Report

Improving Outcomes for Students with Disabilities

Negotiating Common Ground for District and Charter School Collaboration

Collaboration in special education between charter schools and traditional public school districts offers the potential to benefit students with disabilities.

In this article
Kindergartners listen as their teacher explains the day's activities at an elementary school in Indianapolis on March 25, 2013. (AP/AJ Mast)

Introduction and summary

All students deserve the right to attend high-quality public schools that prepare them for success. In cities and towns across the United States, public education is provided through a combination of traditional school districts and charter schools. Charter schools are autonomous public schools of choice, which are granted the opportunity to operate by entities referred to as authorizers—including state departments of education, local school districts, independent charter boards, and institutions of higher education—as outlined in state charter school statutes. Traditional local school districts operate public schools in a geographic area recognized by the state. While advocates and policymakers have passionately debated whether traditional versus chartered public schools best provide this preparation, both governance models can thrive and contribute to students’ success. Rather than seeing charter schools as adversaries, district schools should act on the original vision of many charter pioneers and explore opportunities to collaborate with charter schools, thereby joining forces to drive and accelerate initiatives that can lead to better student outcomes for all kids.1 In the best-case scenario, such collaborative efforts will enable districts and charter schools to share thought leadership, resources, and responsibilities.2 Given the urgency of the need to improve public education, policymakers and education leaders simply do not have the luxury of drawing artificial lines between districts and charter schools.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

While the relationship between districts and charter schools admittedly remains contentious in some locales, the two governance models are nevertheless collaborating effectively in communities across the country—much to the benefit of students. The Center on Reinventing Public Education has studied district and charter collaboration extensively and found that effective collaboration generally focuses on “shared resources, shared responsibility, shared effort to build trust and collegiality, and shared work to ensure equal access to high-quality schools for all students in the city.”3 In Boston, for instance, the traditional district, charter schools, and Catholic schools formed a compact in 2011 to “bring district, charter and Catholic school educators together in order to provide equitable access to high-performing schools and excellent instruction to all students.”4 In St. Louis, the district provides the nonprofit Knowledge Is Power Program, or KIPP, charter schools with free rent in surplus buildings, and in return, KIPP provides district leaders with access to the charter management organization’s, or CMO’s, successful leadership development program.5

The need to collaborate is particularly pressing in the area of special education. Approximately 6.5 million students—13 percent of students ages 3–21—receive special education and related services in public schools every year.6 Approximately 90 percent of those identified have high-incidence disabilities, such as specific learning disabilities, speech or language impairments, other health impairments, autism, intellectual disabilities, and emotional disturbance.7 However, these specialized programs provide services to students with a diverse range of disabilities, including low-incidence disabilities such as visual and hearing impairments. High-quality programs for students with disabilities provide differentiated services and supports in inclusive environments with a clear focus on successful student outcomes. Special education and related services could include offerings such as instruction from certified special education teachers, behavioral counseling, speech therapy, support from a paraprofessional, and access to assistive technology. These services can be extremely costly, as they often require significant technical expertise. Delivering effective special education services presents significant challenges for both traditional school districts and charter schools. Increased collaboration between districts and charter schools would allow educators to aggregate their efforts and expertise, thus improving access to high-quality special education and related services.

This report provides a brief overview of special education policies and outcomes and explores the potential of district and charter collaboration. There have been numerous examples of charter schools that have struggled to ensure equitable access for students with disabilities. The district and charter school collaboration efforts described in this report in Colorado’s Denver Public Schools, California’s Los Angeles Unified School District, and between Rhode Island’s Blackstone Valley Prep Mayoral Academy and Central Falls School District build opportunities to:

  • Collaborate to better serve students with disabilities in charters
  • Ensure access to innovative schools for students with disabilities
  • Create cost-effective solutions for districts and charters

The examples highlight the opportunities—and challenges to overcome—for districts and charter schools to collaborate to improve the education of students with disabilities. The report concludes with actions that the federal government, states, charter authorizers, districts, and charter schools can take to facilitate collaboration that will benefit students with disabilities, no matter what type of public school they attend.

Authors’ note

We are grateful for the opportunity to interview Josh Drake from Denver Public Schools, or DPS; Kaci Coats from STRIVE Preparatory Schools, or STRIVE Prep; Jeremy Chiapetta and Jennifer LoPiccolo from Blackstone Valley Prep; Edda Carmadello from Central Falls School District, or CFSD; Sydney Quon from Los Angeles Unified School District, or LAUSD; Katie Dammann from KIPP: LA; and Gina Plate from the California Charter Schools Association, or CCSA, by phone in order to learn about collaboration between school districts and charter schools on special education programming. We would also like to thank all of our interviewees who were generous with their time in providing additional data and responding to follow-up questions via email. Data and quotes not otherwise cited in this paper come from these personal interviews and email exchanges. Author Jessica Sutter conducted these interviews in June, July, and August 2016.

Room for improvement: The education of students with disabilities

Since the authorization of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, or IDEA, in 1975, the national approach to not only ensuring access but also providing quality special education and related services has been a work in progress. According to key metrics, the nation’s schools are making gains in terms of students accessing the general education curriculum, modest improvements in key student achievement measures, and increases in graduation rates that slightly outpace overall improvements. (see Figures 1–3)

However, there remains much room for improvement. Public schools—both traditional and charter—are struggling to consistently provide a high-quality education to students with disabilities, as evidenced by special education students’ relatively low graduation rates and limited postgraduation opportunities, as well as the persistent achievement gap between general and special education students and the disproportionate share of students with disabilities in juvenile detention facilities.8 Recent data released by the U.S. Department of Education regarding states’ implementation of IDEA documented that fewer than half of the states nationwide are meeting federal performance targets for special education.9

High-quality instruction in the general education environment is the first and most critical element of ensuring that students with disabilities achieve at high levels, but many students with disabilities also need high-quality and highly individualized special education and related services, such as visual impairment teachers and audiologists. To address the challenge of developing and sustaining quality special education programs, states and districts across the country have developed structures—frequently referred to generically as education service centers or education services agencies—to pool expertise; share potentially high costs from low-incidence disabilities; target resources; and assist districts in educating students with a wide range of disabilities. Given the costs and documented shortages of qualified specialists, these structures can be critical to ensuring that districts can reliably access specialized personnel to provide their students with key services.10 For instance, Massachusetts districts partner to form special education collaboratives to aggregate resources, pool risk, and develop technical expertise that would be nearly impossible for individual districts—much less schools—to develop.11 Similarly, in Colorado, districts join Boards of Cooperative Educational Services, or BOCES, in order to pool resources and access special education expertise.12 In Michigan, intermediate school districts provide critical support to district special education programs by geographic region.13 Such partnerships allow schools, especially in small districts, to plan and budget for potentially variable costs and develop and sustain the capacity required to provide a full continuum of quality services and placements to students with a diverse array of disabilities, as required by the IDEA.

Collaborative relationships between district and charter schools have significant promise, but their potential hinges on both districts and charters recognizing that collaboration can support their mutual interests in order to overcome inherent challenges. As the charter sector grows—and, in some locations, makes up a significant, if not majority, representation of public school enrollment—charter school administrators and state policymakers must identify strategies to build and sustain charters’ capacity to serve students with disabilities. Meanwhile, these administrators and policymakers must maintain the autonomy central to the charter construct and avoid bureaucratic structures that can undermine many efforts to create effective learning environments.

Special education: Individualized supports and services

The federal and state laws and associated regulations that guide how educators teach students with disabilities, ranging from mild learning disabilities to significant cognitive or physical impairments, grew out of the civil rights movement. While students with disabilities had historically been largely segregated from their peers and provided with little if any educational opportunities, the equal protection clause of Brown v. Board of Education provided the foundation for key federal laws that frame special education practice in U.S. public schools today: Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, the Education of all Handicapped Children Act of 1975—which evolved into IDEA—and the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990.14

Students identified as having one of 13 disabilities are eligible for special education and related services identified under the federal IDEA.15 Public schools are required to provide students with disabilities with a free appropriate public education, or FAPE, in the least restrictive environment, or LRE, appropriate for their needs and to provide parents with explicit rights to ensure that states and districts comply with the statute.16 In practice, students eligible for special education are provided accommodations and modifications that enable them to access the general education curriculum and make academic progress.17 While the special education and related services that students with disabilities receive under IDEA are a key component of improving outcomes for these students, these individualized services are still only a part of what must be a broader approach to serving students with disabilities—and all students. Students with disabilities need high-quality, effective instruction in inclusive settings, and they should have access to differentiated services and supports as soon as a need is identified.

