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appalachiablue

(41,172 posts)
Sun Jun 17, 2018, 08:57 PM Jun 2018

ELITE CHARTER SCHOOLS: How Some Exclude Minorities

"How Some Elite Charter Schools Exclude Minorities," NBC News, Special Report, June 17, 2018

GREENSBORO, Ga. — This clearly was no ordinary public school.

Parents of prospective students converged on Lake Oconee Academy for an open house on a bright but unseasonably cold March afternoon for northern Georgia. A driveway circling a landscaped pond led them to the school's main hall. The tan building had the same luxury-lodge feel as the nearby Ritz-Carlton resort. Parents oohed and aahed as Jody Worth, the upper school director, ushered them through the campus. Nestled among gated communities, golf courses and country clubs, the school felt like an oasis of opportunity in a county of haves and have-nots, where nearly half of all children live in poverty while others live in multimillion-dollar lakeside houses.

The school's halls and classrooms are bright and airy, with high ceilings and oversize windows looking out across the lush landscape. There is even a terrace on which students can work on warm days. After a guide pointed out several science labs, the tour paused at the "piano lab." The room holds 25 pianos, 10 of them donated by residents of the nearby exclusive communities. The guide also noted that starting in elementary school, all students take Spanish, art and music classes. The high school, which enrolls less than 200 students, offers 17 Advanced Placement courses.

Lake Oconee's amenities are virtually unheard of in rural Georgia; and because it is a public school, they are all available at the unbeatable price of free. Conspicuously absent from the open house were African-American parents. Of the dozen or so prospective families in attendance, all were white except for one South Asian couple. At Lake Oconee Academy, 73 percent of students are white. Down the road at Greene County's other public schools, 12 percent of students are white and 68 percent are black; there isn't a piano lab and there are far fewer AP courses.

Lake Oconee Academy is a charter school. Charters are public schools, ostensibly open to all. The idea behind charters was to loosen rules and regulations that might hinder innovation, allowing them to hire uncertified teachers for example. But dozens of charters have also used their greater flexibility to limit which kids make it through the schoolhouse doors — creating exclusive, disproportionately white schools. They do this in a variety of ways: Some pick from preferred attendance zones. Some don't offer school bus transportation. Others require expensive uniforms...More..

Read More, https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/how-some-elite-charter-schools-exclude-minorities/ar-AAyLDsn
- This story about school segregation was produced by the Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, independent news organization focused on inequality and innovation in education, and the Investigative Fund at the Nation Institute, a newsroom for independent journalists, in partnership with NBC Nightly News and NBCNews.com.



- Kim Smith, a mother of three, has set up a Facebook Page to support Greene County's traditional public schools.

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