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Education
Week
“D.C. Eyes Plan for Shared
Space;
K-4 students would move to KIPP for grades 5-8”
By Jeff Archer
May 17, 2006
http://www.edweek.org
If
you can’t beat ’em, join ’em.
That’s
what some education leaders hope to do in the District of
Columbia, where the local school board is considering an
unusual partnership between a new charter school and a regular
public school.
Under
the plan, a charter school in the Knowledge Is Power Program,
or KIPP, network would open this coming fall in the building
now occupied by Washington’s Scott Montgomery Elementary
School.
While
charter schools in some other cities share space with regular
public schools, the KIPP-Montgomery deal would go a step
further. Students would go through grades K-4 at Montgomery,
and then on to grades 5-8 at the KIPP school.
Backers
of the plan, including District of Columbia Superintendent
Clifford B. Janey, see it as a win-win deal. Montgomery
Elementary’s enrollment has dwindled in recent years
to 200, and the school could face consolidation. Meanwhile,
KIPP needs a home for what will be its third campus in the
city.
“We
think this is the kind of creative way of thinking that
the school system needs to engage in,” said Robert
Cane, the executive director of Friends of Choice in Urban
Schools, a pro-charter group in the city. “And we
very much need the space.”
But
some school board and community members question the wisdom
of using a district school as a feeder for a charter school.
Already, about one-fourth of the 65,000 public school students
in Washington attend charter schools—one of the highest
proportions in the country.
Another
concern is that charter schools must accept students from
throughout the city, and so students from Montgomery Elementary
could not be guaranteed spots in the KIPP school. KIPP organizers
say, however, that they’ll have more than enough spots.
Regina
Arlotto, the president of Save Our Schools, a local group
that has challenged charters, said she worries that students
in a district school would be taught using KIPP’s
techniques, which she sees as overly strict and rote.
“While
I understand they can operate the charter independent of
the system,” she said, “I do not believe [the
school district] should endorse this as a method.”
A
public hearing on the plan is set for June 8, after which
the school board is expected to vote on it.