Shoring up high-quality instruction for all kids, including students with disabilities, is critical, as 95 percent of the students eligible to receive special education are enrolled in traditional district schools and spend significant time in the general education classroom. While there is significant variation between states, on average, 63 percent of school-age students with disabilities spend 80 percent or more of their day in the general education classroom, and another 19 percent spend at least 40 percent of their school day in the general education classroom.18

Providing highly individualized supports to students in compliance with federal and state regulations is one of the most complex areas of education. Special education policies and structures—designed to enable students with disabilities to access the general education curriculum alongside their peers—vary across states and districts; are regulated by federal and state laws; and are supported by federal, state, and local revenues. In addition, as described above, students with disabilities are supported and protected by various laws and programs, which, unfortunately, are not always easily aligned. For example, while a student with disabilities is afforded all of the protections under IDEA, schools must also afford them the supports and opportunities required by the Every Student Succeeds Act. The body of laws and related regulations are nuanced and can be daunting to new charter school operators, many of whom may have limited experience navigating the complex web of administrative requirements that shape so much of special education in public schools.19

Special education challenges

Twenty-five years into the charter sector, there is ample documentation that charter schools have struggled, to varying degrees, to ensure equitable access for students with a diverse range of disabilities and to amass and sustain the capacity to provide high-quality services.20 The factors contributing to the challenge are myriad and have even included reports of some charters discouraging students with disabilities from enrolling.21 First, while funding is a perennial challenge for all public schools, charter schools’ small size, prohibition from raising revenues through taxes that are potentially available to traditional districts, and general inability to realize economies of scale critical to providing a full continuum of special education services is problematic.22 Second, charter authorizers have historically not devoted adequate attention to clearly articulating roles and responsibilities associated with educating students with disabilities or developing metrics to track their success.23 Finally, states, districts, and charter authorizers have struggled to retrofit regulatory structures developed before charter schools were created and in states where charter schools operate as part of a local district, in order to operationalize how they share responsibility for provision of special education within these structures.24

Due process and legal actions

Parents’ ability to file a grievance when they are concerned that a school is not fulfilling its obligations to provide FAPE is a key avenue to protecting their children’s rights. During the 2012-13 school year, parents or advocates submitted 16,980 due process complaints related to compliance with IDEA. The majority of these complaints—11,164 representing 65.8 percent—were resolved without a hearing. Yet the complaints provide insight into how often parents and schools—traditional districts and charters alike—clash regarding special education.25 Charter schools have been the focus of due process complaints as well as complaints submitted to the Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights, or OCR, and the Department of Justice’s Office for Civil Rights. While there is no national repository for individual parent due process complaints, public reporting of complaints submitted to the respective offices for civil rights provide insight into how some of the challenges are translating to formal grievances and the collective understanding of how relevant laws are being applied to autonomous charter schools. Since October 2013, the Department of Education’s OCR has issued 71 letters stemming from complaints against charter schools.

Examples of OCR complaints related to educating students with disabilities in charter schools
  • In 2014, the OCR investigated a complaint filed against a CMO in Texas alleging significant underrepresentation of students with disabilities—2.7 percent in the CMO compared with 7.3 percent in the local districts—and English language learners—11.5 percent compared with 22.5 percent—stemming from discriminatory enrollment and discipline practices.26 The complaint was resolved with a resolution agreement outlining specific steps, such as adding nondiscrimination statements regarding students with disabilities on recruitment materials, the CMO was required to take to ensure compliance with relevant federal and state statutes.27
  • In 2014, parents filed a complaint against a charter school in North Carolina alleging violation of Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 stemming from the school’s refusal to provide services to a student after an evaluator determined that the student qualified to receive them. After determining that the school had violated Section 504 by failing to have appropriate policies and procedures in place to serve qualified students, the OCR developed a resolution agreement that required the school to fulfill specific actions to demonstrate compliance with the law.28
  • In 2014, a complaint was filed with the OCR alleging violation of Title II of Section 504 regarding access to facilities, programs, services, and activities for English language learners and students with disabilities in charter schools in Wisconsin. As the authorizer, the school district was the defendant in the complaint. The district entered into a resolution agreement with OCR that involved the district ensuring that these subgroups of students would have equal access to the charters. The schools would also provide parents with information about how to access the schools and ensure that the schools were physically accessible to students with disabilities.29
  • In 2016, a cohort of parents filed a complaint with the OCR against a CMO in New York that alleged discrimination against students with disabilities stemming from the failure to identify students as eligible for special education or to provide accommodations; illegal discipline practices; and inadequate communication with parents regarding their rights associated with accessing special education and related services.30 The complaint has yet to be resolved.

Special Education in the Charter Sector

In June 2012, the federal Government Accountability Office, or GAO, released a nationwide analysis of enrollment data; the report was spurred by public concerns that charter schools were not serving their fair share of students with special needs as required by law. The GAO reported that in 2008-09, the share of students with disabilities enrolled in charter schools was 7.7 percent, compared with traditional public schools at 11.3 percent. In the 2009-10 school year, the GAO found that 8.2 percent of all students enrolled at charter schools were students with disabilities, compared with 11.2 percent observed in traditional public schools.31 As result of these findings, the GAO urged charter schools to examine how their practices affected special education enrollment and recommended that the department conduct deeper research on the factors that influence enrollment.32 In November 2015, the National Center for Special Education in Charter Schools, or NCSECS, released a comprehensive report using the 2011-12 Civil Rights Data Collection, or CRDC, maintained by the department and found that, nationally, students with special needs made up 10.4 percent of total enrollment in charter schools compared with 12.55 percent of all students in traditional public schools—a 2.15 percent gap.33 Based on the GAO data and that reported by the NCSECS, the enrollment difference between the two types of schools has been dropping over time: from 3.6 percent to 3 percent to, most recently, 2.15 percent. Analysis of the recently released 2013-14 CRDC will provide additional insight regarding this apparent recent trend.

Concerns regarding special education in the charter sector

Currently, 43 states and the District of Columbia have charter school laws, and there are approximately 6,800 charter schools operating across the country that serve an estimated 2.9 million students.34 While the charter school model has undoubtedly captured the imagination of policymakers, parents, and school leaders, the schools and policies have also generated criticism and critiques. Since the inception of the charter sector in 1991, critics and scholars have questioned the extent to which charter schools welcome and provide adequate services to students with disabilities.35 Research has documented that while many charter schools have struggled to amass the requisite expertise to effectively service students with disabilities, there are ample examples of charter schools creating successful special education programs. For instance, CHIME Institute in California has developed a national reputation for creating a dynamic and wholly inclusive environment for students with significant disabilities.36 Another example comes from Massachusetts’ UP Education Network and its methodical approach to moving students from self-contained to inclusive classrooms as part of its focused school turnaround work, which has demonstrated notable improvements in outcomes for students with disabilities.37

Concerns regarding special education in the charter sector range from broad questions about schools generally limiting access to narrower concerns about access for students with more significant disabilities. Other common areas of concern include the quality of programs for students with special needs and practices, such as discipline, that might have a disproportionate impact on students with disabilities. The growth of specialized charter schools designed primarily to serve students with disabilities also raises questions about inappropriate segregation of students with disabilities.38 While these specialized charter schools appear to be filling a parent-driven demand, advocacy groups that have fought to have traditional districts move away from segregated settings have expressed concerns that specialized charter schools may lead to students being counseled into settings that are not the least restrictive environment or that may not be accessible to all students with disabilities. In particular, advocacy groups are worried that specialized charter schools are more common for a narrow subgroup of special education students, such as students with autism or learning disabilities.39

While autonomous charter schools have unique opportunities to innovate, they can struggle to leverage the opportunity for students with disabilities given practical financial and staffing limitations.40 However, collaborating with districts has the potential to optimize both district systems and expertise and charter autonomy to improve the quality of education for students with disabilities in both. In particular, new charter schools, small charter schools, and—more importantly—the students with disabilities who elect to enroll in them stand to benefit from collaborative relationships with school districts that have established special education expertise. Those districts that function as authorizers may be uniquely positioned to encourage collaboration by virtue of an explicit shared interest and the valued district resources that they can make available to their authorized charter schools.

The collaboration in Denver, described in detail below, is tightly connected to the allocation of facilities and capital improvement expenses. Charter schools need access to facilities and construction funds to appropriately serve students with significant disabilities. Denver Public Schools, as the district, controls access to excess facilities, and state facilities bind funding and can allocate them to charters, which agree to house center programs. Not all district authorizers are as sophisticated as Denver in their portfolio management of schools; however, Denver’s management highlights the opportunity for high-quality district authorizers to leverage resources as an incentive for charter collaboration.

Districts that do not serve as authorizers may also see the benefits of collaborating with charter schools, and the relationship would be arguably simpler absent the oversight role that is central to authorizers. However, these collaborations would most likely require some explicit incentive or apparent mutual interest in order to occur given historical tensions between the two entities.

