THE STATE EDUCATION DEPARTMENT / THE UNIVERSITY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK / ALBANY, NY 12234

 

TO:

Full Board

FROM:

Jean C. Stevens

SUBJECT:

2004-05 Annual Report on the Status of Charter Schools in New York State

 

DATE:

June 29, 2006

 

STRATEGIC GOAL:

Goals 1 and 2

 

AUTHORIZATION(S):

 

 

 

Summary

 

Issue for Decision

 

          Should the Regents approve the proposed 2004-05 report on charter schools?

 

Reason for Consideration

 

          Required by State statute, §2857(3) of the Education Law.

         

Proposed Handling

 

          This question will come before the full Board on July 26, 2006 for discussion and action.

 

Procedural History

 

          A report of the status of charter schools in New York State has been approved by the Board annually for submission to the Governor and Legislature starting in 2000.  A five-year report was also submitted and approved by the Board at your December 2003 meeting. 

 


Background Information

 

          The Board needs to review the attached report and determine if it wishes to make any changes in policy as a result of the findings, and/or make any recommendations to the Governor and the Legislature.   Potential recommendations are provided.  Appendix A of the report will be available in the Regents Office.  It contains information obtained from public school districts on the type and level of impact, if any, of the charter schools located in those districts.

 

Recommendation

 

          VOTED:  That the Board of Regents approve the 2004-05 Annual Report to the Governor, the Temporary President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the Assembly on the Status of Charter Schools in New York State.

 

Timetable for Implementation

 

          Not applicable.

 

 

Attachment


 

 


ANNUAL REPORT TO THE

GOVERNOR,

THE TEMPORARY PRESIDENT OF THE SENATE,

THE SPEAKER OF THE ASSEMBLY

AND

THE BOARD OF REGENTS

ON THE STATUS OF CHARTER SCHOOLS IN NEW YORK STATE

2004-05

 

 

JULY  2006

 

 

 

 

 

THE

UNIVERSITY

OF THE

STATE

OF

NEW YORK

 

 

 

 

THE STATE

EDUCATION

DEPARTMENT

 

 

 


Background and Introduction

 

          The New York Charter Schools Act, now Article 56 of the Education Law, was enacted on December 17, 1998.  This Act amended existing Education Law to allow for the creation of charter schools.  The stated purpose of the Article “is to authorize a system of charter schools to provide opportunities for teachers, parents, and community members to establish and maintain schools that operate independently of existing schools and school districts in order to accomplish the following objectives:

 

(a)  Improve student learning and achievement;

(b)  Increase learning opportunities for all students, with special emphasis on expanded learning experiences for students who are at risk of academic failure;

(c)   Encourage the use of different and innovative teaching methods;

(d)  Create new professional opportunities for teachers, school administrators and other school personnel;

(e)  Provide parents and students with expanded choices in the types of educational opportunities that are available within the public school system; and

(f)    Provide schools with a method to change from rule-based to performance-based accountability systems by holding the schools established under this article accountable for meeting measurable student achievement results”(§2850(2) of Education Law).

 

Article 56 also requires the Board of Regents to report annually to the Governor, the Temporary President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the Assembly on the status of charter schools in New York State (§2857(3) of Education Law).  This report covers the 2004-05 school year.

 

This report includes data submitted by the charter schools and local school districts. 


Executive Summary

 

This report provides data required by §2857(3) of the Education Law and covers the 2004-05 school year, during which a total of 61 charter schools were open for instruction.  Of these 61 schools, 16 were chartered by the Board of Regents, 32 were chartered by the Board of Trustees of the State University of New York (“SUNY”), 11 were chartered by the Chancellor of the New York City Public Schools, and two were chartered by the Board of Education of the Buffalo City School District. Twenty-one had management companies as partners.  There were six charter schools with Edison Schools, Inc. as a partner, four schools each with Victory Schools, Inc. and National Heritage Academies as a partner, three schools with Chancellor Beacon Academies as a partner, and one school each with SABIS, Lighthouse Academies, Uncommon Schools, Inc. and Mosaica Education Inc. as a management partner. There were 32 charter schools located in New York City, 12 in Buffalo, four in Rochester, three in Albany, three in Syracuse, and one each in East Hampton (Wainscott Common School District), Kenmore, Lackawanna, Riverhead, Roosevelt, Schenectady, and Troy.  The largest student enrollment reported was 1,105 at the Charter School of Science and Technology in Rochester, and the smallest was 88 at the Child Development Center of the Hamptons Charter School in Wainscott.  There were 36 schools that served  elementary students (i.e., K-6) in a variety of grade configurations (e.g., K-1, K-2). Seven served students in grades K-8, three served students in grades K-7, two served students in grades K-9, two served students in grades 5-6, and two schools served students in grade 9 only. Finally, one each served students in grades 5-10, 7-9, K and 6, 5-6, 8-12, 5-8, 6-7, 7-10, and K-12. 

