
RECENT NEWS
CHARTER HIGH SCHOOLS TARGET THE DROPOUT EPIDEMIC
By Shaka Mitchell – Associate Director of Policy, The Center for
Education Reform
With federal and state attention being focused on high school
improvement, CER examined efforts to teach the most challenging high
school demographic – those students designated “at-risk.” Students with
this classification are, for personal and historical reasons, teenagers
that are most likely to drop out of school without ever receiving a high
school diploma or its equivalent. The drop out rate in this country is a
staggering 30 percent.
The Scope of the Problem
High school has persistently been considered “unfixable.” Much
attention has been given to grades K-8 with the assumption that if the
quality of early grades is enhanced the latter years will simply follow
suit. While intuitive, this assumption has not come to fruition and the
United States does not have the luxury of letting entire generations
pass through the secondary school system while waiting for substantive
reforms to take root in primary education.
Consider that on a recent internationally administered math exam,
American 15 year-olds scored behind students from 23 other countries.
The Program for International Studies Assessment (PISA) exam also showed
that the US trailed most nations when assessing the value for dollars
spent, meaning, academic achievement is far behind what one might expect
given the amount of money that is spent on education in the
US. 1
It should come as no surprise, then, that policy makers, educators,
administrators and the like stay away from tackling the high school
giant but years of being gun-shy has lead to what can only be considered
a dropout epidemic.
The Dropout Epidemic
In addition to the 30 percent drop out rate, President Bush recently
cited statistics that show that only 68 out of 100 9th graders will
graduate high school on time and only 18 of those will go on to college.
This does not bode well for the 22,000 plus high schools in the United
States. Nationwide only half of America’s black and Hispanic students
graduate, the consequences of which are far more damaging for them, as
studies show they suffer the loss of continuing education opportunities
or better jobs.
Even when students do graduate from high school many are ill prepared
for the demands of higher education. “Twenty-nine percent of freshman
who arrived at U.S. colleges in the fall of 2002 enrolled in at least
one remedial course. In 2001-2002, seventy-five percent of institutions
of higher learning offered remedial courses.” 2
A Solution
The federal Department of Education and the National Governors’
Association have already turned the national eye on improving high
schools through increased calls for standards and measurements.
Ostensibly these reforms will affect the graduate rate but one of the
most effective ways to combat this epidemic is to create new public
charter schools with the specific purpose of teaching at-risk students.
The Minnesota public school system, for instance, has long employed
this strategy through alternative schools for students that have
previously dropped out of the school system.
Likewise, 12 percent of the nation’s charter high schools were
created with the specific intent of teaching an “at-risk” student
population. These schools teach nearly 20,000 teens in 22 states. Some
states, such as Rhode Island and North Carolina, have charter laws that
are more favorable to those wanting to establish a school for at-risk
youths. However, this component alone does not ensure a higher
percentage of specially designed schools.
Ohio has the most charter high schools targeting at-risk students
with 19. Arizona is second with 11 such schools. Yet nationally, charter
high schools are few in number when compared with the majority of
charter schools that serve elementary and middle school grades.
While the number of charter high schools has increased as a function
of demand, it still represents a very small percentage overall,
especially given the inordinate number of at-risk minority youth - the
very population that charter high schools are successful in teaching.
Obviously, more operators should be encouraged to open schools
designed to teach these needy students. Currently, of the 80 charter
high schools nationwide that target at-risk kids, one group, White Hat
Management, an Ohio-based firm with schools in more than five states,
operates 30 percent of the schools. This represents over half of all
students enrolled in these schools. 3 The group has graduated 5,300
students to date. White Hat not only equips their students with a
recognized high school diploma, but also with a job, which results in
15-20 percent of the schools’ population graduating every six months.
Programs like this can and should be replicated, and a renewed focus
on charter high schools is worth the attention of policymakers. There is
no question that high schools should be rich in content, and highly
accountable to ensure that our nation graduates well-prepared and
well-rounded students. However, while developing such schools, immediate
attention needs to be focused on the 4 million students that are
under-educated and currently at-risk of never completing their high
school education.
There seems to be some fear among state and district school leaders
that the introduction of independently operated dropout prevention high
schools will create competition with conventional public schools for
resources. CER has oft-told of the myths that charter schools (which are
in fact public schools) take resources from other schools and students
but the fact is that schools targeted at the dropout epidemic complement
conventional public schools by providing a service that is obviously
lacking in the existing education market. Because dropout prevention
schools have a more specialized focus, its teachers and administrators
can focus their energy on educating “at-risk” students. This singular
purpose should be welcomed by the community at large.
1 OECD, US Department of Education, PISA, “International Math
Proficiency and Problem Solving”, December 6, 2004.
2 John Cloud, "Who's Ready for College? [Sic]," Time Magazine, October
14, 2002; and Digest of Education Statistics, 2001, table 313.
3 P. 4, infra, Center for Education Reform analysis, February 2005.
APPENDIX – The Dropout Epidemic
| State |
9–12 |
Dropout
Prevention |
Enrollment |
| |
|
|
|
| Alaska |
8 |
1 |
200 |
| Arizona |
141 |
11 |
901 |
| California |
85 |
7 |
3227 |
| Colorado |
17 |
2 |
620 |
| DC |
14 |
1 |
60 |
| Delaware |
2 |
1 |
52 |
| Florida |
46 |
7 |
582 |
| Idaho |
4 |
1 |
122 |
| Indiana |
7 |
1 |
80 |
| Kansas |
2 |
2 |
91 |
| Louisiana |
2 |
1 |
330 |
| Massachusetts |
9 |
1 |
100 |
| Michigan |
32 |
3 |
890 |
| Minnesota |
36 |
2 |
240 |
| Missouri |
5 |
1 |
60 |
| New Mexico |
16 |
2 |
236 |
| North Carolina |
11 |
1 |
35 |
| Ohio |
30 |
19 |
8545 |
| Oklahoma |
4 |
1 |
433 |
| Oregon |
12 |
1 |
167 |
| Texas |
48 |
10 |
1847 |
| Wisconsin |
48 |
4 |
958 |
| TOTALS |
677 |
80 |
19776 |
Other Highlights
- There are approximately 3,300 charter schools in the nation.
- 51 percent of the charter schools serve K-8.
- 21 percent of the nations charter schools exclusively serve
grades 9-12
- White Hat Management operates 24 schools aimed at dropout
prevention
- Excel Education Centers operates 4 charter schools
- The remaining 52 charter schools list no formal affiliation
