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State policy an obstacle to charter school serving English learners

A charter school that hoped to focus on students who don’t speak English is changing tactics after being told by the state that it cannot give admissions preference to the students it wants to attract.

Though New York City’s charter schools admit relatively few English Language Learners in comparison to district schools, Inwood Academy for Leadership intended to be the exception. When Principal Christina Hykes applied for a charter, she envisioned a school where half the students were English Language Learners and half were general education students, making Inwood Academy the first charter school in the city to propose such a model.

Hykes planned to achieve this balance by giving admissions preference to ELL students living in Inwood, something Department of Education officials agreed she could do. State law encourages charters to focus on students “at risk of academic failure,” and students with little English seemed like prime candidates. They routinely have lower scores on the state tests than their English-speaking peers and are less likely to graduate high school.

But officials at the State Education Department disagreed with the city’s reading of the law, telling the DOE and Hykes that ELL students don’t fall in the “at risk” category. As a result, Inwood Academy’s application would have to lose all the language giving ELLs enrollment preference if it wanted to get a charter.

“Because a student is an ELL doesn’t necessarily mean they’re at risk. That’s their [SED's] interpretation,” said Michael Duffy, director of the city’s office of charter schools.

“What’s ironic is that it seems like at the Regents level there’s a real interest in seeing charter schools that can reach out to ELLs in the way Inwood was trying to do,” he said.

According to the state, ELL students are considered “high needs,” but not “at risk.” To bridge this distinction, the Board of Regents recommended last week that the state legislature raise the charter cap to encourage the growth of charter schools targeting “high needs” high school students,” said Tom Dunn, a spokesman for SED.

A change in law could offer hope to future charter operators looking to focus their attention on specific student groups like ELLs.

Charter schools won’t hold lotteries until April, leaving state officials time to change their interpretation of current law and the city time to lobby them, Duffy said.

In the meantime, Hykes has modified Inwood’s application enough to get it approved by the Board of Regents last week.

Inwood’s charter now says it will give admissions preference to students living in District 6 who get low scores — 1s and 2s — on the state math and English exams. Because of their low scores, the state does consider these students to be “at risk.”

“We’re being specific about how we recruit,” Hykes said. “We know where the need is. We’re going to have our meetings in the projects. What we’ll try to do is reach out to recent immigrants who came here in third or fourth grade. But there’s a chance we still won’t get 50 percent ELL.”

Without being able to give preference to ELL students, Hykes could land 110 fifth graders who have low test scores but are English-speakers.

“We would also like that language back in our application to show we’re devoted to these students,” Hykes said.

Traditional public schools don’t face the same admissions restrictions charter schools do. The high school Inwood Academy is using as a model, Gregorio Luperon High School in Washington Heights, only admits Spanish-speaking students who have lived in the U.S. for fewer than two years.

“There are criticisms out there about charters not enrolling enough ELL students, and I think those are valid criticisms,” Duffy said. “Here you have a school like Inwood that wants to go the extra distance and they’re being stymied and it doesn’t make sense.”

6 Comments

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  1. This is more evidence that, when anti-charter legislators introduce baloney bills to eliminate SUNY as an authorizer, they are trying to cripple the charter movement.

    The SED authorizer has no apparent interest in charter school quality or these issues. It seems to me that this decision is all about playing politics, and preserving power, for adults who hold the important signatures in Albany.

    ELL students are not at risk??? That’s an outrageous piece of nonsense.

  2. [...] in admissions because such students aren’t technically “at risk,” according to a story published yesterday by GothamSchools. State law urges charter schools to focus on students [...]

  3. [...] in admissions because such students aren’t technically “at risk,” according to a story published yesterday by GothamSchools. State law urges charter schools to focus on students [...]

  4. State Education department officials are incorrect by asserting that “ELL students do not fall into the ‘at-risk’ category”; and by attempting to make some semantical difference between “high needs” students, which include English Language Learners, and students “at-risk of academic failure,” which are mentioned in the Charter Schools Act in state Education law. These terms are subjective and flexible, and bureaucratic distinctions by State Ed are meaningless. An “at-risk” student is nowhere defined in statute or regulation, including the Charter Schools Act itself which may be the only place it’s mentioned. The description of such a student, as traditionally permitted by State Ed, has been connected to a category of needy student that can be measured objectively or has some legal definition. Most commonly, charter schools have given an enrollment preference to students from low-income households as defined by eligibility for the federal free- or reduced-priced meal program. Rather than sticking to this inchoate reasoning for refusing to allow ELL students to be given enrollment preference in a charter school, State Ed should get out of the way and enable, yea, encourage charter schools to define “at-risk” to include ELL students. So far, State Ed’s reasons are vapid and unacceptable and they get away with it because they can. They shouldn’t absent a bona fide legal concern which has thus far been omitted in any discussion I’ve seen or heard.

  5. Great post and great comments from KS and Peter Murphy.  I would love to hear more from SED on this matter.

  6. [...] Check out the article here: Gotham Schools Article. [...]

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