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Alternative Graduation Rates in the News

6/9/2016

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The following is an article from Education Post by Nelson Smith  on May 9, 2016.

Nelson Smith is a frequent presenter at the Alternative Accountability Policy Forum and he leads an effort by charter school authorizers to develop a policy basis for alternative school accountability measures.


A few years ago, the California Charter School Association revealed Golden State charter performance didn’t align to the usual bell-shaped curve, but instead was clustered at the highest- and lowest-performance levels, creating a U-shaped curve.

The 2016 Building a Grad Nation Report, released today by GradNation, suggests that the same is true for charter graduation rates nationally:
"Charter schools, shown to have mixed performance outcomes across states, also had mixed results in terms of graduation rates, with more than 3 in 10 charter schools reporting graduation rates of 67 percent or less and 44 percent with graduation rates of 85 percent and above.

This suggests that more than any other school type, charter high schools tend to either do very well or very poorly in graduating their students."

So first, a big high-five to all those charter high schools outperforming the national grad rate! But before taking the axe to those low-grad laggards over at the left side of the U-curve, let’s pause a moment to consider some of the annoying limitations in this data.

For starters, charter high schools tend to be located in urban areas. So when the report makes an invidious comparison between the 7 percent national rate of low-grad district schools versus a rate of 30 percent for charters, the next question has to be: How do those charters compare to the schools their students would actually have attended? Alas, we only get state-level numbers.

The report concedes that there’s a lot of overlap in three groups of schools—charter, alternative and virtual—that collectively make up for about half of all low-graduation rate high schools and tries to present some disaggregated stats.

Federal data on “alternative schools” is notoriously bad and almost certainly undercounts the number of charters serving highly at-risk populations. One table in the report says D.C. has no “alternative” charter high schools, which will come as a surprise to kids at Next Step and Maya Angelou.
A four-year graduation rate is largely irrelevant to a charter (or any) high school that seeks out highly-mobile students and former dropouts, especially when their program is based on mastery of subject matter rather than seat time. (To its credit, Grad Nation calls for routine reporting of five- and six-year graduation cohorts for all schools. That’s allowed under Every Student Succeeds Act and should quickly become the norm.)
These gaps in data and understanding have been going on too long. The National Association of Charter School Authorizers has been working in the “alternative accountability” vineyard since 2012, and it’s disconcerting that four years later, we’re still seeing global comparisons with too little acknowledgement of differences in school mission and population.
All that said…Let’s sharpen that axe. Once we’ve sorted through all these apples and oranges, there is still a set of charter high schools that are not performing at acceptable levels. We’ve grown impatient with virtual schools that explain low achievement by claiming that their students are exceptional—and then can’t produce the evidence.

Charter schools need to do their job. Those that set out to offer four years of college- and career-ready education for a largely mainstream student body have no business letting one-third of them fail to graduate—and those that do should face stiff questioning at renewal time.

Nelson Smith is a frequent presenter at the Alternative Accountability Policy Forum and he leads an effort by charter school authorizers to develop a policy basis for alternative school accountability measures.

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