Most decisions are made at the building level, including significant
reliance on public charter schools.
Not exact matches
While conceding that the Ohio constitution does not prohibit
charter schools, he cited the court's previous rulings in DeRolph v. State, Ohio's adequacy lawsuit, holding that the constitution does prohibit «excessive
reliance on locally raised funds to finance
public schools.»
A detour to the included DVD is instructive: in this Harlem - based, lottery - selected
public charter school, we see a 1st - grade classroom that challenges any in the country for the intellectual engagement of its students without any
reliance on the regimented, direct instruction that the clichéd objections imagine dominate all successful
charter schools.
As I look out over the current
school reform landscape I see it is categorized by policies that seek to standardize, homogenize, and corporatize
public education through the use of one - size - fits - all curriculum standards, high stakes testing, micro-management of
school operations from distal bureaucrats, teacher evaluation policies based
on mis - interpretations of current research, and heavy
reliance on corporate education providers camouflaged as non-profits operating via
charter schools.