Need and potential of district-charter collaboration

While many charter schools have created special education programs that enable students with disabilities to succeed, many more students would benefit from support and access to technical expertise to improve programs for students with disabilities.41 Collaborating with districts that have additional scale and established expertise builds opportunities to:

  • Collaborate to better serve students with disabilities in charters
  • Ensure access to innovative schools for students with disabilities
  • Create cost-effective solutions for districts and charters

District-Charter Collaboration on Special Education: Denver Public Schools

Background

Denver Public Schools wanted to increase the number of students with significant disabilities who are educated in district-authorized public charter schools. Using facilities allocation authority, capital dollars for retrofitting space, and a collaborative decision-making process, DPS has begun placing specialized center programs for students with severe to profound disabilities in charter schools. DPS will continue to expand the number of such programs until charters reach parity with traditional district schools in terms of the proportion of students with significant disabilities served.

DPS serves more than 91,000 students, including 17,000 attending charter schools under district authorization. Both sectors serve a student population in which approximately 9 percent have mild to moderate disabilities, and these students are served in inclusive classrooms alongside their peers. Approximately 1.5 percent of DPS students have severe to profound disabilities, and based on the level of specialized services they require, they are placed in center programs within schools distributed across the district. While less restrictive settings are always the goal, for some students, their individualized education plan, or IEP, teams have determined that a separate center program setting outside of the regular classroom is the least restrictive environment appropriate. These decisions are made on an individual basis. In the 2015-16 school year, charter schools had increased the number of students enrolled with more significant disabilities, but these students still made up just more than 0.5 percent of their student population. DPS was concerned that the lack of specialized programs in charter schools was limiting access for students with more significant disabilities.42

As part of Denver’s well-known school choice process, parents of students with disabilities are sent official notification of the school to which their child is assigned based on the needs and services documented within their child’s IEP. Notification is sent prior to the start of the choice process for a given school year and includes a list of other schools, both district and charter, which offer similar services to the assigned school. This is similar to the process for all other students in the district, in which they are assigned to their neighborhood school and then have the option to enter the choice process to enroll in other district or charter schools.43 While parents may select a school of their preference, not all schools have center-based programs; not all centers have excess space available; and the district does not provide transportation for schools of choice. Providing additional center programs in charter schools is an effort to address both choice gaps and geographic needs for the district.

In 2010, the district and its charter schools signed a Gates Foundation District-Charter Collaboration Compact, securing $4 million to facilitate collaborative work between the two sectors.44 Among other commitments, the compact specifically called out access to district facilities for charter schools and a need for charter schools to equitably serve all students with disabilities. This compact provided a common set of expectations and an opening for conversations about collaboration with DPS-authorized charter schools. Collaboration in Denver has taken many forms, but the two special education collaborations have focused on improving compliance and support services to charter schools and placement of center programs in charter schools.

Collaborating to better serve students

Historically, DPS only notified district or charter schools about the planned opening of additional center programs each May, when the center program would need to open in August of the same year. Some charter schools, including STRIVE Preparatory Schools successfully pushed for changes to this short timeline that they felt was not good for teachers or students. Kaci Coats, the senior director of student services for STRIVE Prep, shared in a phone interview, “The district was telling us to do something at a certain time without clear criteria for center placement and no clear channel for decision-making.” Coats called the process reactive and contrasted it with the more proactive planning of STRIVE Prep, noting, “We like to have our ducks in a row.” As a result of this request and following the example of how charter schools plan for opening their own schools, DPS now gives all schools—both charter schools and district-run schools—a planning year, or “Year 0,” to allow for adequate planning, training, and staffing of new center programs before they open.

Josh Drake, executive director for exceptional students for DPS, noted in a phone interview that facilitating sustainable collaboration is difficult, but his staff—and the charter schools they partner with—remain excited about hard work that leads to better outcomes for students. Clear communication and collaborative connections between staff have helped facilitate this work. For example, DPS has created a Center Program Plan that acts as a touchstone for schools to refer to and addresses the common questions that schools need to answer, as well as details that are helpful to planning for the operation of specific disability programs. Coats has also worked very closely with the DPS district support partner assigned to STRIVE Prep. This role used to simply ensure compliance with special education requirements and rarely reached out unless the school made a mistake. But according to Coats, she is now in daily communication with her DPS counterpart about questions and concerns from special education leads at each STRIVE campus and the larger collaborative initiatives. Coats said there is now “a trust that we are both coming at this from a place about what is right for and best by kids and families.”

Ensuring access for students with disabilities

In the spring of 2012, there were only two charter schools in Denver with center programs, serving approximately 10 students with severe and profound disabilities. This left a significant gap between district-run and charter schools with respect to providing a full continuum of service options for students with a diverse array of needs. While some geographic areas of the district required additional capacity for students with severe and profound disabilities, the traditional school buildings in those areas did not always have space. DPS used bond money to retrofit facilities and sought to meet two goals at once: providing facilities to charter schools and ensuring access to such schools for students with disabilities.45 This opportunity came at a time when the district special education team was considering how to reduce the number of students served in centers; how to best accommodate the geographic need for center program space; and how all of that work intersected with the expansion of school choice within the district.46

As of spring 2016, there were 16 center programs with 100 students in charter schools. At that time, DPS schools housed 109 programs serving 1,400 students. The district expects that there will be 40 center programs serving 350 students in charter schools by spring 2019. DPS is aiming to be the first school district to reach parity in its percentage of students with significant disabilities served in charter schools. DPS sees clear benefits to being able to maintain specialization via additional center programs sited in charter schools around the district. “We have a coherent whole,” Drake said of the structure. He added that charters can balance the capacity of the district to provide services and to minimize travel for kids.

As the collaboration on center programs grows, DPS is working on more transparent principles and criteria, including a formal process for identifying center program sites. The process must consider the needs of the student population, the geographic distribution of programs, and the siting of programs in schools that offer a high-quality education to all students—both general and special education.

District-Charter Collaboration on Special Education: Los Angeles Unified School District

Background

The Los Angeles Unified School District wanted to encourage authorized charter schools to return to the district’s special education local plan area, or SELPA, after a significant number of charter schools joined an all-charter SELPA organized by another county. The district created options for charter schools to be part of LAUSD’s SELPA that offered different levels of service provision, support, and autonomy. Nearly all of the charters have returned to the LAUSD SELPA, while also creating a number of specialized programs for students with disabilities.

In California, all traditional school districts and county offices of education are local educational agencies, or LEAs. These LEAs are also members of a special education local plan area, a regional consortia created in 1977 to provide a full continuum of special education services to meet the needs of all children residing in the geographic area. Charter schools in California may be part of the LEA which authorized them or may serve as their own LEA.47 If a charter is part of its authorizer’s LEA, it is automatically part of the LEA’s SELPA. If it elects to be its own LEA, it must apply for membership in a SELPA. There are 135 SELPAs in the state, but only 25 currently accept charter school members.

In 2007, charter schools were frustrated by the lack of SELPA membership options available to them, which limited the potential to act as independent LEAs for special education purposes. In response to this frustration from charter schools, the California State Board of Education requested recommendations for a regional approach to charter SELPAs.48 A task force drafted recommendations for charter schools to gain membership to SELPAs—including those not within their own geographic region.

In Los Angeles, charter schools were “looking for a more equitable funding and service delivery partnership, either within LAUSD or in another entity, statewide,” said Gina Plate, senior special education advisor at the Californian Charter Schools Association, in a phone interview. Each charter pays what LAUSD terms a “fair share” contribution, which is a share of the charter’s state public funding allocation to cover the cost of educating students with the most significant disabilities across the district.49 Kim Dammann, managing director of special education at KIPP LA,50 recalled in a phone interview that the difficulty of accessing supports and programs—despite paying fair share funding—was the impetus for charter schools to start exploring options. In school year 2011-12, 22 charter schools authorized by LAUSD, though not KIPP LA, left the LAUSD SELPA to join an all-charter SELPA formed by the El Dorado County Office of Education.

Losing such a large number of charter schools hurt the LAUSD SELPA. It resulted in a loss of funds to the SELPA itself, and LAUSD also lost control over the special education services provided to charter LEAs they authorized that were located in their geographic area. Consequently, LAUSD wanted to find a way to retain as many charter schools within their SELPA as possible and convince those that had left to return. This became the impetus for the reorganization of the LAUSD SELPA and the collaboration with Los Angeles charter schools. In January 2011, the LAUSD Board of Education voted unanimously to restructure the existing LAUSD SELPA to include the Charter Operated Program, or COP, with three options for membership. Since the creation of the options, nearly all of LAUSD’s authorized charters have returned to membership in the LAUSD SELPA.51

Creating cost-effective solutions

All charters authorized by the district may select one of three SELPA membership options. (see Table 1) While a “school of the district” option, Option 1 in LAUSD, is required in California statute, the small number of charter schools that have chosen Option 1 is a result of both an interest in greater autonomy by charters and a deliberate effort on the part of the district to encourage this autonomy.

More than 40 percent of charter schools select SELPA membership under Option 2, which provides some direct support from LAUSD. Option 3 offers the greatest autonomy for charter schools and is also the deepest level of collaboration with the district. All charter schools selecting Option 3 send representatives to a coordinating council that meets monthly for information sharing and professional development. In February 2012, Sydney Quon joined the staff of LAUSD as the director of charter operated programs. She is an employee of the school district, but Quon’s position is primarily funded by the Option 3 charter schools within the LAUSD SELPA.

