Thomas B. Fordham Institute - Advancing Educational Excellence

Charter School Autonomy: A Half-Broken Promise

April 28, 2010

by Dana Brinson, Jacob L. Rosch

This Fordham Institute study finds that the typical charter school in America today lacks the autonomy it needs to succeed, once state, authorizer, and other impositions are considered. Though the average state earns an encouraging B+ for the freedom its charter law confers upon schools, individual state grades in this sphere range from A to F. Authorizer contracts add another layer of restrictions that, on average, drop schools' autonomy grade to B-. (Federal policy and other state and local statutes likely push it down further.) School districts are particularly restrictive authorizers. The study was conducted by Public Impact.

*Updated May 2010. This updated edition of Charter School Autonomy: A Half-Broken Promise reflects changes that were made after a few minor sampling errors were found and corrected. The changes did not impact our findings or conclusions, and a complete explanation is included at the end of the report.

Full study

Press release

PowerPoint

State data

Arizona

California

Colorado

Connecticut

DC

Delaware

Florida: Conversion

Florida: Startup

Georgia: Conversion

Georgia: Startup

Idaho

Illinois

Indiana

Louisiana: Type 2

Louisiana: Type 5

Maryland

Massachusetts

Michigan

Minnesota

New Hampshire

New Mexico

New York

North Carolina

Ohio

Pennsylvania

Tennessee

Texas

Utah

Wisconsin: Instrumentality

Wisconsin: Non-instrumentality

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