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    Literature Review Charter schools enroll larger proportions of minority and low‐income students and smaller proportions of White students than traditional district public schools statewide: African American students make up 33% of the students in Texas’ open‐enrollment charter schools compared to 14% in Texas public schools, overall. Hispanic students make up 48% of the students enrolled in open‐enrollment charter schools, compared to the state average of 46%. Open‐enrollment charter schools have a

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    education. These children are left to a failing system because teachers simply just do not care about how they are affecting their lives. One of the strongest forms of emotional appeal in this documentary revolves around the raffle to get into a charter school. The narrator explains that these children’s futures are being “placed in the hands of luck.” Guggenheim is able to establish feelings of sickness for those who do not get selected and he creates a sadness that is sure to make his audience

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    Journalism has significant impact on politics According to Wikipedia, “journalism is gathering, processing, and dissemination of news, and information related to news, to an audience. The word applies to the method of inquiring for news, the literary style which is used to disseminate it, and the activity (professional or not) of journalism.” In our daily life, journalism plays a very important role in spreading the news or information about any kind of topic. When journalists, reporters or writers

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    have attempted to tackle what seemed to be a hopeless situation. With all the corruption and bureaucracy within the system, it is unlikely that this problem will be resolved anytime soon. However, there is hope amidst all this, and that is charter schools. Charter schools impact education by having passionate teachers who truly care for their students’ well-being, use up-to-date school methodology, are able to function with less bureaucracy, and have accountability that results in less corruption,

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    4 Traits of Effective Charter School Vendors One thing you may be surprised to learn about starting a charter school is that it’s a lot like starting a business. You’ve got to put out a quality product (your teaching style), you need to attract customers (your students), and you want to attract the best talent (your teachers). One of the most challenging aspects of the process is the hiring and management of suppliers. Your school will need more suppliers than you think. There’s the food for the

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    first conception back in 1991, charter schools have been heralded as giving parents a choice in their child’s education. Also, unlike private schools, charters schools do not require the parents to shell out money to have an option outside of public school. Nationwide public schools are being scrutinized for having poor test scores, especially among minority students, and being too costly compared to the results they produce. To combat low performing public schools, charter schools have stepped in to

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    Public Education Essay

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    A benefit of placing charter schools in a school district is school choice. Parents appear to support the option of deciding where their children attend school. According to Andy Smarick, “In New York, 12,000 students are on charter wait lists; in Massachusetts 19, 000; in Pennsylvania 27,000” (2008). Additionally, an Annual Survey of America’s Charter Schools 2010 notes that an average of 239 children is on a waiting list to enter each charter school in America, which is a 21% surge

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    are cut out by the masses, parents panic and turn to charter schools assuming that these programs are safer among their choices. Consequently, parents have set their child on an even more dangerous course than that of their public school competitors. In fact, recent findings show that “Charter schools attract less qualified teachers. A study by the Great Lakes Center for Education Research and Practice found that about 40 percent of new charter school teachers leave after their first year - nearly

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    childhood mental illness, and a wide range of education policy issues including school truancy, charter schools, teacher training and education reform efforts.” From August 2003 to July 2009, the Center conducted the largest violence-prevention study that the National Institute of Mental Health has ever funded. In addition, the Center houses the Center for Adolescent Risk and Resilience (C*StARR), a research project that studies the biology and behavior producing teen substance abuse. The Center can give

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    meetings because a teacher had taught a controversial book. The teacher would most likely be given smack on the back of the hand and it will be over with. When charter schools are implemented in urban school settings it draws money away from the other public schools in the same district. Superintendent Hank Allen argues that putting up new charter school next to a hurting public school is only avoiding the problems next door; “it’s sort of like having a road or highway that you can’t take care of then

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