2023 has been a watershed year for the school choice movement, but one of the longest-lasting forms of school choice has barely been part of the public conversation.
Charter schools, which are publicly funded but privately operated and have been around for more than three decades, hold a unique place in today鈥檚 school choice landscape.
They don鈥檛 fall into the same camp as the private school choice measures that have swept through Republican-dominated legislatures this year such as education savings accounts and vouchers that give families public, per-pupil funds to pay for private school tuition and other educational expenses. While Republican lawmakers across the country have used legislative majorities to establish new private school choice programs or expand existing ones, charter schools have often gotten by without a mention in legislative debates.
And while former President Barack Obama was one of charter schools鈥 most ardent champions, prominent Democratic politicians are no longer holding up charter schools as an example of positive education reform. President Joe Biden has been a vocal critic of charters with for-profit operators and stated on the campaign trail that he鈥檚 鈥渘ot a fan of charter schools.鈥 In office, his administration has gone to bat with charter school advocates over proposed revisions to the major federal grant program that supports the creation of charters.
Meanwhile, a new study from researchers who previously found charter schools either performed worse than or on par with traditional public schools found that charter schools overall now outperform their traditional public school counterparts.
So where does that leave charter schools?
If you ask Nina Rees, president and CEO of the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, charter schools are receiving more support than ever, just not as loudly.
鈥淭he fact remains that a good portion of people really like charter schools,鈥 Rees said in an interview with 澳门跑狗论坛 in July. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a portion who are never going to support [them] and then a really broad portion in the middle who don鈥檛 know what [they are].鈥
In a , 45 percent said they support public charter schools while 36 percent were in opposition. Nearly one-fifth of the respondents said they 鈥渘either support nor oppose鈥 charter schools. Pulling in that 19 percent of indecisive respondents is a major goal for Rees, who said vocal opposition to charter schools could stand in the way.
鈥淓ducating those people in the middle is really important now because if things are getting amplified in the court of public opinion and you have a strong opposition, they can start to hear about charter schools in that negative message,鈥 Rees said.
How charter schools got here
Charter schools have traveled a meandering route when it comes to political support.
The nation鈥檚 first charter school law in Minnesota, with a Democrat sponsoring the legislation. Soon after, former President Bill Clinton lauded charter schools as a potential solution to systemic achievement gaps between white, wealthy students and poor students and students of color.
At the time, charter schools were winning support both from Democrats and moderate Republicans. For Democrats, they also represented an attempt to counteract private school vouchers, which President Ronald Reagan supported.
鈥淭here had been various efforts up through the 鈥80s to expand vouchers without much success,鈥 said Douglas Harris, director of the Center of Research for Education Access and Choice at Tulane University. 鈥淐linton鈥檚 orientation was toward public-private partnerships. Charter schools are an example of that.鈥
Democrats鈥 support of charter schools鈥攚hich were a major education policy priority during the Obama administration鈥攈as since cooled even as charter schools serve predominantly urban, lower-income students whose families tend to vote for Democrats.
Last year, the Biden administration passed stricter application requirements for the federal Charter Schools Program, a grant that funds charters in their first three years of operation and represents the schools鈥 only source of federal startup funds.
The final requirements that became part of federal regulations were much less strict than what the Biden administration originally proposed, which would have required incoming schools to secure a letter of support from the public school district in their area. But the rules still require incoming charters to do a community impact analysis, examining how the charter will affect local desegregation efforts, and prove they aren鈥檛 connected to a for-profit management organization.
So far, the rules haven鈥檛 had a major impact on charters, Rees said鈥230 charter schools opened in the 2022-23 school year, according to the National Alliance. But Rees worries that the back-and-forth on the Charter Schools Program is a sign that Democrats鈥 support is waning.
鈥淚鈥檓 more worried about some of the discussions around Democrats not supporting [charter schools],鈥 Rees said. 鈥淢ost of our constituents are also Democrats. So the fact that they take these constituents for granted is what keeps us up at night, at a time when they can鈥檛 be doing this.鈥
Democrats were less likely to support charter schools than Republicans in the Education Next survey. Nearly 38 percent of Democrats said they support charter schools while 45 percent oppose them, leaving 17 percent without an opinion either way. Among Republicans, 55 percent said they support charters and a quarter of survey respondents said they oppose them, with 20 percent having no opinion.
While there are fewer prominent Democratic champions of charter schools, there are still some examples. In for example, Colorado Gov. Jared Polis opposed the Biden administration鈥檚 initial set of proposed changes to the Charter Schools Program, saying they would 鈥渉alt innovation in its tracks鈥 and arguing that charters are leading the way in creating innovation in schools and have better outcomes for students. Polis helped start two charter schools鈥攖he New America School and the Academy of Urban Learning, both in the Denver area鈥攂efore his election.
In addition, Rep. Hakeem Jefferies, the New York congressman who leads the House Democrats, is a longtime charter schools advocate, though advocates expected him not to make charter schools a priority when he was elected to his position as House minority leader late last year, .
Do charters really need political support?
Much of the attention around school choice as of late hasn鈥檛 been focused on charter schools, with conservative lawmakers more focused on private school choice and Democrats advocating for more funding for traditional public schools.
Harris, however, views the fact that the Biden administration ultimately tempered its changes to the Charter Schools Program as evidence of more under-the-radar support for charters.
鈥淎 lot of Democrats came to the rescue on that to get the administration to change their tune to water down the new rules,鈥 Harris said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 support there. It鈥檚 not as loud as it was before and probably not quite as strong but it鈥檚 at least kept things in place.鈥
And even with the attention focused on private school choice, there have been clear political victories for charter schools this year.
Earlier this year, Montana passed two laws that give parents and community members the ability to establish charter schools, making it the 46th state to enact a charter school policy, according to the National Alliance. In New Jersey, Gov. Phil Murphy, a Democrat, signed a budget passed by that state鈥檚 Democratically controlled legislature that includes $20 million for charter schools to cover the cost of facilities improvement. North Carolina lawmakers also passed a charter school omnibus bill that would also dedicate public funds for charter school facilities.
As they grow more established, charter schools may not need support in the form of new state or federal laws, Harris said.
As of the 2020-21 school year, there were 7,821 operating charter schools serving 3.7 million students鈥攖hey account for almost 8 percent of all public schools, according to the latest federal statistics. And recent research from the Center for Research on Education Outcomes at Stanford University released earlier this year showed that charter school students have outperformed their traditional public peers. That finding was particularly significant, as the center鈥檚 first two studies on the topic found that charter schools either underperformed or performed on par with their traditional public school counterparts.
Charter schools no longer have to prove to lawmakers that they should exist, Harris said
鈥淣ow it鈥檚 more [about] are they able to find charter authorizers to open more schools? And are they doing a sufficiently good job that more parents want to attend them?鈥 he said. 鈥淭hose sorts of things are more in their own hands. It鈥檚 not really about what policymakers are saying anymore.鈥