NEPC report finds 44% of charter school students in 2011-12
attended schools operated by EMOs
Contact:
William J. Mathis, (802) 383-0058, wmathis@sover.net
Jamie
Horwitz, (202) 549-4921, jhdcpr@starpower.net
Gary
Miron, (269) 599-7965, garmiron@gmail.com
URL for this press release: http://tinyurl.com/nzhgjup
BOULDER, CO (November 26, 2013) – A new National Education Policy Center
report published today shows that across the nation, schools managed by
for-profit firms such as K12 Inc, National Heritage Academies and Charter
Schools USA, as well as nonprofit education management organizations (EMOs)
such as KIPP, continue to increase the number of students they enroll, despite
a scarcity of evidence showing positive results.
Students across 35 states and the
District of Columbia now attend schools managed by these non-government
entities. Oklahoma and Tennessee have added schools run by EMOs since the last
edition of this report.
The report, Profiles of
For-Profit and Nonprofit Education Management Organizations: Fourteenth Edition
– 2011-2012, was released today by the National Education Policy Center
(NEPC), housed at the University of Colorado Boulder.
“There is growth in number of
schools and students served in both for-profit and nonprofit sectors, although
growth among schools operated by nonprofit EMOs continues to outpace the
for-profit sector. Growth has slowed for for-profits in brick-and-mortar school
settings. The real growth in the for-profit sector is with companies that
operate virtual schools,” said the report’s lead author, Dr. Gary Miron, a
professor of evaluation, measurement, and research at Western Michigan
University. “The growth of virtual schools, which is fueled by millions in
advertising dollars, is astounding because of the sketchy academic results
reported by the schools that operate online.”
The report is the NEPC’s latest
edition in its series of profiles of EMOs, companies contracted to manage
charter schools and other public schools. The EMO sector emerged in the 1990s
as part of an effort to use market forces and private entities to reform public
education.
For-Profit Operators
Since the 1995-1996 school year,
the number of for-profit EMOs has increased from 5 to 97, and the number of
schools they operate has increased from 6 to 840. Enrollment has grown from
approximately 1,000 students in 1995-1996 to 462,926 in 2011-2012.
While the actual number of
for-profit companies has grown very little over the past few years, many of the
large- and medium-sized EMOs are expanding into new service areas, such as
supplemental education services and virtual schooling.
Imagine Schools was the largest
for-profit EMO in 2011-2012 in terms of the number of schools it manages. The
company managed 89 schools during the 2011-2012 school year, but it has lost a
number of contracts since then. The next largest for-profit operators in
2011-2012, in terms of numbers of schools, are Academica (76) and National
Heritage Academies (68).
However, in terms of enrolled
students, the largest EMO is K12 Inc., which operates virtual schools. Because
of the large enrollments in its schools, the total enrollment of K12 Inc.’s
schools exceeded that of any other for-profit—or nonprofit—EMO, with 57 schools
enrolling 87,091 students.
Nonprofit Operators
Nonprofit operators have shown more
robust growth in brick-and-mortar school settings than for-profit operators,
both in terms of new nonprofit EMOs and new managed schools. A total of 201
nonprofit EMOs were identified and profiled in this year’s report, including 31
large nonprofit EMOs, 68 medium-sized, and 102 small nonprofit EMOs.
The overall number of students in
nonprofit EMO-managed schools has increased dramatically, from 237,591 in the
2009-2010 school year to 445,052 during the 2011-2012 school year. KIPP, the
Knowledge is Power Program, a national charter school network, remained the
largest nonprofit EMO, with 98 schools and just over 35,045 students in
2011-2012.
Virtual Schools
The number of virtual schools
operated by EMOs increased from 60 in 2009-2010 to 91 in 2011-2012. This represents
10.8 percent of all schools managed by for-profit operators.
As noted, the largest for-profit
operator is K-12 Inc. which operates full-time virtual schools. Some of the
largest for-profit EMOs are beginning to lose contracts with brick-and-mortar
schools and are shifting their attention to virtual education. “Most virtual
schools are charters, are full-time, and are statewide in their scope,” said
Charisse Gulosino of the University of Memphis, the report’s coauthor. “As it
stands, research, policy and practice have not kept pace with virtual
schooling’s growth — reflecting the need for deliberation about its impact and
implications for public K-12 education.”
Makes sense, when you see these CMO's and EMO's in round table discussions they haven't the look of an educator, and only the look of business people and their language is similar. If they loved teaching and children so much they'd be in the classroom and advocates of teachers, but they aren't and they don't.
ReplyDeleteI am afraid that if I teach at a KIPP school I will burn out, which is the last thing I want to have happen, great work by site admin.
ReplyDelete