You Tell Me; What Does This Mean?

 There are several passages in I-1240 that I cannot discern what they mean.  I have read them out loud, had others read them and we can't find a consensus on the meanings. 

First up, how the Board of Education picks its final cut, once it receives all the approved charter proposals from authorizers (either approved School Boards and the Charter Commission). Unclear part in italics:

Section 215, Pages 21-22
(2) To ensure compliance with the limits for establishing new charter schools, certification from the state board of education must be obtained before final authorization of a charter school.  Within
ten days of taking action to approve or deny an application under section 214 of this act, an authorizer must submit a report of the action to the applicant and to the state board of education, which
must include a copy of the authorizer's resolution setting forth the action taken, the reasons for the decision, and assurances of compliance with the procedural requirements and application elements
under sections 213 and 214 of this act.  The authorizer must also ndicate whether the charter school is designed to enroll and serve at-risk student populations.  The state board of education must
establish, for each year in which charter schools may be authorized as part of the timeline to be established pursuant to section 214 of this act, the last date by which the authorizer must submit the report.  The state board of education must send notice of the date to each authorizer no later than six months before the date.

 (3) Upon the receipt of notice from an authorizer that a charter school has been approved, the state board of education shall certify whether the approval is in compliance with the limits on the maximum number of charters allowed under subsection (1) of this section.  If the board receives simultaneous notification of approved charters that exceed the annual allowable limits in subsection (1) of this section, the board must select approved charters for implementation through a lottery process, and must assign implementation dates accordingly.  (4) The state board of education must notify authorizers when the maximum allowable number of charter schools has been reached.

What would you say "simultaneous notification" means?  The same minute? hour? day?  I keep thinking this is some sneaky backdoor way to allow the Board of Education to select out who they want.  (You'll note that the authorizer has to tell the BOE of proposals that serve at-risk kids but then what? Also to note, this is where the lottery comes into play.)

Next up, Section 208, where it states:

NEW SECTION.  Sec. 208.  WASHINGTON CHARTER SCHOOL COMMISSION.  (1) The Washington charter school commission is established as an independent state agency whose mission is to authorize high quality  public charter schools throughout the state, particularly schools
designed to expand opportunities for at-risk students, and to ensure the highest standards of accountability and oversight for these schools.  The commission shall, through its management, supervision, and enforcement of the charter contracts, administer the portion of the public common school system consisting of the charter schools it authorizes as provided in this chapter, in the same manner as a school district board of directors, through its management, supervision, and
enforcement of the charter contracts, and pursuant to applicable law, administers the charter schools it authorizes.


How can the Charter Commission act like a School Board when it has nothing to do with budgets or policy?  School Boards do not manage districts nor do they supervise anyone but a superintendent.  And enforcing contracts?  Not a Board member's job.  Hmm.  Any thoughts?

Again, in Section 208, members of the Charter Commission are chosen by Governor (3), Speaker of House (3) and President of Senate (3).  No more than 5 can be in the same party and one must be a Washington State public school parent.  But what does this mean?

 (3) Members appointed to the commission shall collectively possess strong experience and expertise in public and nonprofit governance; management and finance; public school leadership, assessment,
curriculum, and instruction; and public education law. All members shall have demonstrated an understanding of and commitment to charter schooling as a strategy for strengthening public education.





What would you suppose "demonstrated and understanding of and commitment to charter schooling" means?  If you came from a management and finance, how would you demonstrate that?  What if there were a retired educator with solid accomplishments who had no particular feeling either way?   Would that objectivity and experience be rejected for a true believer?  Is it even legal to ask for this oath of fidelity?

Section 210


3) All authorizers must develop and follow chartering policies and practices that are consistent with the principles and standards for quality charter authorizing developed by the national association of charter school authorizers in at least the following areas: 

The National Association of Charter School Authorizers is funded by the Walton and Gates Foundations among others.    Is it right for a major funder for the charter campaign to also fund the group whose policies charters have to follow?

Section 213 - Charter Applications - Content
 
(g) Background information on the proposed founding governing board members and, if identified, the proposed school leadership and management team;
 
 Should there be qualifications/requirements to serve on a charter board for a charter school?   None are required here.

(f) Evidence of need and parent and community support for the proposed charter school;
 
What do you think that evidence should look like for a charter application? 

