Learn about the curriculum, school culture and extracurricular activities offered at
these metro area charter schools serving the City of Atlanta, Clayton County, DeKalb County, Fulton County, Gwinnett County.
Not exact matches
Given that
charter schools can and do enroll students across traditional boundary lines, our analysis took into account the demographic composition of students in the entire
metro area, as opposed to a single
school district.
While the national, state, and
metro area analysis comprised the bulk of our report, we did, in fact, examine the segregation of students in
charter and traditional public
schools by geography — comparing students in these
school sectors within cities, suburbs, and rural
areas.
A quick look at the geographical placement of
charter schools in the D.C.
metro area, however, shows why such a comparison is inappropriate.
In fact, in the vast majority of the 39
metro areas reviewed in the CRP report, the application of our central - city comparison decreases (relative to the flawed CRP analysis) the level of segregation in the
charter sector as compared to the traditional public
school sector.
In many of the metropolitan
areas containing at least 20
charter schools, minority segregation was higher in
charter schools than in the
metro's regular public
schools.
In Washington, D.C., 93 percent of the
charter schools in the 5,000 - square - mile
metro area are located in inner - city D.C..
Our growing network of 31
schools uniquely encompasses 24 open - enrollment public
charter schools in Arizona, Texas, and Washington, D.C., with new
schools in Arizona and Texas, plus our first campus in Louisiana, opening in autumn 2018; five domestic private
schools in major metropolitan
areas including New York City, Silicon Valley, and Northern Virginia /
metro D.C.; and two private international
schools in China, with two more
schools in China plus a
school for early learners in the Czech Republic opening in fall 2018, and a new
school in Bangkok, Thailand in autumn 2019.
Using ApplyHouston.org, parents in the Houston
metro area can now apply to many of Houston's public
charter schools with one shared application.
In Georgia, the growth of autonomous, self - governing
charter public
schools, that are 100 % open to any child who wished to attend, has been mostly limited to the Atlanta
metro area.
ASTEC
Charter Schools governing board consists of experienced businessmen and women from the Oklahoma City
metro area.
In their analysis of the Twin Cities
metro area, Wilson and Carlsen (2016) identify four types of
charter schools: elite and international, culturally specific, results - oriented, and progressive.