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Galapagos hiring teachers for 2010
Galapagos Rockford Charter School is hiring teachers and is currently accepting applications for kindergarten through fourth grade teachers for the school year beginning in August, 2010.  Interested teacher applicants should apply online at www.galapagoscharter.org.
 
Charter Schools' Enrollment Information

Galapagos Rockford Charter School 
Galapagos Rockford Charter School mixes a strong foundation of core knowledge with analytical thinking skills.  Galapagos is located at 2605 School Street (in the former St. Patrick's School) and is accepting applications for the 2010-11 school year for students in K-4. Charter school enrollment at Galapagos is open to any K-3 student in RPS District 205, and K-4 beginning with the 2010 school year.  The school offers preference to siblings of students already attending Galapagos.  To enroll online please go to www.galapagoscharter.org.  If you would like more information please call (815) 708-7946. 
 


Legacy Academy of Excellence 
The Legacy Academy of Excellence employs a well-structured, rigorous curriculum incorporating Core Knowledge, Direct Instruction and International Baccalaureate reform models.  Legacy is a public school open to any student in District 205 who will be attending grades K-6 in the 2010-11 school year. Legacy Academy of Excellence is located at 4029 Prairie Road in Rockford.  Siblings of students already enrolled will have priority enrollment.  Students not selected in the lottery will be placed on a waiting list.  For more information or to enroll online, please visit the Legacy Academy of Excellence website at www.comped-csn.org.  Legacy may also be reached by phone at (815) 961-1100 or by e-mail at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots; you need JavaScript enabled to view it.
 

 

CICS Rockford Patriots
CICS Rockford Patriots is accepting applications for students entering grades K-4.  CICS Patriots expands upon the Chicago International Charter School model, which chooses a creative and diverse management system that best matches the strengths and needs of the school's community of scholars.  Located at the Patriot's Gateway Community Center at 615 S. 5th Street in Rockford, CICS Patriots is a public charter school open to all residents of Rockford Public School District 205, including students with disabilities.  For more information, please visit www.patriots.chicagointl.org or call (815) 316-0093.  To reach Principal Charo Chaney, email her at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it .

 

 
Interesting Charter School Articles
What Gandhi would think about "The Lottery"

By Sam Chaltain, Special to the Washington Post

July 6, 2010

I just saw "The Lottery" – a documentary film about public education in general, and the charter school movement in particular – and I feel like I’ve been punched in the gut.

The film is beautiful, and deeply moving.  It is impossible not to fall in love with the four children (and their families) whose bittersweet paths we follow in the lead-up to the lottery that decides who is admitted to Harlem Success Academy, a successful new charter school, and whose dream is (randomly) denied.

Click here to read the rest of the story.

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Southland College Prep picks its students

Lottery used to select first class of 125 for charter school's debut

By Patrick Ferrell, Special to the Chicago Tribune

July 2, 2010

At less than a month old, Southland College Prep High School now has an administration.  And after a lottery earlier this week, it has 125 students.

The next step: teachers.

Read the full story: http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/southsouthwest/ct-x-s-charter-lottery-0702-20100702,0,1895766.story

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Numbers starting to add up for city schools run by private groups

 

By Greg Hinz, Crain's Chicago Business

June 28, 2010

It's finals week at UIC College Prep, a new high school run by the Noble Street charter network, and Principal Oliver Sicat is smiling.  He has some cause.

There's no metal detector at the door, or graffiti on the walls.  After its second full year of operation, the school has 1,130 applications for 230 slots.  Even though the vast majority of those students are poor and minorities, three of the 10 open-enrollment Noble high schools have higher ACT college-admission scores than any Chicago public high school with similar enrollment policies, according to state data.  And four-year graduation rates are double-digit levels above those of the typical Chicago public high school.

Click here to read the full story.

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Good data for charters, but some urge caution

by Meg McSherry Breslin, New York Times

June 24, 2010

He was born to a drug-addicted mother, struggled in school and as a child was bounced among the homes of several relatives.  Yet doors began to open for Shantell Hopkins four years ago after he entered a new charter public high school in Chicago.  Now he is preparing for his freshman year at Knox College in Galesburg, Ill., on a full-tuition scholarship from the school.

Click here to read the full story.

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Understanding charter schools

Innovative charter schools outperform bureaucratic public schools every time - right?  WRONG!

Newsweek

June 13, 2010

Some 15 of NEWSWEEK’s top 100 public high schools are charter schools. Since charter schools amount to only about 4 percent of all public schools, that would seem to suggest that charter schools are a runaway success story, right?

