1 / 33

Alaska’s Charter School Programs

Alaska’s Charter School Programs . Funding Alaska’s Future Leaders By: Sian Ng-Ashcraft, Theresa Lyons & Daniel Pulu . PADM 628, Dr. Protasel April 12, 2013. History of Charter School Movement.

dom
Download Presentation

Alaska’s Charter School Programs

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Alaska’s Charter School Programs Funding Alaska’s Future Leaders By: Sian Ng-Ashcraft, Theresa Lyons & Daniel Pulu. PADM 628, Dr. Protasel April 12, 2013

  2. History of Charter School Movement Offer Choice; Innovative curriculum to improve academic performance; Reject “one size fits all.” • Legislation • 1965: Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), Great Society Program • Project Head Start

  3. Legislation • 1994: Charter School legislation – Federal Charter School Program (CSP) – amendment to ESEA • 1998: Charter School Expansion Act – amendment to CSP • 2001: No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB)

  4. History of Charter School Movement • First State Charter School Law – Minnesota, 1991 • 1995: Alaska Legislature passed Charter School Act; signed by Governor Knowles • Total of 42 states and District of Columbia with charter school laws

  5. Alaska’s Charter School Legislation • Sec 14.03.250 – Establishment of Charter School • Sec 14.03.260 – Funding for Charter School • Sec 14.11.121 – Grant Program – Subject to legislative appropriation and available funding

  6. Amendments to Alaska Stature for Charter Schools • 1st amendment in 2001: HB 101 • Increased maximum number of charter schools 30 to 60 • Length of charter to maximum of 10 years • Remove previous geographical restrictions • 2nd amendment: Senate Bill 235 • Removed limit to number of charter schools

  7. Alaska’s Charter Schools Between 1996-1999 • 26 Charter schools were proposed • 15 schools opened Currently in 2013 • 27 Charter schools are operating

  8. Alaska’s Charter Schools • Charter schools are established upon approval of the local school board and the Alaska State Board of Education • Same collective bargaining agreements • Governed by Academic Policy Committee • Monies maintained by school district accounts • Unique method of instruction

  9. Alaska’s Charter Schools • Charter schools function • Application process (lotteries) • Unique method of instruction • Required family involvement • Academic excellence

  10. Alaska’s Charter Schools • Literature Review • Variation in performance • Creates competition • Choice vs. government selection

  11. Anchorage Choice (Charter Schools) • Eight (8) charter schools in ASD • Alaska Native Cultural • Aquarian • Eagle Academy • Family Partnership • Frontier • Highland Tech • Rilke Schule • Winterberry

  12. Charter School National Ranking & Scorecard (CER) Center for Education Reform: annual analysis of nation ‘s charter school laws. • 2012 – Annual Scorecard for 42 charter laws: National GPA (C grade) • 5 As; 10Bs; 15 Cs; 8 Ds; and 4 Fs • 2013 – Annual Scorecard for 43 charter laws: • 4 As; 9 Bs; 19 Cs; 7 Ds; 4 Fs

  13. Authorizers • One single authorizer: State Board of Education and Early Development • Introduction of HB93 (January 13) – Representative Lynn Gattis of Wasilla • To allow multiple Authorizers: Universities, Government Agencies, Non-Profit Organizations, and Business Entities • Mary Meade disagreement with benefits of multiple authorizers

  14. 2013 State Charter School Law Ranking Report (NAPCS) • National Alliance for Public Charter School (NAPCS) – study of NAPCS Model law based on 20 essential components • Alaska ranks 41, out of 43 State Laws • NAPCS & CER highlight the needs for Alaska’s Charter School Law to be strengthened

  15. Strengthening Needs • Expanding authorizing options • Transparency in Charter application review and decision-making process • Requiring performance-based charter contracts • Clear processes for renewal, nonrenewal and revocation decisions

  16. Strengthening Needs • Comprehensive charter school monitoring and data collection processes • Increasing operation autonomy • Ensuring equitable operational funding and equitable access to capital funding and facilities

  17. Adequate Year Progress (AYP) • Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) measures “the extent to which schools succeed in educating all students to a proficiency in at least reading and mathematics. From NAPCS’s data for 2011, Alaska scores above the national average in meeting AYP. Charter schools making the AYP is 77.8% (21 out of 27 schools), and schools failing to make AYP is 22.2% (6 out of 27). The national average for charter schools making the AYP is 58.9% (2,469 out of 4,195 charter schools), and 41.1% (1,726) of charter schools failing to meet the AYP standards.

