Not exact matches
That question — how to make sure that charter school
authorizers hold up their end of the accountability bargain — is arising a lot lately
as examples of
failed charter schools proliferate.
DCPS could continue to run its schools
as it saw fit, but each would have a contract with the new
authorizer, which could close those that persistently
fail.
So it seems that
authorizers are generally unwilling to close a school that is
failing to comply with federal or state law, but they are also unwilling to require the school to make changes to its special education program, presumably because the
authorizers see this
as infringement on charter autonomy.
As authorizers and states have increased performance expectations and grown less hesitant to close failing schools, «authorizer shopping» has emerged as a growing threat to overall charter school qualit
As authorizers and states have increased performance expectations and grown less hesitant to close
failing schools, «
authorizer shopping» has emerged
as a growing threat to overall charter school qualit
as a growing threat to overall charter school quality.
As charter school authorizers and states have increased performance expectations and grown less hesitant to close failing schools, «authorizer shopping» has emerged as a growing threat to overall charter school qualit
As charter school
authorizers and states have increased performance expectations and grown less hesitant to close
failing schools, «
authorizer shopping» has emerged
as a growing threat to overall charter school qualit
as a growing threat to overall charter school quality.