Comment by derektank

4 days ago

>despite there being little to no evidence that they generate any broad improvements in the base level of education in the population at large?

You don't find the experience of New Orleans following their conversion to a complete charter system in 2005 (10 percentage point gain in college acceptance rates, improvements on standardized tests by about a third of a standard deviation) to be meaningful evidence?

https://news.tulane.edu/news/new-orleans-reforms-boost-stude...

Congratulations to Louisiana on improving from 50th-ranked state in education to...50th-ranked state in education?

  • The population of New Orleans is less than 10% of the population of Louisiana. Also, I'm not aware of a single metric by which Louisiana is considered to be last place in K-12 education in 2024. State PISA scores are basically on par with California, spending per student is higher than Nevada. It's certainly no Massachusetts, I've seen it ranked around 40th out of 50 on different metrics, but I think you're revealing some ignorance in assuming Louisiana's school system is ranked last in the nation.

What you see with that result is way more complicated than just "charter schools working."