Sentences with phrase «one's counterparts in traditional public schools»

Charter critics point to reports showing differences in the demographic characteristics of charter school students and their counterparts in traditional public schools as evidence that choice leads to segregation.
For example, a 2010 report by UCLA's Civil Rights Project found that black charter school students were twice as likely to attend schools that enrolled fewer than 10 percent non-minority students as their counterparts in traditional public schools.
Bluntly put, do students in charter schools learn more than their counterparts in traditional public schools?
Hispanics enrolled in charter schools do significantly worse in reading and math compared to their counterparts in traditional public schools.
The result is a compromise bill that gained unanimous approval from the House Education Committee and the public support of both charter proponents and their counterparts in the traditional public school system.
Summing up its stunning findings, Richard Whitmire writes, «Graduates from the top charter networks — those with enough high school alumni to measure college success accurately — earn four - year degrees at rates that range up to five times as high as their counterparts in traditional public schools.
Most charter schools have been successful because their leaders have had the ability to innovate in ways their counterparts in traditional public schools systems can not.
Students in publicly funded and independently managed online charters across the country made far less progress than their counterparts in traditional public schools.
Studies are showing, for example, that black students in charter schools are more likely than their counterparts in traditional public schools to be educated in an intensely segregated setting.
Typically, students in charter schools perform 2 - 3 grades and 30 points higher on achievement tests than their counterparts in traditional public schools.
There is also a dearth of training programs specifically geared toward charter leaders, who tend to have more responsibilities than their counterparts in traditional public schools.
CREDO found that, on average, students in New Jersey charter schools are making greater gains in both reading and math than their counterparts in traditional public schools.
Charter schools in Connecticut, as everywhere else, have a more select population than traditional public schools: fewer students with special education needs, fewer students who have English as a second language, fewer students from impoverished homes or no homes at all, and more students who have higher base line scores than their counterparts in traditional public schools.
Students who use corporate tax dollars to attend private schools that lack accreditation, accountability and standards do not out - perform their counterparts in traditional public schools.
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