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posted by cmn32480 on Monday September 07 2015, @06:17AM   Printer-friendly
from the public-money-for-private-profit dept.

Common Dreams reports

The Seattle Times reports that

The ruling--believed to be one of the first of its kind in the country--overturns the law [I-1240] voters narrowly approved in 2012 allowing publicly funded, but privately operated, schools.

Teacher and author Mercedes Schneider offers more on the Act:

As is true of charter schools nationwide, the charters in Washington State (up to the current ruling) were eligible for public funding diverted from traditional public schools. Charter schools were approved via a November 2012 ballot initiative (I-1240, the Charter Schools Act) in which charters were declared to be "common schools" despite their not being subject to local control and local accountability. And also like America's charters in general, Washington's charters are not under the authority of elected school boards.

Thus, Washington voters had approved to give public money to private entities--a one-way street that provided no means for such funds to overseen by the public.

[...] The new ruling (pdf)[1] states that charters, "devoid of local control from their inception to their daily operation", cannot be classified as "common schools," nor have "access to restricted common school funding."

[...] "The Supreme Court has affirmed what we've said all along--charter schools steal money from our existing classrooms, and voters have no say in how these charter schools spend taxpayer funding," said Kim Mead, president of the [Washington Education Association], in a statement.

"Instead of diverting taxpayer dollars to unaccountable charter schools, it's time for the Legislature to fully fund K-12 public schools so that all of Washington's children get the quality education the Constitution guarantees them," Mead continued.

The Associated Press reports that the state had one charter school last year, and eight more have opened in the past few weeks.

I pity Ms. Schneider's students if she routinely starts sentences with conjunctions--especially consecutive, redundant conjunctions.

[1] I had trouble with the connection.


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  • (Score: 2) by eof on Monday September 07 2015, @03:39PM

    by eof (5559) on Monday September 07 2015, @03:39PM (#233305)

    I haven't given much thought to charter schools, but here are some wise words on coordinating conjunctions (coordinators): [chronicle.com]

    [...]Nothing has ever banned coordinators from independent clauses. Yes, there are rules; for example, coordinators are prefixed in English, rather than suffixed as in Japanese. An independent clause like And I agreed complies with that rule (the and is at the beginning where it should be), and with every other genuine syntactic rule of English. The sentence is just as grammatical as I agreed.

    When should a sentence begin with a particular coordinator? When it gives you the shade of meaning you need.

    We open a sentence with and when it is a tightly linked immediate follow-up to the previous one: “I told him. And as I walked on I was lonely no longer” (Fitzgerald, Gatsby, Chapter 1).

    We use or to introduce a sentence that presents an afterthought expressing a temporarily overlooked alternative: “It was Gatsby’s mansion. Or rather, as I didn’t know Mr. Gatsby it was a mansion inhabited by a gentleman of that name” (ibid.).

    Initial but signals that the content of the sentence might not have been expected given the prior context: “At first I thought it was another party. … But there wasn’t a sound” (ibid., Chapter 5).

    Starting Score:    1  point
    Karma-Bonus Modifier   +1  

    Total Score:   2