Read the full story:  http://www.newsweek.com/2010/06/13/understanding-charter-schools.html

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Charter School graduation extravaganza

Chicago Charter high schools graduating their first classes this weekend with more than 90% of graduates accepted into college

By Alexander Russo, District 299, the Chicago Schools Blog

June 11, 2010

More than 90% of the 577 graduating students at six Chicago charter high schools have been accepted to a 2 or 4 year college, a rate nearly double the district college enrollment average of just more than 50%.  These six charter public high schools are graduating their first senior classes this year and were launched through the city's Renaissance 2010 initiative in 2006.

Read the full story:  http://www.chicagonow.com/blogs/district-299/2010/06/charter-school-graduation-extravaganza.html

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Summit charter school's whole graduating class is headed to college

Silican Valley MercuryNews.com

By Shaun Bishop, Daily News Staff Writer

June 10, 2010

Andrea Hernandez's parents fled from El Salvador to escape a civil war in the mid-1980s. Today, they'll get to proudly watch their daughter receive her diploma from Summit Preparatory Charter High School knowing she'll go on to college.

The 18-year-old Redwood City resident will be heading to the University of Pacific in Stockton this fall. "They seem very proud I have that opportunity," Hernandez said in an interview Thursday.

She is not the only Summit graduate moving on to higher education. All 96 seniors graduating from the seven-year-old Redwood City charter school today also will be doing so, adding to the school's track record of unusually high college acceptance rates.

Over the past four years, 96 percent of Summit's graduates have gone on to college, according to school officials. For comparison, about 51 percent of San Mateo County's public high school graduates go to college and about 47 percent of graduates statewide do, according to state statistics.

Read the full story: http://www.mercurynews.com/breaking-news/ci_15273751?nclick_check=1

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How the SEED school is changing lives

Inner-city boarding school is achieving academic breakthrough

CBS

May 23, 2010

A few miles from the White House in southeast Washington sit some of the worst public schools in America. The students there are mostly poor, mostly black, and their test scores are low. Only one in three finish high school; of those who do go on to college, just five percent graduate.

But right in the middle of this same area is also one of the most successful and innovative public schools in the country. Started in 1998, the school is called SEED. It's the nation's first urban public boarding school.

Ninety one percent of the students finish high school, and 95 percent go on to college. It's a charter school that's getting national attention. Admission is by lottery, open to any family in the district willing to take a chance.

Read the full story:  http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2010/05/21/60minutes/main6506911.shtml?tag=contentMain;contentBody

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Charter school in tough neighborhood gets all its seniors into college

By Duaa Eldeib, Chicago Tribune

March 5, 2010

The entire senior class at Chicago's only public all-male, all-African-American high school has been accepted to four-year colleges. At last count, the 107 seniors had earned spots at 72 schools across the nation.

Mayor Richard Daley and Chicago Public Schools chief Ron Huberman surprised students at an all-school assembly at Urban Prep Academy for Young Men in Englewood this morning to congratulate them. It's the first graduating class at Urban Prep since it opened its doors in 2006.

Huberman applauded the seniors for making CPS shine.

"All of you in the senior class have shown that what matters is perseverance, what matters is focus, what matters is having a dream and following that dream," Huberman said.

The school enforces a strict uniform of black blazers, khaki pants and red ties -- with one exception. After a student receives the news he was accepted into college, he swaps his red tie for a red and gold one at an assembly.

The last 13 students received their college ties today, to thunderous applause.

Ask Rayvaughn Hines what college he was accepted to and he'll answer with a question.

"Do you want me to name them all?"

For the 18-year-old from Back of the Yards, college was merely a concept--never a goal--growing up. Even within the last three years, he questioned if school, let alone college, was for him. Now, the senior is headed to the prestigious Morehouse College in Atlanta, Ga. next fall.

Hines remembers the moment he put on his red and gold tie.

"I wanted to take my time because I was just so proud of myself," he said. "I wanted everyone to see me put it on."

The achievement might not merit a mayoral visit at one of the city's elite, selective enrollment high schools. But Urban Prep, a charter school that enrolls using a lottery in one of the city's more troubled neighborhoods, faced difficult odds. Only 4 percent of this year's senior class read at grade level as freshmen, according to Tim King, the school's CEO.

"I never had a doubt that we would achieve this goal," King said. "Every single person we hired knew from the day one that this is what we do: We get our kids into college."