  18. Alaska Education Funding Formula • The State formula ensures that each of Alaska’s 53 districts receives the resources needed to provide students with a basic education. • Alaska’s Education Funding Formula accommodates the great diversity among 53 school districts

  19. Alaska Education Funding Formula • Formula is made up of 8 components • Average Daily Membership • School Size Adjustment • Temporary Adjustment for Significant Decline in Enrollment • District Cost Factor • Special Needs Funding • Career & Technical Education • Intensive Services Funding • Correspondence Students

  20. Anchorage School District Funds 62% of ASD funds allocated from the State 38% of ASD funds allocated from Local taxes & revenue and Federal grants & programs

  21. Charter School Funding Formula Consists of 6 Variables( A – F) • Variables utilize the 8 components from the State Education Funding formula • Variable A • Average Daily Membership (ADM) • 20 –school day count

  22. Charter School Funding Formula • School Size Formula (* ADM) • Variable B • Multiply Variable A by 120% (Special Ed Factor)

  23. Charter School Funding Formula • Variable C • Level III Special Ed Intensive Student population ($13 per student) • Variable D • Students in 9-12 (* 1%) • Sum of Variables B, C ,D is called the Adjusted ADM. • Adjusted ADM multiplied by Base Student Allocation (Y1213 $5,680) • “Basic Need”

  24. Charter School Funding Formula • Variable E • Quality School Grant ($16 per student) • Add product to Basic Need • Indirect cost • (Indirect rate * Basic Need) • Y1213 Indirect rate 3.64%

  25. Charter School Funding Formula Variable F Indirect Cost- Basic Need Example of Rilke Schule’s budget projection

  26. Charter School Business Partnerships List of the business partnerships of each Anchorage Charter School

  27. Other Revenue and Funding • CSP Funds/Grants • Priority to states with multiple chartering agencies • Agencies with accountability of reaching clear and measurable objectives • Schools with high degree of autonomy over budgets and expenditures

  28. School Bonds • Alaska’s Charter Schools have not exercise their right to petition for school bonds • Public school projects funded through voters’ approved bonds qualify for 60 - 70% debt reimbursement by the state

  29. Revenue and Funding Sustainability Options • Alternative education funding options • Voucher system • Education savings account • Tax-credit scholarship • Individual tax credits/deductions

  30. Conclusion • There is a growing movement for alternative education • Alaska House Bill 93: Charter Schools • More research is needed to measure: • Student achievement • Understand impact on traditional public schools • Families are voluntarily electing charter schools • Exercising choices

  31. References • Alaska Senate Bipartisan Working Group. (February 8, 2010). Senate Education Committee Moves Bill to Help Charter Schools. Press Release. Retrieved April 4, 2013 from http://www.aksenate.org/press/020810_committee_moves_education_bill.pdf. • Anchorage School District. (2012). ASD Tube Community [Video file]. Retrieved March 15, 2013 from http://www.asdk12.org/depts/staff_dev/ASDTubeCommunity/CharterSchools.asp. • Anchorage School District. (2013). Retrieved March 28, 2013 from https://www.asdk12.org/. • Anchorage School District. (2013). Where Does ASD's Money Come From? Retrieved March 12, 2013 from http://asdk12.org/budget/. • Comeau, Carol. (Sept 10, 2001). ASD MEMORANDUM #36 (2001-2002). Anchorage School District: Mission Statement and Goals. Retrieved March 01, 2013 from www.asdk12.org/school_board/archives/Arc2001-2002/.../H08M036.pdf. • Cordero-Giorgana, Erick. House Majority Press. (Jan 30, 2013). Gattis Introduces Bill to Enhance Public Charter Schools: HB 93 Allows Multiple Authorizers of Public Charter Schools in Alaska. Retrieved March 29, 2013 from http://www.housemajority.org/item.php?id=item20130130-33. • Gattis, L. (2013). Sponsor statement: House Bill 93 – Charter Schools [January 30, 2013]. Retrieved April 10, 2013 from http://housemajority.org/spon.php?id=28hb93. • Holloway, S. J. State of Alaska Dept of Education and Early Development, (2001). Alaska's Public School Funding Formula: A Report to the Alaska State Legislature. Retrieved March 14, 2013 from http://education.alaska.gov/publications/FundingFormulaSB36Report.pdf. • League of Women Voters. (March 2000). History of the Charter School Movement: What are Charter Schools? Retrieved March 17, 2013 from http://www.dcwatch.com/lwvdc/lwv0003c.htm. • Meade-Olberding, M. (2012). All About Charter Schools [Video file]. Retrieved March 20, 2013 from http://www.asdk12.org/depts/staff_dev/ASDTubeCommunity/CharterSchools.asp. • National Conference of State Legislatures. Charter Schools: Overview. Retrieved March 17, 2013 from http://www.ncsl.org/issues-research/educ/charter-schoolsoverview.aspx. • National Education Association – Alaska. (n.d). School Choice. Retrieved March 12, 2013 from http://www.neaalaska.org/sites/default/files/SchoolChoice2013.pdf • Public School Review. (2013). Alaska Blue Ribbon School. Retrieved on March 26, 2013 from http://www.publicschoolreview.com/blueribbon_schools/stateid/AK.

