CER News Alert
(Washington, DC 9/21/01) The Center for Education Reform (CER) today released additional data documenting the positive effects of charter schools on students, parents and communities.
"The data shows conclusively that charter schools have made an indelible mark on education. Findings continue to reinforce the facts: charter schools are working, parents are happy with them, traditional school districts have been propelled to make improvements and children are thriving in a charter school setting," observed CER president Jeanne Allen. "These findings and reports are so definitive they leave little room for those that say charter schools hurt public education."
"What the Research Reveals about Charter Schools" looks at the growing number of national, regional and state charter school studies. Of 65 studies, 61 show positive effects of charter schools. Of particular note are two U.S. Department of Education studies confirming the ripple effect charter schools have on local districts by driving these schools to implement new educational programs, make systemic changes or create similar programs within the traditional public schools.
An important conclusion from an Arizona study, "Does Charter School Attendance Improve Test Scores?: The Arizona Results" finds that the longer a student attends a charter school the greater the academic gains - with no similar result among district school students. That study was one of the largest in scope, tracking 40,000-50,000 students who spent one to three years in charters, comparing them to students in comparable district schools and accounted for things like ethnicity, gender, language and more. Similar results were found in a Texas study.
Also released is the Survey of Charter Schools, 2000-2001. The survey's findings bolster long-held convictions that charter schools serve diverse populations, offers varied but demanding curricula and are held accountable. These data come from responses to CER's national survey of charter schools operating in the 200-2001 school year and represent 346 schools of more than 2,030 operating nationwide as of September 2000.
Key Findings Include:
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Copies of these publications can be found on the CER website:
What the Research Reveals About Charter Schools and Survey of Charter Schools, 2000-2001 or for a modest fee from the Center at (202) 822-9000.
Also see: Back to School #3, 1.3 million Americans directly involved in Charter Schools
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The Center for Education Reform is a national, independent, non-profit advocacy organization founded in 1993 to provide support and guidance to individuals, community and civic groups, policymakers and others who are working to bring fundamental reforms to their schools. For further information, please call (202) 822-9000.
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Copies of these publications can be found on the CER website:
What the Research Reveals About Charter Schools and Survey of Charter Schools, 2000-2001 or for a modest fee from the Center at (202) 822-9000.
Also see: Back to School #3, 1.3 million Americans directly involved in Charter Schools
# # #
The Center for Education Reform is a national, independent, non-profit advocacy organization founded in 1993 to provide support and guidance to individuals, community and civic groups, policymakers and others who are working to bring fundamental reforms to their schools. For further information, please call (202) 822-9000.
Go to Charter Schools Week Homepage
CER Home Page
CER News Alerts
Education
Reform
E-Mail
CER
CER
Publications