This post was contributed by a community member. The views expressed here are the author's own.

Schools

DOE Grants Final Charters to Just Nine Schools

Some of the schools that didn't make the list may be the most interesting of all

The Christie administration yesterday put out a short list of charter schools given final approval to open in the fall, but more interesting was the far longer list of those not getting the go-ahead.

Nine schools were granted final charters, according to the announcement from the state Department of Education late yesterday, including four in Newark and two in Camden.

More notable was the department’s decision to postpone 10 other school openings for another year, including the state’s first all-online schools. Another 13 schools that it had approved earlier .

Find out what's happening in Teaneckfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Among those 13 were two suburban charters -- Regis Academy Charter School and Princeton International Academy Charter School -- that had been at the center of intense community disputes over the past year. Other schools on the list contended that they had met all the state's demands.

In letters to some of the schools, the department said they had been given an extra “planning year” or rejected because they were simply not ready to open.

Find out what's happening in Teaneckfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

But with some already contesting that claim yesterday, the debate is unlikely to be over.

“We know we were working against the tide on this, with people not wanting us to happen,” said Michael Pallante, board chairman of the NJ Virtual Academy Charter School, an online school that was told it would have to take a second planning year.

“We were ready to go, we worked really hard putting this together,” he said. “We’re disappointed, we’re disappointed for the 850 kids and families who were counting on this.”

‘High Bar’ Set for NJ Schools

Yesterday’s announcement had been eagerly anticipated, with a total of 32 schools on the list to potentially receive their final charters this summer, by far the biggest class yet of new schools.

Each had received preliminary approval from the state, but the process calls for the state to do a final review before a final charter is granted.

The decisions on the final charters were particularly sensitive this year, with the virtual schools on the lists and a number of suburban ones up for their final OK.

In the end, acting Education Commissioner Chris Cerf approved some that had been expected and rejected others, stressing a renewed process that he said would set a “high bar” for any school allowed to open and stay open.

“We must hold a high bar for any school that serves New Jersey students, and we are confident that [the approved] schools have the academic and operational components in place to provide a high-quality choice on day one,” Cerf said in a statement.

Of the nine schools that were awarded their final charter, all but one are located in urban communities. Two will use a hybrid of online learning and face-to-face teaching:

  • City Invincible Charter School, Camden
  • Knowledge A to Z Charter School, Camden
  • Thomas Edison Energy Charter School, Franklin (Somerset), South Brunswick and North Brunswick
  • Beloved Charter School, Jersey City
  • Merit Preparatory of Newark Charter School, Newark
  • Newark Prep, Newark
  • Paulo Freire Charter School, Newark
  • 100 Legacy Charter School, Newark
  • Benjamin Banneker, Willingboro

On-line Charters Must Wait Another Year

The fate of the all-online charters was the biggest question going into the announcement. Cerf was tight-lipped on what he would do with schools that were not anticipated when the state’s charter school law was enacted in 1995, but had also indicated that they could be accommodated.

Meanwhile, criticism mounted about the online schools, with a coalition of education groups urging Cerf to hold off approving them, to the point of threatening to take the administration to court. Both schools were to be working in conjunction with K12 Inc., the nation’s largest online education company, stirring up even more debate.

In the end, Cerf ended up landing somewhere in between, deciding not to reject them outright but also putting off a final decision for another year.

In a letter to Pallante of the NJ Virtual Academy Charter School, Cerf’s office cited a number of technical points, including the online school’s failure to put in a place a food services contract -- itself an obvious challenge with students learning in their homes.

“The Board of Trustees and founders of New Jersey Virtual Academy Charter School have failed to meet the necessary statutory and regulatory requirements to gain final approval for opening in 2012,” Cerf wrote in the letter.

Reached last night, Pallante said that the school -- serving students in kindergarten through high school -- had met all the state’s demands through what was a laborious review process, adding any that fell short could easily be rectified.

“There was always one thing or another,” said Pallante, a longtime public educator in Newark schools, most recently as principal of the Robert Treat Academy Charter School.

“But I can’t imagine there wasn’t something we could have tied together in a day or two,” he said. “We had always done what was asked of us.”

Now he’s being requested to alert families that the school will be unable to open this year, no light task with 850 students all but enrolled and another few hundred on waiting lists. The school had started hiring staff as well, including an out-of-state principal.

“We had a principal from Arkansas who had taken up residence here, ready to go,” he said. “I’m at a loss for words.”

The other online school was more specialized, focusing on at-risk high school students in four targeted communities. Operating out of the Monmouth-Ocean Special Services Commission, it had said it would seek a planning year after it was unable to secure the names of enough students.

Read more at NJSpotlight.com

 

The views expressed in this post are the author's own. Want to post on Patch?