Yet charters can be more segregated than ever, and
get more money per student, plus lots of services and in - kind staffing.
Not exact matches
Few jurisdictions have passed significant voucher and tax - credit legislation, and most have hedged charter laws with one or another of a multiplicity of provisos — that charters are limited in number, can only be authorized by school districts (their natural enemies), can not enroll
more than a fixed number of
students,
get less
money per pupil than district - run schools, and so on.
Districts with higher
per - pupil costs — those with many disadvantaged
students, for example — don't necessarily
get significantly
more money.
A proposal in the Georgia General Assembly would give
more money to state charter schools, which
get less
money per student than traditional public schools yet must outperform traditional schools or risk losing their charters.