Leaders from 39 charter school organizations elect nine voting members to serve on the executive council board, which approves the budget for spending the “shared budget” funds and determines the recipients of program grants given to charter schools. 52 Overall, 86 percent of the funds in the shared budget that charter schools pay into goes directly back to schools. Some of the funds are used for COP staff at the LAUSD SELPA; some funds support nonpublic school placements for students with severe needs; and other funds are used to provide grants that charters may use to start programs to serve students with more moderate to severe disabilities. Interviews highlighted that the membership of authorized charters in the LAUSD SELPA has allowed charters to build special education capacity while maintaining autonomy, to contribute financially to the collective work of serving students with disabilities in LAUSD, and to leverage the SELPA relationship with the district as a means of better serving students.

Collaborating to better serve students

In Los Angeles, KIPP LA’s experience highlights the potential for autonomy and collaboration under Option 3. The autonomy and freedom to innovate within Option 3 aligns with KIPP’s own value of “Power to Lead.”53 KIPP LA had previously been a SELPA member under Option 2, but struggled to support students with significant needs. Kim Dammann shared in a phone interview, “There was some truth to the district saying ‘you’re not serving these kids,’ because we were sending them back to the district for placement.” KIPP LA tried a pilot of Option 3 with one of its midsize campuses, motivated by the desire to try and create a program that could serve an enrolled very young student with an intellectual disability. Under Option 3, KIPP LA applied for a program grant. The grant provided KIPP LA with three years of funding, which decreased each year as the CMO worked to internalize the cost of the new programming. In partnership with LAUSD, KIPP LA staff observed schools with model programs and worked to build a program that included an itinerant provider who served students across KIPP campuses and whose excess time could be made available to other charters with similar student service needs. KIPP LA now operates seven specialized programs. Two of these programs are fully developed and have been replicated: a program for students with intellectual disabilities and a program to assist students with transitioning from district special day programs to an intensive inclusion setting with blended learning support. The CMO is also working with LAUSD to build a third distinct program, a therapeutic alternative to a nonpublic school serving elementary and middle school students with intensive socioemotional needs. KIPP LA shared that through this work they now have 75 staff focused on special education across their 13 schools and specialized programs. Each of the specialized programs now operated by KIPP LA was directly made possible by the seed funding from, partnership with, and expertise of the LAUSD team members.

Ensuring access for students with disabilities

Both Quon and Dammann highlighted in interviews the important successes of the options approach and the opportunities they create for collaboration that directly and tangibly benefits students with disabilities. A recent report from LAUSD’s Office of the Independent Monitor commended charter schools for continuing to increase the enrollment of students with disabilities. According to the report, general enrollment at charter schools increased 2 percent in the 2015-16 school year, but the enrollment of students with disabilities increased nearly 10 percent. The monitor noted that the “increase in [students with disabilities] enrollment is evidence that the changes to the policies and practices for servicing [students with disabilities] have resulted in a positive outcome.”54

Charter schools are noticing a variety of benefits from their partnerships with the district to improve students with disabilities’ access to high-quality services. Dammann said, “The communication is really the win. The resources are great, but the improved communication is key.” She credited the district with embracing this opportunity to work with charter schools and says, “Our relationship with LAUSD has really improved from where it used to be.” She also expressed pride at what charter school organizations such as KIPP LA have been able to accomplish through this collaboration with the district. Dammann shared: “We are owning that all of these kids [with disabilities] are our kids—mild, moderate, or severe—and we’re going to keep them all and serve them the best way we can.” LAUSD’s Quon praised Option 3 schools in her interview for using their autonomy to “think outside of the box and be more creative to move forward” the practices used to serve kids.

District-Charter Collaboration on Special Education: Central Falls, Rhode Island, and Blackstone Valley Prep Mayoral Academy

Background

As Blackstone Valley Prep Mayoral Academy, or BVP, grew, the organization’s leadership recognized a need to have dedicated administrative leadership for special education. As part of a wider collaboration effort, BVP developed a partnership with Central Falls School District to provide special education administration, professional development, and provision of some specialized services for BVP students. This partnership has enabled BVP to benefit from the deep expertise within CFSD in a cost-effective manner that is also beneficial to the district.

Rhode Island is home to 30 charter schools serving more than 7,000 students who make up about 5 percent of school children in the state. State law allows for three kinds of charter schools: district charter schools, independent charter schools operated by universities or nonprofit entities, and mayoral academies.55 All three kinds of charter schools are authorized by a single entity, the Rhode Island Council on Elementary and Secondary Education, and are granted for a term of five years.56

Central Falls School District, or CFSD, is located 10 miles north of Providence, Rhode Island, and serves 2,900 students in six schools. The student body is a diverse mix of Latino, African American, white, and multiracial students; 81 percent of CFSD students qualify for free or reduced lunch. CFSD students receive English language learner, or ELL, services—23 percent—and special education services—22 percent—at a higher rate than the state average, at 7 and 15 percent, respectively.57

In 2011, CFSD and six local charter schools signed a district charter collaboration compact and received a $200,000 planning grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.58 In the year before submitting the grant proposal, then-Superintendent Frances Gallo gathered charter leaders for periodic roundtable discussions to explore ways traditional and charter schools might collaborate. The conversations generated many ideas such as school facilities, talent pipelines, and ELL supports. But Jeremy Chiappetta, CEO of BVP, and Gallo became excited about an idea that previously had not sparked much interest for other charter school leaders: special education. 59 Both Chiappetta and Jen LoPiccolo, director of external affairs for BVP, credit the mutual respect between CFSD and BVP to the initial collaboration, as well as the continued joint work between the organizations.

Collaborating to better serve students

Opened in 2009, BVP serves more than 1,500 students from kindergarten through 11th grade across six schools. Approximately 14 percent of its students are eligible for special education services, a rate slightly lower than both the state and the CFSD average.60 As BVP grew as an organization, adding more schools and more grades, it also worked to grow its administrative infrastructure for special education.

From the establishment of the first elementary school in 2009 until the opening of the high school in 2014, BVP contracted with two retired special education administrators who each, in turn, served as part-time special education administrator for the organization. While each campus has a full-time special education chair and dedicated special education teachers, there was no one, LoPiccolo explained in a phone interview, devoted full-time at the network level to supporting the “building of a system that would ensure compliance procedures and connections with both families and the state was as good as it could be, and could do what it was intended to do.” As BVP contemplated further growth, it sought a full-time special education administrator.

Chiappetta noted that, for special education, “The best talent is actually found at the district.” Even before the district-charter collaboration began, CFSD had been working to augment its own internal capacity to deliver high-quality special education and related services, specifically focusing on opportunities to return students from private placements back to the district. This capacity made CFSD the natural choice for BVP to turn to in its search for a new full-time special education administrator. BVP entered into a six-month trial memorandum of understanding, or MOU, with the district, under which CFSD served as the special education administrator for BVP and provided BVP with access to special education services at an efficient scale. The MOU also included consulting hours from a CFSD expert to coach BVP school leaders and work to build internal capacity around special education.61

The key to the implementation of the work under the MOU is a former special education director and current chief academic officer at CFSD, Edda Carmadello, who also serves as BVP’s special education administrator under the MOU. In this role, she participates in BVP leadership meetings as a member of the organization’s cabinet; meets monthly with each head of school; and checks in with school-level special education and grade level chairs regularly throughout the year. While special education chairs at each campus are still the day-to-day managers of special education services for students, they can now access real-time coaching from Carmadello, an experienced special educator.

For her part, Carmadello highlighted specific interactions between BVP and CFSD staff as early evidence of success. The co-planning of secondary transition opportunities for students is one such interaction. Carmadello shared that CFSD has begun planning opportunities to expose middle and high school students to postsecondary opportunities but is still working to document the variety of opportunities students can access for career and life planning. During the 2015-16 school year, staff from BVP and CFSD spent Thursday mornings before school in a joint professional learning community, or PLC, reviewing best practices from around the state and crafting concrete opportunities for students from both systems to prepare for postsecondary transition.

Chiappetta and Carmadello were also proud of the trust and relationships that have been built across organizations as part of the collaboration. According to staff survey responses, “our special educators feel supported,” said Chiappetta. “There’s been really strong acclaim from both educators and leaders on this relationship.” Carmadello noted that BVP has no areas where it has fallen out of compliance, largely due to the way “we have risen as a team” to work through mediation hearings and difficult IEP meetings.

The developing relationships have also benefited CFSD staff. Carmadello identified getting district staff into BVP schools and classrooms to see the strength the CMO has around curriculum and instruction as having a “bilateral benefit” that has led to a “trickle of collaboration into other things, like math curriculum work.” She said that BVP sets high expectations for students and it “helps us to see this and be reminded of the need to maintain high expectations and rigor, too.”

