We have rigorous statistical evidence from Stanford's Center for Research on Education Outcomes (CREDO) that
urban charter schools outperform traditional schools (the table below comes from their 2015 study of charters in 41 urban regions), and I believe this should be our nation's preferred school improvement strategy.
Not exact matches
In general, these
urban charters are
outperforming their traditional public -
school counterparts.
Boston's
Charter Schools Show Significant Gains — Boston charter school students outperformed their counterparts at traditional public schools and at charter schools in other urban areas by a striking margin over a recent six - year span, a Stanford University study
Charter Schools Show Significant Gains — Boston charter school students outperformed their counterparts at traditional public schools and at charter schools in other urban areas by a striking margin over a recent six - year span, a Stanford University study
Schools Show Significant Gains — Boston
charter school students outperformed their counterparts at traditional public schools and at charter schools in other urban areas by a striking margin over a recent six - year span, a Stanford University study
charter school students
outperformed their counterparts at traditional public
schools and at charter schools in other urban areas by a striking margin over a recent six - year span, a Stanford University study
schools and at
charter schools in other urban areas by a striking margin over a recent six - year span, a Stanford University study
charter schools in other urban areas by a striking margin over a recent six - year span, a Stanford University study
schools in other
urban areas by a striking margin over a recent six - year span, a Stanford University study found.
In the past few years,
charter public
schools in Colorado have
outperformed comparable public
schools in nearly every area, while serving high percentages of minority students in
urban areas.
For example,
charter public
schools in Colorado have
outperformed other public
schools in nearly every area while serving high percentages of minority students in traditionally
urban areas.
In most large
urban school districts throughout Florida this is also the case —
charter Title I
schools do not
outperform traditional public
school Title I
schools.
A series of studies from CREDO at Stanford University have found that in the aggregate
charter schools don't perform better than traditional public
schools but often
outperform them in
urban areas.
Boston
charter school students
outperformed their counterparts at traditional public
schools and at
charter schools in other
urban areas by a striking margin over a recent six - year span, a Stanford University study found.
Sixty percent of
urban charter schools in Massachusetts
outperformed comparable traditional
schools on the 2003 MCAS exams.
«What this shows is that
charters both
outperformed urban schools and improved faster than
urban schools,» said David Plank, director of Michigan State University's Education Policy Center.
Research from MIT, Stanford and Harvard have repeatedly documented that in states with comprehensive
charter school laws, public
charter schools outperform traditional public
schools, especially those serving students who are low - income, living in
urban communities, are children of color and are English - language learners.