College is omnipresent at the school. Before the students begin their freshman year, they take a field trip to Northwestern University. Every student is assigned a college counselor the day he steps foot in the school.

The school offers an extended day--170,000 more minutes over four years compared to its counterparts across the city--and more than double the number of English credits usually needed to graduate.

Even the school's voicemail has a student declaring "I am college bound" before it asks callers to dial an extension.

Normally, it takes senior Jerry Hinds two buses and 45 minutes to get home from school. On Dec. 11, the day University of Illinois at Champaign- Urbana was to post his admission decisions online at 5 p.m., he asked a friend to drive him home.

He went into his bedroom, told his well-wishing mother this was something he had to do alone, closed the door and logged in.

"Yes! Yes! Yes!" he remembers screaming. His mother, who didn't dare stray far, burst in and began crying.

That night he made more than 30 phone calls, at times shouting "I got in" on his cell phone and home phone at the same time.

"We're breaking barriers," he said. "And that feels great."

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Charter Schools: Education's Fox in the Henhouse?

By Burt Saxon

From Education Week

December 28, 2009, Vol. 29, Issue 16

 

Successful urban charter schools are showing that high demand, high support education works for all students - not just Jewish and Asian and upper-class kids, but all kids who commit to academic success.  Some of these schools' achievement gains are very impressive.

So why am I, a retired public school teacher of 34 years, cautious and suspicious?

Perhaps there's a hidden agenda, one that may be revealed by the following questions:

1. Are charter schools "culling"?  Are they taking in lots of low-income youngsters, keeping the high-achievers, and sending the rest back to the regular public schools?

2. Are high-performing charters spending huge amounts of money per student, thereby getting the large achievement gains one might expect from one-to-one tutoring and after-school and summer support?  Although many charters receive less public funding per pupil than their public school counterparts, these schools can supplement their budgets with grants - and with private money.

3. Do charter schools create disinformation campaigns against the public schools, so that urban districts will turn over their schools to what appears to be an idealistic crop of young administrators with proven results?

4. Are these idealistic young administrators working hand in hand with the Wall Street investors who already have brought this nation to financial disaster?  As The New York Times reported earlier this month, hedge-fund managers play a significant role in the New York City's charter movement.

5. Is the ultimate goal privatization?  Have the financiers realized that voucher plans are politically dead, leading them to implement their privatization strategy through charter schools?

I doubt that privatization would improve the nation's schools.  It certainly would result in the destruction of the public school teaching profession, the last secure, middle-class occupation in America.

My own take on effective education reform is based on two seemingly contradictory assumptions: Education is a public good, and competition is a good thing.  Perhaps public education should become something more akin to what the U.S. Postal Service now is: a quasi-governmental institution that allows for limited competition.  Private companies compete with the post office in overnight, package, and other special deliveries, but regular mail service is left intact.  A system like this forces the government-supported component to improve or lose resources.

Don't misunderstand me: I'm not a shill for the public schools and the teachers' unions.  Teachers in public schools have few incentives to excel.  Their pay is fixed, based on experience and degrees.  The system in which I worked for over three decades took good care of me, but it did not lead me to work as hard as I could have.  Could merit pay be a solution?

Michelle Rhee, the controversial chancellor of public schools in the District of Columbia, has offered teachers there the possibility of high salaries in return for their giving up tenure protections for one year.  Of course, hedge-fund managers would laugh at my calling the proposed salaries of up to $130,000 high ones, but let's simply ask whether the potential of more pay would attract good teachers.  Finding talented math and science teachers is especially difficult; maybe an incentive system would bring in candidates with better math and science skills.

But who might be willing to give up the benefits of tenure?  How about those Teach For America recruits, who are only going to teach for a couple of years anyway?  Even TFA's most well-known critic, Stanford University's Linda Darling-Hammond, admits that the students of certified TFA teachers do better in math.  This makes me wonder if a lot of these folks - the successful charter schools, the hedge-fund managers, Chancellor Rhee - are on the same team.  If they are, let's ask another question: Is this a better team than the one that's in charge now?  The one in which teachers make political contributions to become administrators, while their former colleagues who stay in the classroom have to work second and third jobs to send their children to college?

Maybe we do need some sort of incentive system for professional educators.  I prefer one based less on standardized tests and more on "customer satisfaction."  And I do believe that charter schools should be allowed to compete on an equal playing field.

