence.
announced that the principal who had purportedly created a «got - to - go» list
of kids to be «
counseled out»
of a Success Academy
charter school in Brooklyn was taking a leave
of absence.
As the former principal
of this school, which follows the Big Picture Learning philosophy
of — one student at a time — and seeks to connect students to their interests and passions, I know the other variables at play, e.g. over 75 % are chronically truant (not a new practice they develop but one that's existed for some time), thought the school serves about 140 students, it's not unusual that nearly double that figure are served in a given year (it's the nature
of serving students in foster care and others that are highly mobile), over 2/3 are transfer students who were «
counseled out» by other LAUSD district and
charter schools.
Additionally, COPAA found that students with more significant disabilities were excluded from
charter schools through a process
of «selectivity, controlled outreach,
counseling out, and other push
out practices.»
For example, there are many cases where students are refused enrollment in a
charter school, expelled, or pushed or «
counseled out»
of a
charter school.
In electing to provide only the most basic special education services,
charter schools foist an additional burden on local public schools, which, by law, can not practice the same kind
of «
out -
counseling» (Yell 1998).
Making the link between school choice, accountability, testing, and exclusion
of unmotivated students even more explicit, Ravitch (2010b) has found that «Some
charter schools «
counsel out» or expel students just before state test day» (p. 7).