SACRAMENTO, Calif., Dec. 2, 2014 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The California Charter Schools Association (CCSA) has called for the non-renewal of five (5) charter public schools across California that are below CCSA's Minimum Criteria for Renewal. These five charter schools are among the lowest performing schools in the state, have not demonstrated substantial growth over time, and have consistently ranked near the bottom of state and local measures of academic performance.
While California's public schools transition to a new accountability system, CCSA and its members remain committed to ensuring charter schools deliver on their promise to students and their families. Charter schools operate with greater autonomy and flexibility than traditional public schools in exchange for increased accountability. Charter school renewal is the time when charter school authorizers must determine if a charter school is fulfilling this promise.
"We believe that charter public schools should be held to high standards of performance and when they do not perform, we advocate for their non-renewal," said Jed Wallace, president and CEO, CCSA. "We know that closing low-performing charter public schools is one of the strongest tools available to ensure quality in California's charter school sector."
This year, CCSA is calling for the non-renewal of the following five charter public schools: South Sutter Charter School (Sutter County); Manzanita Middle School (Contra Costa County); New City Charter School (Los Angeles County); RAI Online Charter School (San Diego County); and Oasis Charter Public School (Monterey County).
CCSA is committed to supporting our members in creating significantly better learning opportunities for children and their families. That means not only supporting the growth of high-performing schools, but also shining a light on those charter public schools that are not providing a high-quality education. In doing so, California's charter school movement reaffirms its commitment to the transparency and accountability parents and the general public wish to see in place for all public schools.
"CCSA has led the way for increased accountability by raising standards that value academic rigor, while also giving schools credit for academic growth, and for taking on the challenge of serving traditionally disadvantaged students," said Elizabeth Robitaille, senior vice president of Achievement and Performance Management, CCSA. "Students cannot wait for schools to 'get better.' Parents are demanding high-quality educational options now."
There are 91,000 students on charter public school waiting lists – despite an additional 87 new charter schools opening this year for a total of 1,184 charter schools in California. Nearly 548,000 students attend a charter school in California, leading the nation in the number of charter school students and the number of charter schools.
"We recognize that closing a school is a difficult decision," continued Wallace. "But we believe it is necessary, which is why we've advocated for the non-renewal of chronically underperforming schools since 2011."
About the California Charter Schools Association
The California Charter Schools Association (CCSA) advances the charter school movement through state and local advocacy, leadership on accountability, and resources for member schools. CCSA's vision is to increase student learning by growing the number of families choosing high quality charter schools so that no child is denied the right to a great public education. Our mission is to ensure a million students attend charter public schools by 2022, with charter public schools outperforming non‐charter public schools on every measure. For more information, please visit our website at www.calcharters.org.
Contact: Emily Bertelli
[email protected]
(412) 559-8571
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SOURCE California Charter Schools Association
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