But I absolutely do not believe that any school district should turn over all its schools to a corporation.  Special education services would be slashed immediately.  Unregulated monopolies - public or private - are not good for the consumer.  Privatization does offer the hope of some helpful efficiencies, but a form of public-private competition would be the better answer.

Of course there are those who would argue that I am overreacting.  I have no proof that the hidden agenda of the charter school movement is to privatize American public education.  Some sources (including The New York Times) say the hedge-fund managers see their involvement in charter schools as community service, rather than profit-generating.  Only time will tell if this is true or not.  I love community service, but I also believe that capitalists are geniuses at finding new markets and ways to put the screws on the working class.

I am among the few lucky Americans to have a decent pension and good health care, and I want others to have the same.  Privatizing the public schools would not help any of us educated, middle- and working-class folks.  It would just move more of us, and our children, into the ranks of the working poor.

One of my great professors in college believed that the public schools were nothing less than the foundation of American democracy.  Lawrence A. Cremin of Teachers College, Columbia University, knew full well that this nation's education system was imperfect.  But he also understood that we have continually tried to reform public schools precisely because we believe in them.

Are we ready to give up on an institution that, throughout our history, has promoted and sustained our democracy?  Should we not recognize the fact that our poorest students are failing to achieve at high levels largely because we have allowed wealth and income gaps that are morally intolerable to exist in this country?

The arguments for privatization sound good at first, but once you give the fox the key to the henhouse, it's virtually impossible to get it back.

Burt Saxon taught in the New Haven, Conn., public schools for 34 years, and he has led a seminar on educational policy at Yale University since 1976.

_________________________ 

Charter life -- or death?

From the Chicago Tribune

June 9, 2009

It got lost a bit in the end-of-session shuffle, but the Illinois legislature just passed some extremely significant legislation on charter schools.

The question is whether the legislation will prompt charters to flourish -- or will crush them.

Illinois law currently allows no more than 60 charter schools in the state -- 30 in Chicago, 15 in the suburbs and 15 Downstate. The total number of charters would double under a bill sent to Gov. Pat Quinn. Chicago would get 45 of the 60 new charters allowed.

The state should have dumped the cap altogether: Illinois has some 13,000 kids on waiting lists for charter schools. But the expansion would at least allow Chicago to continue its very encouraging experimentation with charter schools. The rest of the state has pretty much ignored the opportunity.

Here's the rub. The bill also greatly reduces the flexibility of charter schools to hire non-traditional teachers. Right now, at least 50 percent of the teachers in a charter school have to be certified by the state. That requirement would grow to 75 percent.

That would mean fewer options for charter schools to hire the artist or physicist or business leader who wants to switch careers and go teach 7th graders.

A separate bill sent to the governor has other troubling language: If teachers form a union at a charter school, they would have to do so under the Illinois Education Labor Relations Act, which is quite friendly to traditional teachers unions. That might shut out more innovative union arrangements that give teachers more input on school operations but don't provide lifetime job protection to bad teachers.

Charter schools succeed precisely because they cut the rules and requirements that straitjacket traditional schools and they give more flexibility to the teachers, administrators and parents who are key to students' performance. Raising the certification requirements and putting up walls to alternative union models won't improve education. They will push charters into being ... plain, old schools.

We do need more charters, as those 13,000 kids in line will attest. Quinn would do a great thing for education if he issued an amendatory veto that preserved the expansion of charter schools and kept the certification requirements just as they are now.

Proponents of the charter expansion argue that it will put the state in better position to claim some of the $5 billion pot created by the Obama administration to encourage public school innovation. Indeed, when Education Secretary Arne Duncan visited Illinois recently, he said charter expansion was one of the keys to qualifying for this money. Duncan commended the approval of an increase in the charter cap here. But let's do even more.

Governor, let charter schools flourish here. Raise the cap. Period.

_________________________ 

 

Kids reap benefits of long school year

By Jessica Durando, USA TODAY 

NEWARK — At the Robert Treat Academy, students sporting blue-and-green plaid uniforms fill the auditorium at 8:30 for morning announcements. "Have a sensational day of learning," principal Michael Pallante says to the crowd after they sing Happy Birthday to a fellow student."Let's stay focused. Let's learn. You guys are becoming stars."

 

Some students have been there since 7:30, eating breakfast and receiving extra homework help.  About 70% of its 450 kindergarten through eighth-grade students stay until at least 5 p.m. The public charter school operates 205 to 210 days a year, compared with the state-required 180. Some grade levels devote Saturday hours to state testing preparation. Pallante calls the 11-month school year a "blessing for these urban school kids and their parents. We have kids from broken homes, drugs, parents incarcerated. We have everything."

