The beauty of charter schools, according to their advocates, is their flexibility. Charter schools — alternatives to established public education systems — operate by their own set of rules. And they are supposed to be able to alter or adjust those rules as deemed necessary to improve the educational process.
But what happens when bureaucracy kicks in? What happens when charter schools are required to adhere to systems not of their own making? Can they still be the catalyst for academic excellence their creators envision?
The nation may soon find out.
President Obama is a supporter of charter schools. However, his path to the presidency enjoyed the strong support of organized labor, including teachers unions. Now, at least one union, the American Federation of Teachers, is pushing to represent educators at charter schools in major cities.
And the AFT is urging the Obama administration to make sure its support for charter schools is accompanied by insistence that they be properly regulated.
Yet regulation and unionization would seem to be contrary to the concept of charter schools, that are supposed to achieve progress by operating outside the strictures public schools deal with on a routine basis. Naturally, not everyone involved with charter schools thinks unions are desirable.
The way we see it, increased regulation of charter schools is inevitable, because that is the nature of things.
It is naive to think that every organizer out there involved with establishing a charter school will produce excellence. Some will be incompetents more interested in their ideology than education. Others will be charlatans hoping to make a quick buck off the money flowing to experimental schooling.
As certain charter schools fail — and some already have — there will be a reaction. Government will be called on to step in and demand more from these schools and their backers. The faces of students whose educational opportunities were shattered by flawed charter efforts will propel these moves.
In discussing charter schools, it’s also worthwhile to consider their impact. Are they likely to play a key role in education reform? Or will they prove to be just curiosities at best, serving a select few students while the majority in troubled education systems see no difference?
And if the impact of charter schools is limited, are they worth the resources they inevitably take from the rest of the public education system?
Maybe the real value of charter schools is in the message they reinforce: That public education has structural problems which need to be addressed. Running away from those problems by forming charter schools or developing other alternatives won’t work, because the flaws in education will gradually migrate with the students.
Rather than run, people who believe a stronger education system is necessary must stand up and fight for it.
Editorials
More regulation of charter schools is inevitable
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2011 Heart Walk: Steps in the right direction
It's always pleasant to report good news in which our entire community can participate with positive results.
Such is the cae with next Saturday's annual American Heart Association’s Lake Cumberland Heart Walk at Somerset High School.
As of today, some 250 Pulaski County residents are expected to participate by — quite literally—taking positive steps to improve their health. Their goal is to to raise $35,000 this year to fight heart disease and stroke, America’s No. 1 and No. 3 killers, respectively. However, with this encouragement, perhaps even more will join in the effort.
The non-competitive, one- to three-mile walk begins at 10 a.m. and includes teams of employees from local companies, along with friends, family members and survivors of all ages.
Activities will be available, including a kid’s zone, music, a survivor memorial, and helicopter appearance by Air Methods KY. Throughout the day, heart healthy snacks and information will be available.
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'Golden Leaf' has lost its luster
For many years, tobacco was the undisputed king of crops in Kentucky, but the end of the tobacco quota program in 2004, a continuing decline in the number of smokers in the United States and increased competition from foreign-grown tobacco have combined to greatly diminish tobacco’s impact on the state’s farm economy.
To be sure, more tobacco is grown in Kentucky than any other state, but the 726 million pounds of tobacco Kentucky farmers expect to take to market this fall represent a drop of nearly 28 percent from a decade ago when 991 million pounds of tobacco were raised in the state.
The number of cigarette consumers in the U.S. has dropped dramatically in the last two decades, and here in Kentucky, state and local governments and employers have actually encouraged the smoking decline. -
New Pulaski roads proving confusing
If you haven’t taken a wrong turn on Pulaski County’s recently opened network of new highways, you’re definitely in the minority. Braggarts around coffee shops saying driving on the new roads is a piece of cake are branded as smart aleck city slickers.
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Honoring thosewho gave theirlives in service
In the years before he was nominated to the U.S.Supreme Court by President TheodoreRoosevelt, Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. was thevoice of remembering those who served.Memorial Day became an official holiday throughan act of the federal government in 1967.
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- Everbody used to love a parade Yes, those were the Good Ol’ Days; treasured memories of a time long gone.
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- War funding bill had unnecessary spending
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