Creating cost-effective solutions

Carmadello described in her phone interview that the first six months of the collaboration were a “getting to know you” period, during which she conducted a “deep dive into the practices at BVP.” Carmadello echoed what Chiapetta and the BVP already believed to be true—as the organization grew, it had not grown its systems for special education administration, and it benefited from sharing the already established systems within CFSD. After the initial trial period, CFSD and BVP signed a 12-month MOU in July 2015 to continue and deepen the collaboration on special education. The elements of the MOU remained the same, facilitated by a few key structural factors of both districts. One pillar of the BVP model is a longer school day and a longer school year. While CFSD employees end their contractual hours at 2:30 p.m., the BVP school day ends at 4 p.m. for students and 4:30 p.m. for staff. This daily difference allows CFSD employees—including service providers such as psychologists, bilingual speech-language pathologists, occupational therapists, physical therapists, and adapted physical education teachers—to work with BVP students and be compensated without conflicting with their CFSD contracts. Summer hours at BVP are also a time when CFSD are not covered by their 185-day contract and can work on planning and professional development with the CMO.62

The MOU covers the 40 percent of Carmadello’s time as both a special education administrator and expert consultant, as well as hourly billing of direct services provided by CFSD staff. The former is billed at a rate of $6,650 per month, not to exceed $80,000 per year. The latter allows for three to five CFSD staff to provide services outside of contractual hours at the rate of $100 per hour for up to 100 hours per year. The pricing was set by CFSD and based on the community standard. The fact that BVP is an independent LEA means that all IDEA and state funds come directly to the CMO and it can then determine how to allocate them to serve students. Both the management contract with CFSD and some of the direct services are paid for using BVP’s state operating funds; other services are Medicaid reimbursable and processed by BVP and a third-party biller.63

Chiappetta noted that, as the collaboration continues to evolve, BVP will work with CFSD to “brighten the line between direct services and management [and] consulting services.” He said that, for the collaboration to be valuable to the district, it must be a “profit center for CFSD” and a way for the district to maximize the time and talent of their staff, while BVP benefits from the knowledge and expertise of that staff. The extended school day and year at BVP make the partnership financially viable for both systems, allowing CFSD staff to work as consultants in addition to their salaried roles at the district and providing BVP access to special education talent in the region without having to compete with the district. LoPiccolo stressed the importance of this benefit, noting that the BVP special education team has “varied levels of experience and the mentoring they get from Edda [Carmadello] is really building their capacity.”

Managing Challenges to Successful Collaboration

Focus on serving needs of kids

When the charters in Denver pushed back against the district’s original timeline for siting center programs, DPS’ Drake shared that there was a feeling among some within the district that the charter schools just didn’t want to have to serve the kids. Being able to come to a common table and listen authentically to why the charters pushed back was essential to the final outcome of a planning year prior to siting center programs in district or charter schools. Drake acknowledged that, while the district has deep expertise in special education, charter schools’ strong planning expertise led to the longer planning horizon for all schools, enabling both of these entities to better prepare to serve students. STRIVE Prep’s Coats shared that the task forces have worked because “everyone is coming to the table to figure this out.”

Establish clear processes and responsibilities

While the collaboration options in Los Angeles have led nearly all of LAUSD’s authorized charter schools to remain or rejoin the LAUSD SELPA, the process of collaboration has not been without challenges. Plate recalled challenges in developing the options solution. Initial discussions included a large group of charter leaders with a variety of interests. Narrowing down the number of voices in the room to make decisions was seen as important to the process, as was strong leadership from within the district. CCSA’s Plate credited then-Superintendent Ramon Cortines in her interview with efforts to move the COP proposal forward to board approval. LAUSD’s Quon added praise in her interview for Sharyn Howell, the former executive director of LAUSD’s division of special education, with making a crucial decision to getting buy-in from charters—to not discuss the cost of each option upfront, instead focusing on the levels of support that would be provided with each option.

While any collaboration can expect challenges, BVP’s LoPiccolo shared that most of the difficulties experienced in Rhode Island have been overcome. There were early hurdles such as confusion about whom staff could call for support and about all of the new faces in the BVP buildings. BVP and CFSD also needed to address a number of logistical challenges such as where to house people and whether BVP staff or CFSD staff would hold on to students’ special education files. CFSD’s Carmadello said that she feels good about how all of the early challenges were able to be addressed but would like to “get over the hurdle” of having her service providers work with BVP only after the CFSD school day.

Know your audience

Voluntary participation can provide a solid foundation for collaboration. Somewhat paradoxically, offering LAUSD charter schools options to rely on the district or to act as an LEA for special education purposes led to many charter schools seeking autonomy and then approaching the district as a valued, expert partner. The charter schools felt strongly about maintaining autonomy but were very comfortable with learning from and sharing with other schools. In offering a range of options that reflected their desire for autonomy and capacity for innovation, the LAUSD SELPA convinced nearly all of their authorized schools to become members and to innovate and build their capacity.

Build effective relationships

In Denver, DPS’ Drake was proud of the dramatically improved relationship between the special education department and the charter sector and credits the individual relationships between the liaisons and the charter school staff. “There a number of arrows pointing in the right direction in Denver to help us get going in the right direction,” Drake noted. Publicizing what is possible could therefore help other districts as they make efforts to evaluate how they support charters to serve all kids. Coats from STRIVE Prep echoed Drake’s comments on the progress thus far but was also eager to see how the partnership could be expanded. “Our collaboration can get better,” she said. “We can get far more accomplished when charters and districts work together.” That said, Coats expressed concern that there is also a need to be open to new ideas. For instance, Coats reflected that separate center-based special education programs are “a 40-year-old concept. Can we move away from this and think about how we fund kids, not programs?” She was eager to work closely with the district to “navigate the waters ahead” and do things differently.

Emerging collaborative efforts focused on special education: The Boston Compact

In the fall of 2011, the superintendent of the Boston Public Schools, the chair of the Boston School Committee, leaders from the Boston Alliance of Charter Schools, and the mayor of Boston signed the Boston Compact, a document that outlined plans for the traditional and public charter school sectors to collaboratively address issues that affected the quality of education available to all of the city’s children. This compact had grown out of local conversations between education leaders and national interest from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation in cultivating cross-system collaboration. By the spring of 2012, the Archdiocese of Boston also joined the effort and signed on to the compact’s four main goals:

  1. A common enrollment calendar for all schools
  2. Cross-sector professional development strategies
  3. Common accountability metrics
  4. Better use of vacant city-owned school facilities

The compact work attracted more than $4 million dollars in financial support from the Gates Foundation and local philanthropies. This funding helped support both the issue-focused work and the operations of such a complex collaboration. A cross-sector steering committee with tri-chairs governs the compact, now entering its fifth year, and two full-time staff coordinate and facilitate meetings and provide administrative and communications support for the work.

While special education was not one of the original elements of the compact work, it emerged as one of six key initiatives outlined by the steering committee as part of a Gates Foundation grant proposal. Framed as an initiative to support practitioners in their work with students with disabilities, the compact committed to review legal and regulatory obligations of traditional and public charter schools; develop a system for securely sharing student records between schools across sectors; and analyze student data to identify and share exemplary practices for serving students.

In a recent report on the compact, School & Main Institute identified the overall return on investment of the Students with Disabilities, or SWD, Initiative as “moderate, with potential for greater impact in the future.” 64 This moderate impact is largely the result of two practical benefits of the initiative. The first benefit is student data sharing. The trust-building work of the compact led to five of the sixteen compact charter schools signing nondisclosure agreements with BPS and sharing all student-level data. While fairly straightforward, this was a big step forward in a city with significant student mobility and difficulties with student records transfer. A second benefit of the initiative grew out of the data sharing. Analysis of the student data identified classrooms within schools in both the traditional and charter sectors where “students with high levels of need were thriving in inclusive settings.” Teachers from all compact schools have been invited to observe in four schools where these best practice classrooms are located.

While the compact is moving forward with a revised structure that no longer calls out the SWD Initiative specifically, the collaborative efforts on special education are expected to continue as part of the compact’s teaching and learning subcommittee. It is worth watching the forthcoming work of the Boston Compact to see what additional collaboration around serving students with disabilities may emerge.

Discussion and policy recommendations

Providing consistently high-quality supports and services to students with a diverse range of disabilities requires pedagogical, technical, and administrative expertise. Over the course of the charter sector’s 25 years, enrolling and effectively educating students with disabilities has consistently been identified as a challenge. District and charter collaboration has the potential to benefit students with disabilities in both sectors as charter schools can leverage district expertise and districts can leverage charter autonomy to explore new and potentially innovative practices. However, tension between the two sectors significantly limits the extent to which they have optimized opportunities to collaborate. In particular, lack of trust, unclear expectations, and inadequate planning can undermine efforts to effectively collaborate.65 The successful collaborative efforts highlighted in this report demonstrate where districts and charter schools can collaborate specifically for the purpose of improving the quality of services provided to students with disabilities in both sectors. Of note, private philanthropy and practical fiscal realities played a key role in catalyzing collaboration in all three examples. Furthermore, the collaborative efforts relied heavily on interpersonal relationships that are difficult if not impossible to create or sustain via policy mandates. While requiring collaboration could backfire, there are policy actions at multiple levels that could encourage more districts and charters to pursue these collaborations.