 

More time is necessary for academic improvement, he says.

 

Robert Treat Academy boasted the highest test scores among New Jersey urban public schools in 2008, based on a test called the New Jersey Assessment of Skills and Knowledge. The school was one of only eight nationwide declared "high-poverty, high-achieving" by the U.S. Department of Education. With examples like this, the push for extended learning time is gaining nationwide.

 

Roughly 1,000 schools — 80% charter schools, 20% traditional public schools — have expanded their schedules by more than one to two hours a day or 300 hours a year, according to the National Center on Time and Learning in Boston.

 

Karl Alexander, a sociology professor at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, says poorer children need enrichment programs over summer months to compete academically with middle-class children. "The real key is what you do with the extra time," he says. "It has to be high-quality."

 

But in Miami-Dade County, Fla., a three-year program in 39 underperforming public schools that included an extended school day and a longer school year produced mixed academic results, according to a final evaluation released last month. Administrators and teachers experienced fatigue and burnout, and many students did not attend class in the beginning of the summer, the report said.

 

"Principals and teachers also reported that proficient students felt stigmatized by the mandatory additional time, which was viewed as a punishment rather than enhancement," program evaluators wrote.

 

Other report findings showed students scored lower on the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Tests in reading or math compared with other students in the county.

 

KIPP Philadelphia Charter School CEO Marc Mannella says he instituted a longer school year because students were coming to KIPP (Knowledge Is Power Program) behind by two to three grade levels.  KIPP: Knowledge Is Power Program shown as urban triumph

 

Ashley Rainer, 13, says she doesn't mind leaving the house at 5:50 a.m. to take the bus to KIPP Philadelphia. "I feel good about it, because I know when I'm in college and have a job it is going to happen," she says.

 

Other kids aren't exactly thrilled.  "Everybody says it (stinks) going to school in the summer, but it benefits me," says Louis Grier, 14, of Robert Treat, where students won't see a summer break until July 1.

 

The concept of a longer school year also has spread to Louisiana and the Recovery School District, which was formed after Hurricane Katrina to give direction to underperforming schools. District Superintendent Paul Vallas added 40 days of instruction to the school calendar.

 

The National Education Association, the nation's largest teachers union, takes the stand that the extended calendar may work for certain school districts but not all.  "More hours is not automatically the best answer," says the NEA's Joel Packer. "Maybe we need to reduce class size, change our curriculum. Maybe we need more school counselors and mentors."

 

Joshua Medina, 16, a former Robert Treat student, now goes to The Hill school in Potsdam, Pa., on scholarship. He already has his eye on New York University or Washington, D.C.'s Howard University and hopes to pursue a career in law. "Robert Treat became my home away from home. From birth, I was always a motivated person, but coming to this school really helped me realize what I'm motivated for."

_______________________________________

 

All of the articles below are written by Karin Piper.  Karin is a charter school parent whose blogs on “charter mythology” have been featured in various Charter Advocacy Network publications through the Colorado League of Charter Schools. You can contact her at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it , or see her Web site www.charterschoolmom.com.

 

"Does My Charter School Kid Take Away From Yours?"

It happened again.

I was standing in line at my favorite coffee shop when I ran into a mom from years back.

We hugged, air kissed, and OMG’d before asking about each other’s families. We soon determined that neither of us had moved and still lived within a couple of miles. She casually asked:“Where do your kids go to school?”  (click link below to read full article)http://www.examiner.com/x-2157-Colorado-Charter-Schools-Examiner~y2009m4d15-Does-my-charter-school-kid-take-away-from-yours 

 

"Do Picky Charters Pick Students?"

Choosy moms choose charter schools. But do choosy charter schools choose its students?  (click link below for more)

http://www.examiner.com/x-2157-Colorado-Charter-Schools-Examiner~y2009m4d10-Do-picky-charters-pick-students 

 

"Crappy Schools Don't Cream"

Do you know which schools are never accused of “creaming” for enrollment?—Crappy schools.

I have never, not once, heard of a school with an awful reputation and terrible academic ratings be charged with attracting the best students. I suppose it would be difficult to imagine a school drawing the best of the best and achieve the worst of the worst education results.  (click link below for more)

http://www.examiner.com/x-2157-Colorado-Charter-Schools-Examiner~y2009m3d30-Crappy-schools-dont-cream

 
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