PUBLIC IMPACT
504 Dogwood Drive
Chapel Hill, NC 27516
919-967-5102
919-928-8473 fax info@publicimpact.com

"High-Stakes" : Public Impact’s National Study of Charter School Accountability
This website presents results and information from a two-year national charter school accountability study conducted by researchers from Public Impact with funding from the Smith Richardson Foundation.
Background
The study asks the question: “How are Charter Schools Being Held Accountable for Results?” To answer this question we looked at 50 charter school “decisions” from around the country.
For the purposes of this study we defined charter school “decisions” as definitive action taken by a sponsoring agency on the legal status of a charter. A sponsoring agency, or charter school authorizer, is an agency authorized by a particular state’s charter school law to charter a school by negotiating a contract that holds the school accountable to agreed upon expectations. These agreed upon contracts have a term of expiration - usually 3 to 5 years under the first contract. In theory, if charter schools meet the expectations set for student success and maintain good school-business practices, the charter will be renewed for another period of time. At the same time, there is a looming threat of closure. If these schools do not meet academic expectations or mismanage the school, the charter can be revoked in the midst of the term, or not renewed at the charter’s expiration date. The three types of “decisions” we focused on are Renewal, Revocation, or Nonrenewal.
This two-year project was designed to investigate the very basis of the charter school concept by asking several key research questions:
  1. To what extent are authorizers setting clear, measurable expectations that charter schools must meet in order to attain renewal or avoid revocation?
  2. To what extent are authorizers gathering information that allows them to determine whether schools are meeting these expectations?
  3. To what extent are authorizers making decisions based on a comparison of actual performance with expectations?
  4. To the extent that authorizers are facing challenges related to questions 1 through 3, what are the sources of these challenges?
  5. What practical recommendations emerge from these findings for authorizers and state policy-makers?
Click here for more information about the research design.
From this site, you can access the study’s principal products:
Database of "High-Stakes" Charter School Decisions: a database of authorizer-determined decisions on charter school futures from around the country. Decisions include Renewals, Nonrenewals, and Revocations.
"High-Stakes": Findings from a National Study of Life-or-Death Decisions by Charter School Authorizers” [pdf]: a paper summarizing findings and offering analysis of 50 high-stakes charter school decisions from around the country.
Starting Fresh: A New Strategy for Responding to Chronically Low-Performing Schools [pdf]
How Business Can Support Charters
  A menu of options for businesses interested in supporting charter schools featuring real-world examples
National Charter School Policy Briefing
  A quality-driven vision for the future of the charter sector with the steps necessary to achieve the vision
Ohio Value-Added Primer
  A short primer to help non-specialists understand Ohio’s new “value-added” assessment.
Ohio Charter Schools
  How did Buckeye charters perform on state tests?
Competencies for Turnaround Success
  Series of resources to help select leaders and teachers likely to be successful in school turnarounds.
Mayoral Academies
  New Rhode Island law allows mayor-led new school networks
School Turnaround Stories
  Real-world vignettes illustrate how school principals have used 14 leader actions to turn around schools
North Carolina Charter Schools
  A report to the Blue Ribbon Commission to guide recommendations to the State Board of Education
Improving Teaching Through Pay for Contribution
  Report published by NGA Center for Best Practices outlines research-based agenda for pay reform
Fund the Child in Ohio
  How Ohio can make its finance system more equitable and effective through weighted student funding

 

Public Impact • 504 Dogwood Drive • Chapel Hill, NC 27516
(919) 967-5102 • info@publicimpact.com