Based on a review of the literature regarding district-charter collaboration and the examples described above, the Center for American Progress and the NCSECS developed a set of recommendations that can facilitate positive collaboration that will benefits students. Maintaining a wall between the two sectors is neither prudent nor cost-effective.

Federal opportunities to encourage collaboration

  • Provide incentives in the Charter School Program to encourage districts and charter schools to collaborate explicitly for the purpose of improving services for students with disabilities. For example, the Department of Education could give competitive preference points in the state charter school grant competition to states where state education agencies and authorizers are encouraging meaningful collaborations between traditional districts and charter schools.
  • Research and develop technical assistance to aid in the establishment of successful collaboration initiatives. The National Center on Special Education Research within the Institute of Education Sciences should fund research on effective models of collaboration.

State opportunities to encourage collaboration

  • Ensure charter schools are able to access and leverage expertise clustered in existing education services centers and agencies—such as boards of cooperative educational services, collaboratives, or intermediate school districts—to build their capacity and to facilitate development of collegial relationships between districts and charter schools. For instance, in some states there is notable variance in the extent to which the intermediate entities support charter schools and state agencies can collect data and issue guidance to ensure these entities are supporting all public schools.
  • Offer technical assistance to education service centers and agencies, districts, and charters to highlight how collaboration initiatives can be established with clear roles and responsibilities to benefit students with disabilities. NCSECS published a brief in 2015 describing how the Kent Intermediate School District in Michigan proactively supports both traditional and charter public schools and fosters development of collegial relationships across the two sectors.
  • Provide incentives, such as financial support, to encourage districts and charter schools to collaborate explicitly for the purpose of improving services for students with disabilities. These incentives could be part of a subgrant process to distribute federal charter school funding or to support efforts similar to those profiled in this report.
  • Develop and implement mechanisms—for example, authorizer performance metrics—to hold charter schools accountable for provision of special education, thereby creating tangible external pressures to catalyze charter schools’ commitment to collaborative opportunities.

Charter school authorizer actions to encourage collaboration

  • Develop guidance and provide support to facilitate district-charter collaboration for the purpose of developing charter school special education capacity. This is especially important for existing district authorizers to adopt. For instance, the National Association of Charter School Authorizers can encourage authorizers that participate in their leadership training and authorizer development work to explore opportunities to collaborate.
  • Privilege charter applications that propose substantive collaborative initiatives between district and charter special education personnel. As part of their effort to ensure that all students have equal access to charter schools equipped to offer high-quality special education services, authorizers can encourage applicants to pursue innovative collaborative relationships by identifying such arrangements as evidence of capacity.
  • Target resources to support collaborative partnerships between charter schools and districts that develop innovative special education programs to disseminate emerging best practices. Authorizers can pursue grants from federal competitions such as the Department of Education’s Charter School Program or new Education Innovation and Research Program to document and disseminate information about effective collaborations.
  • Secure external resources, including state or foundation grants, to support collaboration for the purpose of improving services for students with disabilities. Local, regional, and national foundations committed to improving outcomes for students with disabilities or expanding school choice for all students have invested in developing collaborative efforts.

District and charter school actions to facilitate district-charter collaboration

  • Identify and articulate mutual interests and tangible benefits to ensure collaborative partners understand the explicit potential value of collaborating. Regional “harbor masters,” such as the Donnell-Kay Foundation in Denver and The MindTrust in Indianapolis, support multifaceted transformation efforts across districts and charter schools. These types of organizations are positioned to facilitate district-charter collaboration through identification of shared goals and provision of targeted resources.66
  • Leverage both district and charter school leadership bully pulpit to foster buy-in to collaboration by faculty and staff. For instance, district efforts to improve the school leadership pipeline through introduction of training initiatives such as Leading Educators in Kansas City, Missouri, and Washington, D.C., that enroll both district and charter school leaders in cohorts create opportunities for school leaders to identify mutual interests and then use their position to foster collaboration.67
  • Offer open and inclusive professional development and technical assistance opportunities that enable district and charter school personnel to interact as professionals. Partnerships facilitated through nonprofits supporting special education in charter schools, such as the collaboratives in New York City and Washington, D.C., are positioned to host such collegial opportunities.68

Conclusion

Collaboration between traditional school districts and charter schools offers the potential to improve the effectiveness of special education and related services for students with disabilities. The examples in this report highlight how collaboration helped to better serve students with disabilities in charter schools; how these efforts improved access to innovative schools for students with disabilities; and how collaboration created opportunities for cost-effective solutions for both districts and charters. With a focus on building strong relationships and establishing clear processes and responsibilities, policymakers and education leaders across the country have an opportunity to encourage this type of collaboration in their communities.

Methodology

The authors sought to identify examples of district and charter collaborations that focused on improving services provided to students with disabilities receiving special education and related services. While approximately half of the charter schools in the nation operate as part of a local district as stipulated in state charter law, we were interested in identifying collaborative partnerships that went beyond simply required negotiations between authorizers and school operators.69 Rather, we sought examples rich with information that would highlight innovative or proactive approaches to leveraging district expertise to build the capacity of charter schools to serve students with disabilities. District-charter collaborations in Denver; Los Angeles; and in Central Falls, Rhode Island, serve as examples that other districts can learn from. While each example is shaped by its unique local context and, therefore, is arguably not generalizable to all schools, the descriptions are nonetheless instructive as they illustrate what is possible if districts and charter schools are willing to collaborate for the benefit of students. In each city, we reviewed relevant documents and interviewed at least two stakeholders to understand the following questions:

  • What factors catalyzed the development of the collaboration?
  • What district policies, structures, or practices can help charter schools improve their special education and related services?
  • What actions can state policymakers and authorizers take to further promote development of collaborative relationships between districts and charter schools that will benefit students with disabilities?

All interviews were conducted by phone and additional questions and clarifications were handled via email communication or follow-up phone conversations.

About the authors

Lauren Morando Rhim is a researcher, consultant, and advocate for children. She has spent the past 25 years striving to identify strategies to create and sustain high-quality public schools for all students. She co-founded and serves as executive director of the National Center for Special Education in Charter Schools where she leads efforts to conduct critical research, facilitate collaboration between special education and charter school advocates, inform policy, and provide targeted technical assistance. Rhim has a bachelor’s degree from the University of Vermont in psychology, a doctoral degree in education policy from the University of Maryland, and has published extensively about school reform—specifically, issues related to equity in the charter sector. She has consulted extensively with federal, state, and local policy leaders, as well as practitioners.

Jessica Sutter is president of EdPro Consulting, LLC, a small, woman-owned business in Washington, D.C. Jessica founded EdPro in 2013 and has worked with a variety of clients both in the District and nationally. She has managed projects for the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, New Schools Venture Fund, and the DC Public Charter School Board, as well as conducted research for the National Center for Special Education in Charter Schools, the Center for Reinventing Public Education, and Whiteboard Advisors. Jessica previously served as a program officer at the Office of the State Superintendent of Education and senior policy advisor to the deputy mayor for education in the district. She began her career as a middle school teacher. Jessica holds a bachelor’s degree in political science from Loyola College in Maryland and a master’s degree in education policy studies from the University of Maryland, where she is currently a doctoral candidate.

Neil Campbell is the Director of Innovation for the K-12 Education Policy team at American Progress. In this role, he focuses on issues such as personalized learning, charter schools, and the effective use of student data. Prior to joining American Progress, Campbell was the director, next generation at the Foundation for Excellence in Education, where he oversaw policy work related to personalized learning, course access, education funding, and student data privacy. He also worked at the U.S. Department of Education—first as a special assistant and later as chief of staff in the Office of Planning, Evaluation and Policy Development—was the director of strategic initiatives at Education Elements, and was a consultant with The Boston Consulting Group.

Acknowledgements

The Center for American Progress is grateful for the opportunity to collaborate with the National Center for Special Education in Charter Schools on this paper. The NCSECS is dedicated to ensuring that students with disabilities have equal access to charter schools and that public charter schools are designed and operated to enable all students to succeed.

