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Charter Schools Are Better Than District Schools. Unless They Aren’t.

Photo: Jack Dugan

Charter schools, on average, do no better or worse than District schools.

Charter schools are better than District schools in educating poor children.

Charter schools don’t play fair.

The battlefield over charter schools success is littered with these simple refrains. Year after year, a new study or a review of charters or a School Reform Commission hearing brings out a new interpretation of charter schools’ value—each one presented as though it is the end of the discussion.

The latest came just a few weeks ago, with the release of a study of urban charter schools from Stanford’s Center for Research on Education Outcomes (CREDO), which found that poor students in charters learned more than their comparable peers at traditional public schools. In Philadelphia, the results were striking: Based on test scores, the study indicated that, on average, charter school students received the equivalent of 40 more days of math learning and 28 more days of reading. School reformers (of a certain stripe) touted the results. As Sharmain Matlock-Turner and Michael Person wrote in The Inquirer: “The debate over charter schools’ ability to produce better results is over.”

That’s it. End of discussion.

Except that, of course, it’s not the end of the discussion—or even any real discussion at all. Sweeping statements about charter schools—or any set of schools—do not account for the complications and nuances of public education. They are more akin to the sort of low-minded discourse of the mayoral race, where candidates were asked in the first televised debate to answer “yes” or “no” to the question: Do you support charter schools?

One recent study found that poor students in charters learned more than their comparable peers at traditional public schools. In Philadelphia, on average, charter school students received the equivalent of 40 more days of math learning and 28 more days of reading.

It would be nice for the issue to be so simple: Digging into what is really behind the bumper sticker sloganeering takes you down a rabbit hole lined with funhouse mirrors, where every seemingly definitive statement has a series of what Jon Cetel of state education advocacy organization PennCAN calls “yeah, buts…”

“The charter school system is not a monolith,” says Adam Schott, Director of Policy Research for education think tank Research for Action. “When you’re asking the question of how charters perform for different groups of kids, you have to ask, What are the characteristics of that group? What counts as making gains? What do you consider success?”

So what do we know about charter versus District performance in Philly?

“Because charter schools are schools of choice they may not have a student population that exactly mirrors the districts from which they draw students,” the CREDO study notes. “These differences are important for understanding which families elect to enroll their students in charter schools.”

“When the District asked for people to take over neighborhood schools, a relatively small number applied,” says Lapp. “When it came to starting a new school, you had all these people signing up. That’s when you can control everything—but that’s not the ballgame.”

Studies show that charters do a better job of educating low-income children, based on the number of students who qualify for free or reduced lunch—which in Philadelphia is 87 percent. But District schools in Philadelphia enroll more disadvantaged children than charters—87 percent versus 77 percent. And even those numbers can be deceptive because not all District schools have so high a percentage of poor students.

Overwhelmed yet? That’s exactly why we tend towards the sweeping generalizations. But broad statements—and overly-broad comparisons—don’t solve anything in an educational crisis like the one we’re in. The hard work is understanding what happens at individual schools beyond test scores and simple stats:  Is Samuel Fels High School making progress in areas that are important for its particular students? Has Mastery Smedley figured out the tools needed to bring its population up to standards? Can what works at one neighborhood school—or at a charter—work at another? Is anyone trying to make that assessment? If you care about educating kids, you need to spend time in the fine print. What matters is not how charters in general compare to District schools in general—because, really, there is no in general when it comes to our school system.

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