this post was submitted on 13 May 2024
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One size doesn't fit all. That's why all kids should have an hour of reading, an hour of writing, and an hour of maths every day (which takes up like 70% of the learning time available).
I'm all for innovation in education, but surely there is plenty of international data to give just a little bit of information on the positives of charter schools.
I nice comparative analysis would go a long way, but no.
It's probably pretty difficult to measure the performance of charter schools vs public schools.
A charter school might specifically cater to underachieving kids, kids for whom the public system didn't work well. Then by selection the public schools will outperform the charter school.
Or alternatively, a charter school might outperform public school because the class sizes can be smaller and they don't have to stick to the government set rules for schools. If you set dumb rules (like three hours a day on the three Rs) then you can then point to the charter schools and say "look, they are doing better than the public schools so we should convert more schools to charter schools" when in reality it's just a sign the way you run public schools is wrong.
I was thinking something a little bigger.
There are countries that run charter schools and countries that don't. Which ones are doing better from an outcomes point of view, which ones are doing better after 20 years out of school?
If we look at a country level then things like attitude towards education, the specific implementation differing between countries, or the general social structure outside of school differing may make comparisons meaningless.
Another factor is that "charter school" doesn't necessarily mean run by a company, just that they have an agreement with the government (a charter) that says they don't have to follow the normal curriculum. But from my understanding charter schools in NZ are privately run?
Regardless, there are some studies. Here's an article about one:
This study shows that charter schools are slow to get started (i.e. perform poorly at the start) and slowly catch up to public schools over time:
This article talks about how charter schools and public schools are as good as the people running them:
Hmm. Sometimes I wonder if this “Dave” is, indeed, an AI.
Hmm, I just checked my fingers and they do look a bit strange. If I was AI, how would I know?
We're all AI, some of us are executing on biological hardware.
I'm not AI, I'm just I
If the charter school can cherry pick which students it chooses and can expel difficult to teach students then I can't see how it could possibly do worse.