Endnotes

  1. Ember Reichgott Junge, “Charter school path paved with choice, compromise, common sense,” The Phi Delta Kappan 95 (5) (2014): 13–17.
  2. Sean Gill, Sarah Yatsko, and Robin Lake, “Herding Cats: Managing Diverse Charter School Interests in Collaboration Efforts” (Seattle: Center on Reinventing Public Education, 2016), available at http://www.crpe.org/publications/herding-cats-managing-diverse-charter-school-interests-collaboration-efforts.
  3. Gill, Yatsko, and Lake, “Herding Cats,” p. 4; Center on Reinventing Public Education, “District-Charter Collaboration,” available at http://www.crpe.org/research/district-charter-collaboration (last accessed September 2016).
  4. School & Main Institute, “City-Wide Collaboration between District, Charter, and Catholic Schools: The Boston Compact Start Up Years 2010-2014” (2016), available at http://www.masscharterschools.org/sites/default/files/docs/resources/mcpsa.case_study.boston_compact.june_2016_web.pdf.
  5. Alex Medler, “What States Can Do to Promote District-Charter Collaboration” (Seattle: Center on Reinventing Public Education, 2016), available at http://www.crpe.org/publications/what-states-can-do-promote-district-charter-collaboration.
  6. National Center for Education Statistics, “Children and Youth with Disabilities” (2016), available at http://nces.ed.gov/programs/coe/indicator_cgg.asp.
  7. Ibid.
  8. National Center for Education Statistics, “Common Core of Data,” Table 1, available at http://nces.ed.gov/ccd/tables/ACGR_RE_and_characteristics_2013-14.asp (last accessed September 2016); National Center for Special Education Research, The Post-High School Outcomes of Young Adults With Disabilities up to 6 Years After High School: Key Findings From the National Longitudinal Transition Study-2 (NLTS2) (U. S Department of Education, 2011), available at https://ies.ed.gov/ncser/pubs/20113004/pdf/20113004.pdf; Council for Exceptional Children, “NAEP Results Show Wide Achievement Gaps Between Students With, Without Disabilities” (2013), available at http://www.policyinsider.org/2013/11/naep-results-show-wide-achievement-gaps-between-students-with-without-disabilities.html.
  9. 2016 Determination Letters on State Implementation of IDEA (U.S. Department of Education, 2016), available at http://www2.ed.gov/fund/data/report/idea/ideafactsheet-determinations-2016.pdf.
  10. Lynn Holdheide and Jenny Demonte, “Critical Shortages in Special Education Teachers. Sound Familiar?”, InformED Blog, February 17, 2016, available at http://educationpolicy.air.org/blog/critical-shortages-special-education-teachers-sound-familiar.
  11. Massachusetts Organization of Educational Collaboratives, “About Collaboratives?”, available at http://moecnet.org/home/about-collaboratives (last accessed July 2016).
  12. Colorado BOCES Association, “Who Are We?”, available at http://www.coloradoboces.org (last accessed September 2016).
  13. Michigan Department of Education, “Michigan Department of Education Guidance for the Intermediate School District Annual Website Report” (2016), available at http://www.michigan.gov/documents/mde/ISD_Annual_Website_Report_June_2006_175814_7.pdf (last accessed September 2016).
  14. Mitchell L. Yell, David Rogers, and Elisabeth Lodge Rogers, “The Legal History of Special Education: What a Long, Strange Trip It’s Been!”, Remedial and Special Education 19 (4) (1998): 219–228.
  15. That is, specific learning disabilities, speech or language impairments, mental retardation, emotional disturbance, other health impairments, multiple disabilities, hearing impairments, orthopedic impairments, visual impairments, autism, deafblindness, traumatic brain injury, and developmental delay. Students are also more loosely categorized as having a high-incidence disability—a common type of disability such as specific learning or a speech and language disability—or a low-incidence disability—such as an uncommon disability such as traumatic brain injury, autism, or orthopedic impairment. See the National Center for Education Statistics, “Fast Facts: Students with Disabilities” (2016), available at http://nces.ed.gov/fastfacts/display.asp?id=64.
  16. The constructs of free and appropriate education mean that each child with a disability is to be provided services and programs identified by their IEP team to meet their individual needs. Furthermore, these are to be provided by the public education system, at no cost to the student’s family. The standard of what is appropriate education has been the subject of litigation. To date, Congress and the courts have defined FAPE as a continuum of services and supports necessary to provide a student with a disability access to the general education curriculum. The courts have not allowed LEAs to use cost to define what is appropriate. The principle of LRE dictates that children with disabilities should—to the extent that it is possible and meets students’ educational needs—be educated in the general education classroom alongside their peers without disabilities and provided with appropriate aids and supports, in order to maximize their access to the general education curriculum. LRE builds on the civil rights principle that separate is by definition not equal. See Lauren Morando Rhim and Paul O’Neill, “Improving Access and Creating Exceptional Opportunities for Students with Disabilities in Public Charter Schools” (Washington: National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, 2013), available at http://www.publiccharters.org/publications/improving-access-creating-exceptional-opportunities-students-disabilities-public-charter-schools/.
  17. Matthew Di Carlo, “Do Charter Schools Serve Fewer Special Education Students?”, Albert Shanker Institute Blog, June 21, 2012, available at http://www.shankerinstitute.org/blog/do-charter-schools-serve-fewer-special-education-students.
  18. 38th Annual Report to Congress on the Implementation of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, 2016 (U.S Department of Education, 2016), available at http://www2.ed.gov/about/reports/annual/osep/2016/parts-b-c/index.html.
  19. Eileen M. Ahearn and others, “Project SEARCH Final Report: Special Education as Requirements in Charter Schools” (Alexandria, VA: National Association of State Directors of Special Education, 2001), available at http://www.nasdse.org/Portals/0/Documents/ProjectSearch.pdf.
  20. Robin Lake, ed., “Unique Schools Serving Unique Students: Charter Schools and Children with Special Needs” (Seattle: Center for Reinventing Public Education, 2010); Rhim and O’Neill, “Improving Access and Creating Exceptional Opportunities for Students with Disabilities in Public Charter Schools.”
  21. Government Accountability Office, “Charter Schools: Additional Federal Attention Needed to Help Protect Access for Students with Disabilities,” GAO-12-543, Report to Congressional Requesters, June 2012, available at http://www.gao.gov/assets/600/591435.pdf.
  22. Lauren Morando Rhim and others, “Getting Lost While Trying to Follow the Money: Special Education Finance in Charter Schools” (New York: National Center for Special Education in Charter Schools; Washington: National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, 2015), available at http://www.publiccharters.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/sped_finance_web.pdf.
  23. Karega Rausch, “One Set of Data/Four Unique Perspectives on Authorizing and Special Education,” National Association of Charter School Authorizers, April 20, 2016, available at http://www.qualitycharters.org/?s=special+education.
  24. Lauren Morando Rhim and Dana Brinson, “Retrofitting Bureaucracy: Factors Influencing Charter Schools’ Access to Federal Entitlement Programs” (Lincoln, Illinois: Center on Innovation and Improvement, 2010), available at http://www.adi.org/about/downloads/Retrofitting_Bureaucracy.pdf.
  25. 38th Annual Report to Congress on the Implementation of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, 2016.
  26. U.S. Department of Education, “U.S. Education Department Reaches Agreement with Texas’ Harmony Public Schools to Ensure Equal Access for English Language Learner Students and Students with Disabilities,” Press release, November 26, 2014, available at http://www.ed.gov/news/press-releases/us-education-department-reaches-agreement-texas-harmony-public-schools-ensure-equal-access-english-language-learner-students-and-students-disabilities.
  27. Office for Civil Rights, Re: OCR Docket No. 06-11-5004 (U.S. Department of Education, 2014), at http://www2.ed.gov/documents/press-releases/harmony-public-schools-letter.pdf.
  28. Office for Civil Rights, Re: OCR Complaint No. 11-14-1249 Resolution Letter (U.S. Department of Education, 2014), available at http://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ocr/docs/investigations/more/11141249-a.pdf.
  29. Office for Civil Rights, Re: OCR #05-11-5001 (U.S. Department of Education, 2015), available at http://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ocr/docs/investigations/05115001-a.pdf.
  30. Office for Civil Rights, Complainants Against Success Academy Charter Schools, Inc. (U.S. Department of Education),” available at http://rishawnbiddle.org/outsidereports/ocr_complaint_against_success_academy.pdf (last accessed September 2016).
  31. Government Accountability Office, “Charter Schools: Additional Federal Attention Needed to Help Protect Access for Students with Disabilities.”
  32. Ibid.
  33. Lauren Morando Rhim, Jesse Gumz, and Kelly Henderson, “Executive Summary: Key Trends in Special Education in Charter Schools: Secondary Analysis of the Civil Rights Data Collection 2011-2012” (New York: National Center for Special Education in Charter Schools, 2015), available at http://bit.ly/2gCd6nj.
  34. National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, “A Closer Look at the Charter School Movement” (2016), available at http://www.publiccharters.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/New-Closed-2016.pdf.
  35. David Arsen and Lisa Ray, ”When Do Charter Schools Enroll Students with Disabilities?”, Journal of Special Education Leadership 17 (2) (2004): 71–81; Mary Bailey Estes, “Choice for All? Charter Schools and Students with Special Needs,” The Journal of Special Education 37 (4) (2004): 257–267; Kenneth R. Howe and Kevin G. Welner, “School Choice and the Pressure to Perform: Déjà Vu for Children with Disabilities?” Journal of Remedial and Special Education 23 (4) (2002): 212–221; William H. Blackwell, “An Era of Charter School Expansion: An Examination of Special Education in Massachusetts’ Charter Schools,” Journal of Disability Policy Studies 24 (2) (2012): 75–87.
  36. Lake, ed., Unique Schools Serving Unique Students: Charter Schools and Children with Special Needs;

    Elizabeth Setren, “Special Education and English Language Learner Students in Boston Charter Schools: Impact and Classification” (Cambridge, MA: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2015), available at https://seii.mit.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/SEII-Discussion-Paper-2015.05-Setren1.pdf.