  32. References • State of Alaska, Department of Education and Early Development. (2013). History of Alaskan Charter Programs. Retrieved March 25, 2013 from http://www.eed.state.ak.us/ alaskan_schools/charter/pdf/history_of_alaskan_charter_schools.pdf. • State of Alaska, Department of Education and Early Development. Retrieved March 10, 2013 from http://www.eed.state.ak.us/alaskan_schools/charter/ • State of Alaska, Department of Education and Early Development. Retrieved March 10, 2013 from http://education.alaska.gov/faq.html#A2. • The Alaska State Legislature. AS§14.03.250 & AS §14.03.260. Retrieved March 10, 2013 from http://www.legis.state.ak.us/basis/statutes.asp?title=14#14.03.250. • The Alaska State Legislature. 22nd Legislature (2001-2002). AS§ 14.03.263. Charter school grant program. Retrieved March 10, 2013 from http://www.legis.state.ak.us/basis/get_bill_text.asp?hsid=HB0101D&session=22. • The Alaska State Legislature (2013). House Bill 93 Letters Oppose. Retrieved April 10, 2013 from http://www.legis.state.ak.us/basis/get_document.asp?session=28&bill=HB93 • The Center for Education Reform. (n.d.). Charter School Law. Retrieved March 10, 2013 from http://www.edreform.com/issues/choice-charter-schools/laws-legislation/. • The Center for Education Reform. (December 2011). The State of Charter Schools: What We Know and What We Do Not Know About Performance and Accountability. Retrieved March 10, 2013 from http://www.edreform.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/StateOfCharterSchools_CER_Dec2011-Web-1.pdf. • The Center for Education Reform. (2013). Annual Charter School Law Report Card Issued. Retrieved March 10, 2013 from http://www.edreform.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/CERCharterLaws2013_Chart_FINAL.pdf. • The Friedman Foundation for Educational Choice (2013). The ABCs of School Choice. Retrieved April 10, 2013 from http://www.edchoice.org/CMSModules/EdChoice/File Library/965/The-ABCs-of-School-Choice---2013-edition.pdf.

  33. References • The National Alliance for Public Charter Schools. (2012). The Public Charter School Dashboard. Retrieved April 7, 2013 from http://dashboard.publiccharters.org/dashboard/schools/page/overview/state/AK/year/2012 • The National Alliance for Public Charter Schools. (January 2013). Measuring Up to the Model: Ranking of Charter School Laws. (4th ed.). Retrieved April 7, 2013 from http://www.publiccharters.org/data/files/Publication_docs/NAPCS_2013%20Model%2Law%20 • Rrankings_20130211T204454.pdf. • Toma, E. & Zimmer, Ron. (2011). Two decades of charter schools: Expectations, reality, and the future. Economics of Education Review, 31, p. 209-212. doi: 10.1016/j.econedurev.2011.10.001. • U.S. Department of Education, Office of Innovation and Improvement, Charter School Program. Retrieved March 11, 2013 from http://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/oii/csp/index.html?exp=0 • U.S. Department of Education. (July 2004) Charter School Program. Title V, Part B: Non-Regulatory Guidance. Retrieved March 11, 2013 from http://www2.ed.gov/programs/charter/nonregulatory-guidance.doc • U.S. Department of Education. (n.d.). Title I — Improving the Academic Achievement Of TheDisadvantaged. Retrieved March 11, 2013 from http://www2.ed.gov/policy/elsec/leg/esea02/pg1.html • Wikipedia. (n.d). Federal Charter School Program. Retrieved on March 21, 2013 from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Charter_school_program

More Related