graphic
US Charter Schools spacer
Home|Login|Register
graphic graphic
     Advanced graphic
 
OverviewspacerNewsspacerCommunityspacerState ProfilesspacerFederal SupportspacerResources
graphic
spacer In This Section
graphic
arrowResources Review
arrowStarting a Charter School
arrowAssistance & Guidance
arrowNew Research & Reports
arrowHighlighted Resources
arrowState Organizations
arrowSearch Resources
graphic
spacer
graphic
spacer
graphic
Did You Know?
Twelve studies find that overall gains in charter schools are larger than other public schools; four find charter schools’ gains higher in certain significant categories of schools; six find comparable gains; and, four find that charter schools’ overall gains lagged behind traditional schools.

Source: Charter School Achievement: What We Know, July 2005 Update

graphic

 

spacer spacer

Email ThisPrint

USCS Start-Up Brief: What it Takes, Starting a Charter School

http://www.uscharterschools.org/cs/r/view/uscs_rs/1700
This on-line case study of Leadership High School, was conducted by the Policy Support & Studies Program at WestEd, an educational research and development organization, with support from the US Department of Education. It aims to capture the key strategies and day-to-day challenges in starting and running a charter school.

What it Takes: Starting a Charter School

LHS student taking a makeup test.

This on-line case study of Leadership High School, was conducted by the Policy Support & Studies Program at WestEd, an educational research and development organization, with support from the US Department of Education. It aims to capture the key strategies and day-to-day challenges in starting and running a charter school. Leadership High School started from scratch in 1997-98, as part of the San Francisco Unified School District, San Francisco, CA.



As the first installment in the series, this article provides an introduction to the school and an overview of its students, staff, and instructional program.
This second installment focuses on the origins of the school's mission and instructional philosophy, the process used in designing the school during its early development, and the success of the school's founder in negotiating the approval of the charter.
This third installment focuses on the strategies used by the school to find a facility for the school, develop a budget, and establish a board of directors.
The fourth installment examines why many of the students and teachers came to LHS, including the strategies used by the school to recruit, as well as reasons students and staff themselves cite for coming.
The fifth and final installment summarizes some of the major lessons LHS has to offer other prospective school developers before starting their own schools. It also offers insights for other charter school operators in establishing practices that can help benefit a school in its early years.


Case Study by Don Klein, JoAnn Izu, and Kyo Yamashiro.
Photo editing and HTML coding by Jessie Johnson.
Please email us your feedback on these installments at uscharterschools@wested.org.

Source: www.USCharterSchools.org

graphic
Home | Overview | News | Community | State Profiles | Federal Support | Resources

Send Us Feedback

See our disclaimer, copyright, privacy policy and helpful details about this site.