  37. Colleen Eskow and Lauren Morando Rhim, “Special Education in the Turnaround Context: UP Education Network in Massachusetts” (Center on School Turnaround at WestEd, 2016), available at http://centeronschoolturnaround.org/up_education_network_ma/.
  38. Daniel J. Losen and others, “Charter Schools, Civil Rights and School Discipline: A Comprehensive Review” (Los Angeles: The Civil Rights Project, 2016), available at https://www.civilrightsproject.ucla.edu/resources/projects/center-for-civil-rights-remedies/school-to-prison-folder/federal-reports/charter-schools-civil-rights-and-school-discipline-a-comprehensive-review/losen-et-al-charter-school-discipline-review-2016.pdf; Council of Parent Attorneys and Advocates, Inc., “Charter Schools,” available at http://c.ymcdn.com/sites/www.copaa.org/resource/resmgr/Docs/Charter_Schools_final.pdf (last accessed December 2016).
  39. Kathleen Boundy, “Charter Schools and Students with Disabilities: Preliminary Analysis of Legal Issues and Areas of Concern” (Towson, MD: Council of Parent Attorneys and Advocates, Inc., 2012), available at http://c.ymcdn.com/sites/www.copaa.org/resource/collection/7D72B914-2EC7-4664-9124-A32598DA1ABE/Charter-Schools-and-Students-with-DisabilitiesFINAL.pdf.
  40. Lauren Morando Rhim and Margaret McLaughlin, “Students with disabilities in charter schools: What we now know,” Focus on Exceptional Children 39 (5) (2007): 1–12; Rhim and O’Neill, “Improving Access and Creating Exceptional Opportunities for Students with Disabilities in Public Charter Schools.”
  41. See, for example, Lake, ed., “Unique Schools Serving Unique Students: Charter Schools and Children with Special Needs”; Setren, “Special Education and English Language Learner Students in Boston Charter Schools”; Marcus A. Winters, “Why the Gap? Special Education and New York City Charter Schools” (Seattle: Center on Reinventing Public Education, September 2013), available at http://www.crpe.org/publications/why-gap-special-education-and-new-york-city-charter-schools.
  42. Jaclyn Zubrzycki, “DPS shifting more special education duties to charter schools,” Chalkbeat, April 30, 2015, available at http://www.chalkbeat.org/posts/co/2015/04/30/dps-shifting-more-special-education-duties-to-charter-schools/.
  43. Denver Public Schools, “Choice and Enrollment: Pre-Enrollment,” available at http://schoolchoice.dpsk12.org/pre-enrollment/ (last accessed September 2016).
  44. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation sought to foster district and charter school collaboration through investments in “collaboration compacts.” The initial round of funded compact communities were Boston; Denver; Hartford, CT; New Orleans; New York; Philadelphia; and Spring Branch, TX. The communities are part of a group of 16 cities which signed district-charter collaboration compacts—designed to foster collaboration between public charter and district public schools. See Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, “Gates Foundation Invests Nearly $25 million in Seven Cities Dedicated to Bold Collaboration Between Public Charter and Traditional Schools,” Press release, available at http://www.gatesfoundation.org/Media-Center/Press-Releases/2012/12/Gates-Foundation-Invests-Nearly-25-Million-in-Seven-Cities.
  45. Center on Reinventing Public Education, “District-Charter Collaboration Compact,” available at http://www.crpe.org/sites/default/files/Denver_Compact_Dec10_0.pdf (last accessed December 2016).
  46. Zubrzycki, “DPS shifting more special education duties to charter schools.”
  47. California Charter Schools Association, “Frequently Asked Questions,” available at http://www.ccsa.org/understanding/faqs/ (last accessed September 2016).
  48. California Charter Schools Association, “Regionalization of SELPA Models to Better Serve Students With Special Needs In Charter Schools: Recommendations to the Advisory Commission on Special Education (‘ACSE’) and the California State Board of Education (‘SBE’)” (2009), available at http://www.ccsa.org/2010/06/66v6ZTC/FSqMuD3/nA8v3cp/MoftBY/10-5_selpamembershipoptions.pdf.
  49. California Charter School Association, “Charter Operated Program: Option 3 Progress Report” (2014), available at http://www.ccsa.org/Charter-Operated-Program-Option-3-2012-13-June2014.pdf.
  50. Personal communication from Kim Dammann, managing director of special education, KIPP LA, July 1, 2016. The charter schools that comprise KIPP LA are affiliates of the national charter management organization Knowledge is Power Program.
  51. Personal communication from Sydney Quon, director of charter operated programs, Los Angeles Unified School District, June 23, 2016.
  52. Ibid. Charter school organizations, such as KIPP LA, have multiple schools within LAUSD but send only one representative to the executive council.
  53. KIPP, “History,” available at http://www.kipp.org/about/history/ (last accessed December 2016).
  54. Letter from the Office of the Independent Monitor to Michelle King and the Los Angeles Board of Education, July 11, 2016, available at http://oimla.com/pdf/20160711/AnnualReport20142015_Part2_Final.pdf.
  55. Mayoral academies are established by the mayor of any city or town and are the only kind of charter schools in the state that may elect to opt out of requirements around collective bargaining, participation in the teacher retirement system, and teacher tenure. These schools enroll students from urban and  nonurban communities; require the approval of each city or town in an academy’s enrolling communities; and have boards chaired by a mayor. See Rhode Island Department of Education, “Rhode Island Charter Public Schools: Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)” available at http://www.ride.ri.gov/Portals/0/Uploads/Documents/Students-and-Families-Great-Schools/Charter-Schools/FAQs.pdf.
  56. Rhode Island Department of Education, “Rhode Island’s Charter Schools,” available at http://www.ride.ri.gov/StudentsFamilies/RIPublicSchools/CharterSchools.aspx#1977597-about-charter-schools (last accessed September 2016).
  57. InfoWorks!, “Central Falls District,” available at http://infoworks.ride.ri.gov/district/central-falls (last accessed September 2016).
  58. Central Falls School District, “District/Charter Collaboration Compact,” available at http://www.cfschools.net/uploads/1/8/1/6/18163163/cf-dcc-8-29-11_signed.pdf (last accessed September 2016).
  59. Personal communication from Jennifer LoPiccolo, director of external affairs, Blackstone Valley Prep, July 7, 2016. The Rhode Island Mayoral Academies is a nonprofit organization founded to assist mayors with the establishment of charter schools that satisfy the definition of a mayoral academy under state law and to support those schools once they open. Mayoral academies were added to state law as an allowable charter type in 2008. Blackstone Valley Prep was the first mayoral academy to open in the state in August 2009.
  60. Blackstone Valley Prep Mayoral Academy, “2015-2016 Annual Report” (2016), available at https://blackstonevalleyprep.org/2015%C2%AD-2016-annual-report/.
  61. Central Falls School District, “Memorandum of Understanding for Special Educations Support Between the Central Falls School District and Blackstone Valley Prep Mayoral Academy” (2015), available at http://www.ride.ri.gov/Portals/0/Uploads/Documents/Funding-and-Finance-Wise-Investments/Funding-Sources/State-Education-Aid-Funding-Formula/FundingFormulaWorkingGroup/EddaCarmadello-01.pdf.
  62. Ibid.
  63. Ibid.
  64. School & Main Institute, “City-Wide Collaboration between District, Charter, and Catholic Schools.”
  65. Gill, Yatsko, and Lake, “Herding Cats.”
  66. Education Cities is a nonprofit membership organization of harbor master nonprofits in 24 cities across the country. For more information, see Education Cities, http://www.educationcities.org/ (last accessed December 2016).
  67. For more information, see Leading Educators, http://www.leadingeducators.org/ (last accessed December 2016).
  68. For more information, see the DC Special Education Cooperative, http://specialedcoop.org/coop/ (last accessed December 2016); NYC Special Education Collaborative, http://specialednyc.org/ (last accessed December 2016).
  69. Rhim and others, “Getting Lost While Trying to Follow the Money”; Lauren Morando Rhim and others, “Project Intersect research report #7: Survey of Charter School Operators” (College Park, MD: University of Maryland, 2007).

The positions of American Progress, and our policy experts, are independent, and the findings and conclusions presented are those of American Progress alone. A full list of supporters is available here. American Progress would like to acknowledge the many generous supporters who make our work possible.

Authors

Lauren Morando Rhim

Jessica Sutter

Neil Campbell

Director, Innovation

Just released!

Interactive: Mapping access to abortion by congressional district

Click here