Place Holder For Flash
Home Press Room Release: Michigan Charter Schools Consistently Outperforming Traditional Public Schools in Flint section heading
Release: Michigan Charter Schools Consistently Outperforming Traditional Public Schools in Flint
Wednesday, 22 June 2011 15:42

For Immediate Release:
June 13, 2011

Contact:
Dan Quisenberry
517-374-9167

   TEST RESULTS: MICHIGAN CHARTER SCHOOLS CONSISTENTLY OUTPERFORMING TRADITIONAL PUBLIC SCHOOLS IN FLINT
Charter Schools Outpace Traditional Public School Competitors Statewide in 16 of 18 Recently Released MEAP Test Results

Lansing, MI—As students and schools across Michigan this week close the book on the 2010-2011 school year and begin summer vacation, the Michigan Association of Public School Academies (MAPSA) today released the latest MEAP test results showing charter schools across Michigan significantly outperforming traditional public schools located in the same city or region.

Charter schools located in major urban school districts including Flint, Grand Rapids, Lansing and Detroit produced student proficiency rates significantly exceeding the traditional public schools in those districts on 8 out of 8 reading and mathematics tests. Michigan’s public charter schools’ statewide student proficiency rates exceeded their traditional public school rivals in similar districts on 16 of the 18 MEAP tests taken between grades 3 through 9. 

“Michigan’s charter schools create an atmosphere of innovation in education and our students’ remarkable achievement on recent state tests is proof that charters are excelling,” said MAPSA President Dan Quisenberry.  “Charter schools thrive on the competition that empowers parents with desperately needed choices for their children’s education.  With results like these, there is little wonder that two-thirds of Michigan’s charter schools, most located in urban districts like Flint, have waiting lists as parents demand better results for their children.”

Students in charter public schools are succeeding in Flint, earning significantly higher scores on the MEAP math and reading tests than their traditional public school counterparts:

  • Students at charter public schools in Flint achieved a 71.6 percent proficiency rate on MEAP reading tests, nearly 10 points higher than the proficiency rate produced in the traditional Flint public schools.
  • Charters in Flint produced a 78.7 percent proficiency rate in mathematics, 10 full points higher than the proficiency rate produced by their traditional public school counterparts.
  • Proficiency rates among African-American students in charter public schools across the state, including Flint, were 6 points higher than the statewide average in traditional public schools.
  • African-American students have scored higher proficiency rates at Michigan charter public schools than in traditional public schools statewide in each of the last six years.

“It is amazing what a fresh perspective can do in education,” said Traci Schmidt-Cormier, International Academy of Flint's School Leader. “Our students are benefiting from a rigorous education and the results are right there for everyone to see.  Every parent in Michigan should have the sort of opportunity these kids’ parents have today in Flint and the surrounding community.”

Charter public schools in Michigan are exceeding their competitors despite the fact they receive significantly less in per pupil funding each year than their traditional public school counterparts. Charters receive $1,329 less per pupil than traditional schools, despite the fact that they already have more competitive cost structures and lower employee costs.

“Charter schools succeed by operating more efficiently and stretching each dollar further,” said Quisenberry. “Despite the funding gap, charter schools are outperforming their competitors while parents across the state are clamoring for more choices. 

“Governor Snyder and lawmakers have an opportunity to lift the cap on charter schools this year to empower more parents, better educate more students and to finally put aside silly adult issues in order to put our kids first. The “reinvention of Michigan” cannot truly begin until they seize it.”

###

  

The Michigan Association of Public School Academies (MAPSA) has been the unified voice of the public charter school movement in Michigan since 1996.  MAPSA represents over 110,000 students, 5,000 teachers, dozens of authorizers and more than 50 education service providers working in 247 public charter schools in the state.  MAPSA assists the state's public charter schools in their mission to deliver achievement, choice and accountability through our advocacy, communications, technical assistance and professional development services. For additional information, please visit www.charterschools.org

MAPSA
105 W. Allegan, Suite 300
Lansing, MI  48933
517.374.9167 p | 517.374.9197 f
www.charterschools.org 

Comments (0)

Subscribe to this comment's feed

Write comment

- | +

busy
 
Contact

For media inquires contact:
Buddy Moorehouse
Tel: 517-374-9167
Email:
bmoorehouse@charterschools.org

Related Content