 

The charters for three charter schools were not renewed by SUNY past the 2004-05 school year.  The schools that were closed are the Central New York Charter School for Math and Science (Syracuse), the Charter School of Science and Technology  (Rochester),, and the Rochester Leadership Academy Charter School (Rochester).  

 

According to the Basic Educational Data System (BEDS) forms that were submitted in October 2004, a total of 18,408 students were reported enrolled in these 61 charter schools during 2004-05.  Most (12,634) were reported as Black (not Hispanic origin) and the fewest (65) were reported as being American Indian or Alaskan Native.  There were 255 Asian or Pacific Islander students reported. Hispanics made up the second largest population, with 3,059 students enrolled. The number of White (not Hispanic origin) students was reported to be 2,395.  In grades K and 1, there were more Black (not Hispanic) students reported as being enrolled (3,762) than there were students in any other ethnic group in grades K-12. 

Most students (15,305) were enrolled in grades K-6, while 3,103 were enrolled in grades 7-12. No students were reported as “Ungraded Secondary” but five students were reported as “Ungraded Elementary.”  Among the elementary students, most (9,737) continue to be enrolled in grades K-3.  Enrollment in grades 4-6 was 5,563.  Grade 6 had the lowest enrollment (1,612) at the elementary level.  At the secondary level, most students (1,915) continue to be enrolled in grades 7 and 8, but the enrollment gap between grades 7 - 8 and grades 9-12 is decreasing as several charter schools expand or are created to serve high school students.  In 2004-05, 1,188 students were enrolled in grades 9-12. 

 

Fiscal impact is calculated using the number of students reported on each charter school’s BEDS form multiplied by the adjusted expense per pupil (AEP) for that district.  That figure is then compared with the annual operating budget of the resident district and a percent is derived.  This figure may be different from what the districts actually pay to a charter school since such payments are based upon a full-time equivalent (FTE) enrollment figure that must be derived per Commissioner’s Regulation 119.1.  Those FTEs are not reported herein since final reconciliation of payments occurs in July of each year and the data are not readily available.  The figures reported herein are a reasonable estimate, however, of the potential fiscal impact upon any district.

 

Overall fiscal impact in New York City appeared to be negligible (0.30 percent impact on the district budget). In 2004-05, fiscal impact ranged from .01 percent of the school budget for several school districts with a small number of students attending charter schools to 10.15 percent of the Albany City School District budget.  Cumulative impact was 8.25 percent on the Lackawanna City School District budget, 7.77 percent on the Buffalo City School District budget, 4.52 percent on the Roosevelt Union Free School District, 4.06 percent on the Rochester City School District budget, 3.64 percent on the Schenectady City School District, 3.27 percent on the Shelter Island Union Free School District, 3.18 percent on the Syracuse City School District, 3.17 percent on the Sagaponack Common School District, 3.03 percent impact on the Wainscott Common School District, and 2.07 percent impact on the Troy City School District budget.

According to the information provided by the financial audits, 15 schools had a decrease in unrestricted net assets (i.e., fund balance) for the year.   The total amount of Revenue and Support for the charter schools totaled $186.6 million.  Government contracts and grants accounted for 89 percent of the total Revenue and Support.  

Academic achievement, as measured by State exams, was mixed.  For those schools for which the 2004-05 school year was the first year of instruction in the grades assessed, the test results should be interpreted as a baseline by which all future test results will be judged. 

On the grade 4 English Language Arts (ELA) exam, the top performers were as follows (percentages are for the percent of students scoring at or above Level 3):

§       Harlem Day Charter School, New York City: 100.0%

§       Renaissance Charter School, New York City: 95.7%

§       Roosevelt Children’s Academy Charter School, Roosevelt: 87.3%

§       Carl C. Icahn Charter School, New York City: 86.2%

§       Genesee Community Charter School, Rochester: 83.8%%

On the grade 4 English Language Arts exam, the weakest performers were as follows (percentages are for the percent of students scoring at or above Level 3):

§       Pinnacle Charter School, Buffalo (baseline year): 18.4%

§       Stepping Stone Academy Charter School, Buffalo: 20.4%

§       Brooklyn Excelsior Charter School, New York City: 29.9%

§       COMMUNITY Charter School, Buffalo: 32.5%

§       Charter School of Science and Technology, Rochester: 33.9%

On the grade 4 math exam, the top performers were as follows (percentages are for the percent of students scoring at or above Level 3):

§       Carl C. Icahn Charter School, New York City: 100.0%

§       International Charter School of Schenectady, Schenectady, 100.0%

§       Tapestry Charter School, Buffalo: 100.0%

§       Our World Neighborhood Charter School, New York City: 95.8%

§       Harlem Day Charter School, New York City: 94.4%

§       Renaissance Charter School, New York City: 92.0%

§       Roosevelt Children’s Academy Charter School, Roosevelt: 91.8%

§       Genesee Community Charter School, Rochester, 90.7%

On the grade 4 math exam, the weakest performers were as follows (percentages are for the percent of students scoring at or above Level 3):

