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Leader Editorial: Charter Schools Have A Place In Community

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  • Leader Editorial: Charter Schools Have A Place In Community

    LEADER EDITORIAL: CHARTER SCHOOLS HAVE A PLACE IN COMMUNITY

    Burbank Leader, CA
    July 18 2014

    July 18, 2014 | 6:50 p.m.

    After tentatively approving the Giligia Charter Academy last month,
    the Burbank Unified School Board rejected its petition.

    On its face, the reasoning is clearly defensible: The school has
    yet to get a building, the presented budget seems a bit hinky, and
    its unclear if Giligia could hire enough teachers and get adequate
    supplies to open its doors this fall. But scratch the surface, and
    it's clear there's more going on here.

    When the board gave its conditional blessing on June, members couched
    the move as one they had to make. Charters are a matter of state
    law, and if you jump through the hoops, school boards have little
    discretion. Then came a forum earlier this month that drew hundreds
    of local parents, most of them concerned that approving a charter
    would set a bad precedent, that such schools would leech away money
    from the district.

    Others questioned the need for the Armenian-focused curriculum
    Giligia would offer, noting it might negatively impact the district's
    diversity. Additionally, school board members said the issues and
    concerns facing recent immigrants -- a stated goal of the would-be
    charter -- would be better addressed within the district.

    Lost in all this discussion, though, is the fact that Burbank already
    has a charter school, Options for Youth, which serves kids who don't
    fit in with regular schools for whatever reason. It would be a stretch
    to claim Options for Youth has diluted Burbank Unified's educational
    prowess, and incorrect to claim district schools can offer everything
    Options can.

    To this end, we ask parents to not reflexively reject charter schools,
    but to weigh the pros and cons dispassionately. It's worth a public
    discussion on how, exactly, Burbank Unified can better serve recent
    immigrants. If it's not practical or possible, then Giligia has a
    clear, and valid, reason for being, and it should open as soon as it
    gets its issues worked out.

    http://www.burbankleader.com/opinion/tn-blr-leader-editorial-charter-schools-have-a-place-in-community-20140718,0,2400610.story

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