Not exact matches
Within the same
district, charter
schools typically receive less per pupil spending than the
traditional public school.
[2] We also cited a study from Arizona that found that charter
schools within one
traditional public school district pulled students from 21 distinct
districts.
Families in poverty are more likely to have
within -
district traditional public schools within one or two miles, but these differences narrow at longer distances.
Under an intradistrict choice policy, a family is able to choose any
traditional public school within their
school district, even if it falls outside of their local
school attendance zone.
We estimate that private
school choice and intradistrict choice (allowing families to choose any
traditional public school in their
district) have the largest potential to expand the sets of
schools to which families have access, with more than 80 percent of families having at least one of these «choice»
schools within five miles of home.
Intradistrict choice: Allow families access to any
public traditional elementary
school within their
school district (i.e., not just
within their attendance zones).
Prior studies examining this question have focused on the
district level or explored the effects of charter
schools located
within several miles of a
traditional public school.
Given the dysfunction of the larger system
within which they must work, how much should we focus on recruiting great leaders for
traditional public schools and
school districts?
In New Orleans, where essentially all
schools are charters, the comparison
schools have to come either from a handful of
district schools (which aren't really
traditional public schools) or from the suburbs — whereas, in Detroit, the comparison
schools are apparently
within the city.
The Houston, Denver, and Lawrence
school districts were trailblazers in implementing a suite of new reforms
within the constraints of a
traditional public school system.
Bubbling opposition to the idea of a phased - in approach that entails co-locating charter
schools within traditional public schools and allowing the charters to expand one grade at a time — a tactic that charter operators endorse as a way to gradually build community support and resources, but local
school districts are reluctant to participate in.
Charter
schools are tuition - free
public schools operated independently rather than
within a
traditional school district.
The proposed charter
school funding change would no longer allow for the practice of some
districts keeping supplemental property taxes or sales tax revenue that's distributed using the ad valorem method for
traditional public schools within their own taxing jurisdiction.
A cost - benefit analysis of the alternative
school or program in relation to a
traditional public school within the
school district.