Another example of KIPP's effective use of billionaire corporate welfare artists to bulldoze a path into communities to set up their total compliance reform schools. From the Chicago Sun-Times, by Tim Novak:
Last Modified: Feb 4, 2014 02:14AM
Sarah Howard thought Bruce Rauner was an angel who
would rescue her financially troubled, academically struggling charter school
in East Garfield Park.
Instead, the would-be Republican candidate for
Illinois governor took control of the Academy of Communications and Technology
Charter School that Howard started, dumped her as executive director, suspended
operations for two years, then turned it over to a national charter school
operator.
“Bruce was coming to us, saying he was going to
help us strengthen and improve our campus,” says Howard, who now works for the
University of Chicago’s Network for College Success. “And instead what happened
is he approached it like it was a turnaround that needed to be wiped out, sort
of like a venture capital deal — come in, put in new leadership and change
everything around.
“We were a little bit at his mercy,” she says. “He
indicated to us one thing, and then, two months later, he said, ‘Before I write
a check, I’m going to want my own person.’ ”
Rauner, a Winnetka venture capitalist, took over as
chairman of the ACT board in the fall of 2008, saying he hoped to turn Howard’s
school around.
“It probably didn’t end up the way that she would
like or, frankly, the way that I would like,” Rauner says. “ACT was a
struggling, poor-performing charter school. The scores were low. The students
were not growing. And I got involved to try to remedy that. And they were
struggling financially, and I was willing to donate to help them financially.
But they were also struggling in a horrible school building
. . . old,
decrepit, cold, leaky, expensive and . . . I was hoping I could help them find
a better location, as well as restructure their operations and recruit better
teachers and really turn it around.
“We made the tough decision that we couldn’t really
turn this school around . . . So we made the tough decision to suspend
operations for a year or two.”
Howard and a business partner started ACT in 1997
at a former Catholic elementary school at 4319 W. Washington, offering classes
to seventh- through 12th-graders. But ACT’s test scores lagged behind those of
many public schools. That led the Chicago Board of Education to deny ACT’s
application to renew its charter for five years. The board gave ACT a two-year
extension, then two more extensions, through June 2011.
“With the exception of high school test scores, we
were outperforming our neighborhood school on every other metric and, in some
cases, beating the CPS average,” Howard says. “I’m not saying we were knocking
it out of the park, but we were serving the neighborhood well and were
improving.”
But Howard didn’t have the money for repairs needed
at the old Catholic school. A leaking roof forced her to move into a nearby CPS
elementary school for the 2007-08 school year. She met Rauner and hoped he
would give her $500,000 to refurbish her old school.
Soon after Rauner joined her board, Howard says he
started talking about shutting down ACT, which had about 350 students.
Eventually, he got permission from the Board of Education to suspend the school
for two years.
Rauner’s board reopened ACT in the fall of 2012,
not as a high school but as an elementary school with about 80 fifth-graders at
4818 W. Ohio. Rauner turned over management to KIPP Charter Schools, which has
141 charter schools in 20 states and the District of Columbia. Rauner since has
merged ACT with KIPP, which has four charter schools in Chicago. Each KIPP
school pays a management fee of about $30,000 a year to the KIPP’s foundation.
Rauner’s foundation had donated $370,560 to ACT before it closed. He
gave KIPP $100,000 last year.
Even when they meet the metrics, they are closing. Imagine that.
ReplyDeleteIt's all about the bottom line.
Looks like they've reached the bottom.