School Choice & Charters

Charters & Choice News Roundup: Bill Clinton, Home School, and Banned Books

By Arianna Prothero — September 26, 2014 1 min read
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A look back at the week in school choice news and beyond: From the “original charter school promise” to the early days of the home school movement to the most-banned books of the last decade, here’s this week’s Charters & Choice news roundup.

Bill Clinton weighs in on charter school accountability...

... what no state has really done adequately, which is to set up a review system to keep the original bargain of charter schools, which was if they weren't outperforming the public model, they weren't supposed to get their charter renewed," former President Bill Clinton told a group of philanthropists in New York City, as reported by The Huffington Post.

But there’s a side effect to that bargain—perform or close—what happens to the students?

The scuffle between the Philadelphia School District and Walter Palmer Leadership Learning Partners Charter School may soon create more than 1,000 education refugees—students in search of a desk," writes Kevin McCrory for WHYY's Newsworks.

Chalkbeat Indiana also recently explored the impact “ultimate accountability” can have on a community after parents were sent scrambling to find new schools at the beginning of this school year after the Indianapolis mayor’s office shuttered a charter over a cheating scandal.

A home school history lesson...

Theirs was fundamentally a fight about values, but curiously, it was also where the two opposite ends of the culture wars converged to wage a battle over First Amendment rights and individual choice," - OZY traces the beginnings of the home-schooling movement from both the right and the left.

From choosing schools to choosing books (I am, admittedly, stretching the definition of my school choice beat to include this little nugget) ... It’s the last day of Banned Books Week, brought to you in part by the American Libraries Association.

For a more thorough reading list, The Washington Post has collected the 10 most challenged books every year since 2000.

Don’t hesitate to tweet recommendations to me @ChartersNChoice for next week’s roundup.

A version of this news article first appeared in the Charters & Choice blog.