§       Stepping Stone Academy Charter School, Buffalo: 33.9%

On the grade 8 ELA exam, the top performer was as follows (percentages are for the percent of students scoring at or above Level 3):

§       KIPP Academy Charter School, New York City: 71.5%

On the grade 8 ELA exams, the weakest performers were as follows (percentages are for the percent of students scoring at or above Level 3):

§       John V. Lindsay Wildcat Academy Charter School, New York City: 8.3%

 

§       Buffalo Academy of Science Charter School, Buffalo: 13.6%

 

§       Enterprise Charter School, Buffalo: 16.3%

 

§       Stepping Stone Academy Charter School, Buffalo: 20.0%

 

§       Charter School for Applied Technologies, Kenmore-Tonawanda: 27.3%

 

Based upon their 2004-05 State assessment date, five charter schools have been identified as being furthest from State standards.  They are:

§       Ark Community Charter School, Troy: grade 4 ELA;

 

§       Enterprise Charter School, Buffalo: grade 8 math;

 

§       John V. Lindsay Wildcat Academy Charter School, NYC: HS ELA and HS math.

 

§       Pinnacle Charter School, Buffalo: grade 4 ELA; and

 

§       Stepping Stone Academy Charter School, Buffalo: grade 4 ELA and grade 4 math.

 

Results for the 2001 grade 9 cohort show that most students (60.6 percent) in the John V. Lindsay Wildcat Academy Charter School did not take the Regents English exam, while 17.1 percent of the students scored between 0 and 64, and 22.2 percent scored between 65 and 100.  For the Regents math exam, most students (80.8 percent) did not take the exam, while 10.1 percent scored between 0 and 64, while 9.1 percent scored between 65 and 84. 

Most students in the Renaissance Charter School (81.4 percent) did take the Regents English exam.  The results show that 23.0 percent scored between 0 and 64, while 74.4 percent scored between 65 and 100.   The results for the Regents math exam show that all students attending the Renaissance Charter School took the exam, with 38.5 percent scoring between zero and 64, and 61.6 percent scoring between 65 and 100. 

In the 2004-05 school year, the charter schools reported serving a total of 358 English language learners, with 343 being enrolled in grade K-6 and the remaining 15 students enrolled in grades 7-12.

A total of 1,502 students with disabilities were reported in grades K-12, representing nine percent of the student enrollment in charter schools.  The Child Development Center of the Hamptons Charter School had the largest percentage of students with disabilities, 48 of its 88 students (55 percent).

 

A total of 11,555 students receiving Free or Reduced Lunch were reported, representing 63 percent of all students attending a New York State charter school during 2004-05.   Of that number, 9,903 were reported at the K-6 level, and 1,652 were reported at the 7-12 level.

During the 2004-05 school year, a total of 1,445 students were reported as having transferred out of charter schools and into other educational settings.  Of the 1,445, 1,331 transferred into another public school, and 114 were reported as having transferred into a non-public school or to home instruction. 

Charter schools reported serving 23 homeless students, and two migrant students. 

Additional information is provided that describes many of the issues and concerns that have been raised regarding the implementation of Article 56, the New York Charter Schools Act.  Suggestions are made for possible amendments to the legislation.    


The Number, Distribution, and Brief Description of New Charter Schools Operating in New York State in 2004-05

 

          Table 1 provides information for each charter school open for instruction during the 2004-05 school year and includes the grades and number of students to be served, the management company (if applicable), the specific educational approach to be used, the date that instruction commenced, and the charter entity.

 

Table 2 shows the distribution of students reported enrolled by grade, ethnicity, and gender.

 


Table 1

Approved Charter Schools Open for Instruction in New York State During 2004-05

Name and Address

New or Conversion

District of Location

Grades Served

Total Number of Students

Management Company

Educational Approach

Opening Date

Charter Entity

Amber Charter School

220 East 106th Street

New York, NY 10029

New

NYC (CSD 4)

K-5

280

None

Leonard Bernstein Center Artful Learning Model; dual language immersion (Spanish/English)

9/00

SUNY

Ark Community Charter School

762 River Street

Troy, NY 12180-1230

New

Troy

K-5

140

None

Essential Questions; commitment to theory of multiple intelligences

9/01

SUNY

Beginning with Children Charter School

11 Bartlett Street

Brooklyn, NY 11206-5001

Conversion

NYC (CSD 14)

K-8

450

None

Increased learning opportunities, continuous assessment

9/01

Chancellor

Brighter Choice Charter Schools for Boys

250 Central Avenue

Albany, NY 12206-2610

New

Albany

K-3

95

None

Liberal Arts, Core Knowledge

9/02

Regents

Brighter Choice Charter School for Girls

250 Central Avenue

Albany, NY 12206-2610

New

Albany

K-3

95