The state's 107 charter schools, including QEA, receive public funds but are run by separate non-profit organizations and intended to develop
innovate teaching systems that don't exist at traditional public school systems.
Not exact matches
And with judicious support, it can engage to meet the needs of all, and can
innovate through competition to improve
teaching and learning and expand the curriculum, in ways that are unimaginable under public
systems....
Perhaps it is time for central government to yield some of the control over standards and accountability that it has amassed in the last 30 years in exchange for the opportunity for districts and schools to
innovate around what students are
taught and how the actors in the
system are held accountable.