On the first two «costs» the book provides no evidence of harm, other than summary
statements about segregation, expressing concern that «education programs that serve low - income and minority students have become quite different from those that serve the rest of the student population,» (p. 225) and that «charter schools have moved the country farther away from the collective and democratic forms of education.»
Not exact matches
Your point
about «fair evaluations» doesn't say much
about Gerald's
statement on an «acceptable form of
segregation».
NAACP has already released a national
statement about charter schools, saying they do not believe it is the direction we should be headed towards, particularly because they increase
segregation and take resources away from the public school district.