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Autor/inn/enAdamson, Frank; Cook-Harvey, Channa; Darling-Hammond, Linda
InstitutionStanford Center for Opportunity Policy in Education (SCOPE)
TitelWhose Choice?: Student Experiences and Outcomes in the New Orleans School Marketplace
Quelle(2015), (72 Seiten)
PDF als Volltext Verfügbarkeit 
Spracheenglisch
Dokumenttypgedruckt; online; Monographie
SchlagwörterSchool Choice; Portfolios (Background Materials); School Districts; Charter Schools; Natural Disasters; At Risk Students; Governance; School Policy; State Legislation; Public Schools; Selective Admission; Special Education; Student Needs; Student Experience; Behavior Modification; Discipline; Accountability; School Closing; Incentives; Mixed Methods Research; Documentation; Content Analysis; Observation; Interviews; Attitude Measures; Stakeholders; Educational History; Educational Change; Enrollment; Academic Achievement; Racial Differences; Ethnicity; Poverty; Eligibility; Standardized Tests; Elementary Secondary Education; Louisiana (New Orleans)
AbstractAs charters and other public and private schools of choice have created a new landscape in many urban areas across the country, some districts have adopted the idea of creating "portfolios" of options. Central to the philosophy of a portfolio district is continuous improvement, as lowest-performing schools are transformed or replaced. New Orleans, Louisiana is distinctive in that it has not only adopted the portfolio district approach, but has moved to a system that is comprised nearly entirely of charter schools. This drastic change occurred on the heels of Hurricane Katrina, which ravaged the city in 2005, costing lives, destroying property, and displacing large numbers of people, most of them low-income people of color. Citywide, this creates an educational environment like no other, featuring multiple superintendents, boards of education, approaches to school admissions and operations, curriculum, instruction, and student discipline. Furthermore, Louisiana's charter school policy is unique from that of other states in that the law explicitly allows some schools to engage in selective enrollment practices that resemble those of private schools. Public charter schools can require minimum grade point averages and standardized test scores, and they can require applicants to have interviews, provide portfolios of work, or submit letters of recommendation to be admitted. This policy brief and report examine the results of the New Orleans experiment in terms of the experiences of students and families managing their way through a portfolio of charter schools in this unusual context. Among many findings, the research shows that New Orleans reforms have created a set of schools that are highly stratified by race, class, and educational advantage, operating in a hierarchy that provides very different types of schools and to different types of children. While some have choice; others do not: both access and educational quality differ substantially, with the most vulnerable students least likely to experience the stability and supportive environments they need. Successful system reform must promote high quality school experiences for all students while safeguarding children's rights of access to supportive learning opportunities. In the context of a school portfolio, successful reform must also support school improvement in ways that ultimately create schools worth choosing in which all students can enact real choices that serve them well. That system has not yet been created in New Orleans. It is likely that acknowledging the realities of the experiences of the most vulnerable children is a necessary first step in that direction. In this report the authors describe the New Orleans system of schooling and its current operation. In section II, they describe how students are distributed across the different tiers of schools that have emerged in the portfolio or marketplace of schools. In section III, they examine how students' academic and disciplinary experiences appear to vary across schools within these tiers. The authors summarize school outcomes data in section IV and present a discussion and conclusions in section V. The following are appended: (1) Data Collection and Methods; and (2) Legal Framework for Charter Schools in Louisiana. [For the research brief, "Whose Choice? Student Experiences and Outcomes in the New Orleans School Marketplace. Research Brief," see ED574637.] (ERIC).
AnmerkungenStanford Center for Opportunity Policy in Education. Barnum Center 505 Lasuen Mall, Stanford, CA 94305. Tel: 650-725-8600; Fax: 650-736-1682; e-mail: scope@stanford.edu; Web site: http://edpolicy.stanford.edu/
Erfasst vonERIC (Education Resources Information Center), Washington, DC
Update2020/1/01
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