Section 225 - Annual Reports

3) Together with the issuance of the annual report following the fifth year after there have been charter schools operating for a full school year, the state board of education, in collaboration with the commission, shall submit a recommendation regarding whether or not the legislature should authorize the establishment of additional public charter schools.

Can someone put this in plain English for me?  At the end of the fifth year, there are likely to be charters that have been in operation at least 4 years so I am confused about "charter schools operating for a full school year".

Comments

Anonymous said…
I'd say they did a cut and paste job from here and didn't worry about what it actually said.
http://www.studentsfirst.org/page/-/collateral/2012.06.19-CharterAccountabilityModelLeg.pdf

CT
Anonymous said…
I think Section 215 is trying to establish a process that creates a lottery between all applications received by the deadline and meeting the relevant criteria. You and Charlie seem to have been consistently over-reading the phrase "upon receipt." Of course, the text of the initiative could be much clearer.

--My two cents
Anonymous said…
I disagree with two cents above. I think 215 creates a first come, first served approach to creation up to the maximum number of charters permitted. However, they recognize that approach has the potential to leave them without a clear order of receipt (i.e., when they receive simultaneous notices). I think simultaneous is taken literally - that is to say, received at the same minute. The lottery only involves those received simultaneously because everything received before that would already be assigned an implementation date. The passage in italics is designed to solve the dilemma of what happens when you are only permitted X more charters, yet Y (essentially X plus some number) approvals are received literally at the same time. I can't imagine that is ever likely to happen, but they seem to think it is possibly.

-reminder that putting too much in legislation can be just as bad as too little
Anonymous said…
Section 225 - I read it to mean that five years after at least one charter has been operating for one full school year, they will decide whether to lift the cap on the number of charters in the state.

I agree with the above, that 215 is an answer to what to do when they receive proposals for the last slot simultaneously - how do they decide which one gets to be charter number 8 if more than one approved proposal is received at the same time. I disagree that it means "at the same minute" because it is undefined (unless it is defined elsewhere in the initiative or has a specific legal meaning that I'm unaware of). I could see where It may be open to interpretation and thus open to a legal challenge.

-Jill
Anonymous said…
Section 225 is assuming that it will take a while before a charter school is up and running. It would take a certain amount of time for a group to put together an application for a charter, then go through the approval process, then actually get the school up and running.

If it said "five years after the initiative passes we will decide whether to have more charters," it could be possible that NO charters had even been running for very long. The board would have no information to base the decision on.

Instead, they start the clock running only AFTER a charter school has actually had a year of existence. That way they can guarantee that at least one school will have had five years to try, giving the board something to base it on.

North end mom
Anonymous said…
It means:
1. they don't have really detailed ideas to implement, other than paying non honchos like garbage, working non honchos into the ground, and letting a few honchos skim 6 figures plus benes a year.
2. they're liars?

NotTooComplicated
Anonymous said…
Oh look! Here's a chance to ask the creators of the "model" charter legislation directly.

http://www.myballard.com/2012/07/16/community-discussion-about-education-this-week/

This week, there will be an opportunity to join a community discussion about local education. Two groups, the Excellent Schools Now Coalition and Stand for Children are posing the question, “If you could change one thing about your school, what would it be?” in a forum at the Ballard Library on Thursday, July 19 from 6 to 7 p.m. They say children are welcome and food will be provided.

From Anne Martens with Stand for Children:

The Excellent Schools Now Coalition and Stand for Children invite you to join parents, teachers, students, and community members like you for a discussion about our schools, our kids, and our future.

This is an intimate discussion about local and statewide education issues, such as access to high-quality early learning programs, teachers and leadership, innovation, and college and career readiness. We are especially excited that Stacy Gillett from the governor’s Office of the Education Ombudsman will be joining us.

RSVP to Brittany Gibson at bgibson@stand.org. Learn more about the event here.

CT
Eric B said…
Whether it happens the way My two cents described or the way Reminded described is totally up to the State Board of Education and their rules. They could (and IMHO should) go the route that the charter legislation from this year used, where applications approved by a certain date would all be considered to have been received simultaneously, and would be given lottery preference. Any remaining spaces would be filled by later applications.

It would be even better if they could give preference to schools designed to improve performance among lower-performing students, but I believe the initiative text prevents that.

All of this assumes that the charter initiative passes, which I most sincerely hope it does not.

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