




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
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Download:
http://www.tcer.org/tcer/schools/charter_y8_2006.pdf
This report examines performance, demographics, satisfaction, and the financial impact of the 192 open-enrollment charter schools operating in Texas in 2004-05. Academic comparisons of charters and traditional public schools generally favored traditional public schools. For campuses rated under standard procedures, small percentages of charter campuses received Exemplary (2%) or Recognized (13%) status. Traditional public school campuses, in contrast, had higher percentages of Exemplary and Recognized ratings (a combined 30%). Proportionally more charter campuses earned Academically Unacceptable ratings (21% vs. 3%). The researchers, however, found that continuous enrollment in charter schools had a significant positive effect on achievement. Controlling for students' prior academic and social backgrounds, they found that consecutive years spent in a charter school was a positive predictor of language arts and math scores.
Date: 2006
Source: Texas Education Agency
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