Archive for the ‘Education & the State Budget’ Category

What is a Charter School?

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

According to the January, 2010 edition of U.S. News and World Report magazine, California leads the nation with the most number of Charter Schools, 809 to be exact. The next closest state is Arizona, with 482. 

A Charter School is a school that is financed by the public but operated independently.  Education at charter schools are free to all students.  So, how exactly is a charter school different than a public school?

1) Charter schools are attended by choice; there are no districts.

2) Charter schools are financed by the public, but are not held to the same rules and regulations as many public schools.

3) Each school must have a ”charter” which defines accountability for meeting and maintaining certain standards of education, i.e. a mission statement it is held to and judged by to stay open.

4) Many times the charter school is started by activists, parents and administrators who want an alternative to the neighborhood public school.

5) Charter schools frequently specialize in a certain field, such as the arts, sciences or math.

For a list of local charter schools in our area visit the following link:  http://www.vcoe.org/Districts/CharterSchoolsinVenturaCounty/tabid/2053/Default.aspx

State Budget affects new textbook purchases

Sunday, August 9th, 2009

History textbooks in many California classrooms won’t mention the election of President Obama or the subprime mortgage meltdown until at least 2016. Stem cell research and climate change could be absent from science texts even longer. And students will be using aging books for years longer than planned because of California’s education budget cuts. For full article click:

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-me-textbooks8-2009aug08,0,7197708.story