School Choice & Charters

Research on Charters and Integration Is Limited

By Lynn Schnaiberg — May 10, 2000 4 min read
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

A survey of the limited research that has been done on the demographics of charter schools suggests that in some places, they are contributing to the racial and ethnic isolation of their students.

But how much, or how broadly, such findings hold up depends on whom you ask in the ideologically charged debate over school choice.

One challenge for researchers is that there’s no perfect way of comparing the enrollments of charter schools and traditional public schools, and no universally agreed upon definition of racial isolation.

Most studies to date have focused on comparing, in the aggregate, the share of minority students served in charter schools versus traditional public schools in a given state. The problem with this method is that in many states, charter schools are concentrated in urban areas that tend to have higher proportions of minority students than the state’s schools as a whole.

And aggregate statistics, whether at the state or district level, can mask the existence of individual schools that are virtually all- white or all-minority.

Another method is to compare charter schools with traditional public schools in their close vicinity. But that approach assumes that the charter and traditional schools draw their students from the same neighborhoods, an assumption that doesn’t always hold up.

A report released this year by the U.S. Department of Education compares charter enrollments with district figures. It found that 69 percent of the 927 charter schools that responded to the survey were not racially “distinct” from the districts in which they were located during the 1998-99 school year. If a school’s white enrollment varied from the district’s by more than 20 percent, it was deemed distinct. Two years earlier, 60 percent of charter schools could be described that way. But some researchers say the department’s standard can be misleading.

“It’s an awfully broad and forgiving measure,” said Gregory Weiher, a researcher at the University of Houston’s Center for Public Policy and a co-author of a state-sponsored, multiyear evaluation of Texas charter schools.

Mr. Weiher pointed out that the Girls and Boys Preparatory Academy in Houston would not be considered racially distinct from the city school district, even though the charter school is 95 percent black and the district is 34 percent black, 52 percent Hispanic, and 11 percent white.

Researchers at the Institute for Education and Social Policy at New York University, meanwhile, examined more than 500 charter schools from the 1997-98 school year using the federal study’s 20 percent standard. They found that nearly half of all charter schools whose enrollments were more than two-thirds minority were distinct from their districts’ makeups. And the largest numbers of charters studied had enrollments that were zero to 20 percent white, or 81 percent to 100 percent white.

“A closer analysis suggests that charter schools may be proliferating at both the low and the high end of the race/ethnicity and affluence/poverty continuums,” the researchers said in a report last year.

Texas Results

In Texas, researchers compared the state’s 89 charter schools operating last year with the districts where they were located and found that, on average, the charter schools deviated more from their districts’ demographics than the traditional public schools within the same districts did.

For example, the average traditional public school had an Anglo population about 9 percentage points above or below the Anglo population for its district. The average charter school showed a difference of about 17 percentage points—nearly twice as great.

For Hispanic students, the difference was more than twice as great; for African-Americans, it was about three times as great.

The researchers also found that Hispanics were overrepresented in charter schools designated for at-risk students (some of which, they said, include a vocational education focus), while Anglo students were overrepresented in “regular” charter schools.

Black students, they found, were roughly evenly divided between those two types.

A 1999 study by Arizona State University researcher Gene V. Glass that compared charter schools in his state with their traditional public school neighbors found similar results, but the study has come under heavy criticism from choice supporters.

A Look at Vouchers

The picture with another form of choice, private school vouchers, is no less charged and complex.

In both Milwaukee and Cleveland, which provide tuition vouchers to mostly poor families to help defray the cost of sending their children to private schools, researchers found that students were much less racially isolated in the participating private schools than they would have been in the two cities’ public school systems.

Researcher Jay P. Greene, for example, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research in New York City, found that more than three-fifths of public school students in metropolitan Cleveland attended schools that were almost all-white or all-minority at the start of this school year, while half the students in the Cleveland voucher program were in comparably segregated schools.

But critics say neither Milwaukee nor Cleveland is a good indicator of what would happen if private school choice were made more widely available, since both programs are aimed at poor families, and both school systems are 80 percent minority.

A version of this article appeared in the May 10, 2000 edition of Education Week as Research on Charters and Integration Is Limited

Events

This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Artificial Intelligence Webinar
Managing AI in Schools: Practical Strategies for Districts
How should districts govern AI in schools? Learn practical strategies for policies, safety, transparency, as well as responsible adoption.
Content provided by Lightspeed Systems
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Reading & Literacy Webinar
Unlocking Success for Struggling Adolescent Readers
The Science of Reading transformed K-3 literacy. Now it's time to extend that focus to students in grades 6 through 12.
Content provided by STARI
Jobs Virtual Career Fair for Teachers and K-12 Staff
Find teaching jobs and K-12 education jubs at the EdWeek Top School Jobs virtual career fair.

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

School Choice & Charters Opinion Civil Society Is Withering. How to Help Schools Restore Engagement
Can a new wave of initiatives stem the trend of isolation?
7 min read
The United States Capitol building as a bookcase filled with red, white, and blue policy books in a Washington DC landscape.
Luca D'Urbino for Education Week
School Choice & Charters The Federal Choice Program Is Here. Will It Help Public School Students, Too?
As Democrats decide whether to opt in, some want to see the funds help students in public schools.
9 min read
Children play during recess at an elementary school in New Cuyama, CA on Sept. 20, 2023. Can a program that represents the federal government’s first big foray into bankrolling private school choice end up helping public school students?
As Democratic governors decide whether to sign their states up for the first major federal foray into private school choice, some say they want public school students to benefit. Here, children play during recess at an elementary school in New Cuyama, Calif., on Sept. 20, 2023.
Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP
School Choice & Charters Where Private School Choice Enrollment—and Spending—Is Surging
States have devoted billions of dollars recently in public funds families can use on private schooling.
13 min read
20260203 AMX US NEWS COULD TEXAS SCHOOL VOUCHER PROGRAM 1 DA
Enrollment in private school choice programs has grown quickly around the country in recent years. Applications open this month for Texas' newly created private school choice program, the largest such program in the country. Private "microschools"—such as the Humanist Academy in Irving, Texas, shown on Jan. 8, 2026—could benefit.
Juan Figueroa/ The Dallas Morning News via Tribune Content Agency
School Choice & Charters Federal Program Will Bring Private School Choice to At Least 4 New States
More state decisions on opting into the first federal private school choice program are rolling in.
6 min read
Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee speaks during a news conference Tuesday, Nov. 28, 2023, in Nashville, Tenn.. Lee presented the Education Freedom Scholarship Act of 2024, his administration's legislative proposal to establish statewide universal school choice.
Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee speaks in favor of establishing a statewide, universal private school choice program on Nov. 28, 2023, in Nashville, Tenn. Tennessee lawmakers passed that proposal, and Lee is also opting Tennessee into the first federal tax-credit scholarship program that will make publicly funded private school scholarships available to families. Tennessee is one of 21 participating states and counting.
George Walker IV/AP