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         California Charter School Standards:     more detail
  1. Golden state shines on charters.(Update: education news from schools, businesses, research and government agencies)(California's charter schools): An article from: District Administration by Steven Scarpa, 2003-09-01

61. Center For Education Reform
charter Schools NoDollar New Hampshire, Better Late in california, Ray Budde . standards and Accountability california s Great Divide,
http://edreform.com/index.cfm?fuseAction=section&pSectionID=1&cSectionID=72

62. Home: Charter Oak Unified School District
Serving Glendora and Covina, california. District newsletter, FAQ, contactinformation, information about the individual schools, hiring and salary
http://www.cousd.k12.ca.us/
Charter Oak Unified School District Home Contact Bond Governing Board ...
Superintendent

Norm Kirschenbaum 20240 Cienega Avenue
Covina, CA 91724 Phone Fax Your comments and questions are welcome. Click here for the feedback form.
Frequent Questions and Answers Click Here Divisions
Administrative Services
Human Resources Educational Services Curriculum
Accountability Reports
Parents Guide To Selecting A College Class of 2004
Follow-Up Study
For additional educational resources, click on the Parent Resources link on the Main Menu. Final Budget in Brief Detailed Final Budget First Interim Report: Budget Review by School Services Introduction Report Limited quantities of the report are available on CD at the District Office. Note: Comparative data is provided on page 33 of the report District Audit Report (updated Jan 2005) District Email
Inside District

Outside District
Click here for documentation How are they updated? Welcome About Charter Oak The Charter Oak Unified School District Office is located in Covina. The District serves approximately 7,000 students in the communities of Covina, Glendora and San Dimas. The District has five K-5 elementary schools, one 6-8 intermediate school, one 9-12 comprehensive high school, one continuation high school, as well as K-12 alternative education programs. Our schools have been honored by the state for their fine educational programs including being named California Distinguished Schools, National Blue Ribbon Finalist and a Model School. For additional information (

63. California's Charter Law
As early as 1983, the california legislature mandated higher standards, For an update on charter Schools issues in california, see california and
http://www.ncrel.org/sdrs/pbriefs/93/93-2ca.htm
NCREL's Policy Briefs
Charter Schools:
A New Breed of Public Schools
Report 2, 1993
Pathways
home page Contents Previous section ... Next section
California's Charter Law
As early as 1983, the California legislature mandated higher standards, revamped curriculum frameworks, lengthened the school day and year, established mentor teacher programs, improved textbooks, and set up teacher accountability systems. In recent years, the state also has passed laws to create more school-based management systems and teacher career opportunities and to promote school restructuring. Yet, legislators and educators were dissatisfied with student learning progress resulting from these changes. The charter originally was proposed in 1987-88 by California public school educators frustrated by bureaucracy and eager to have real freedom with accountability. A year after Minnesota enacted its charter law, California passed legislation authorizing up to 100 Charter Schools beginning in 1993. California's charter law seeks to:
  • improve student learning increase learning opportunities for all students, particularly for academically low-achieving students

64. Archived: Research Today - Charter Schools: A State Legislative Update
In addition, california charter schools are not required to adhere to proposition227, but charter schools must adhere to standards of Quality
http://www.ed.gov/pubs/ResearchToday/98-3037.html
A r c h i v e d I n f o r m a t i o n
Charter Schools A report from the National Institute on Student Achievement, Curriculum, and Assessment December 1998
Charter Schools: A State
Legislative Update*
Charter School Legislation. Charter schools are a growing phenomenon in American education. The first charter school law was passed in Minnesota in 1991; the second, by California in 1992. By June 1998, 33 states and the District of Columbia had passed charter school legislation. (See Figures 1 and 2.) Four of these states (Idaho, Missouri, Virginia and Utah) passed charter school laws during the 1997-98 legislative session. Puerto Rico also has charter school legislation. The purpose of this legislative update is to provide information on the four states that enacted charter school laws during the 1998 legislative session, as well as to provide information on legislative changes occurring in other states with charter school legislation. The report updates information in A National Study of Charter Schools (1998), which provides details on charter school legislation passed through the 1997 legislative session.

65. City Schools: Sherman Elementary Petitions To Go Charter
the curriculum for SSTCS will be based on california State standards, The study concluded that california charter schools are doing a “better job of
http://www.laprensa-sandiego.org/archieve/april12-02/sherman.htm
April 12, 2002
Sherman Elementary Shoots for the Stars: Petitions to Go Charter
By Yvette tenBerge
Students from Sherman Elementary.
During the week the national education community will celebrate charter schools (April 29 through May 3), the San Diego Unified School District (SDUSD) board will have the chance to turn the dreams of the majority of the teachers, parents and students at Sherman Elementary School, located at 450 24th Street in Sherman Heights, into reality.
As outlined in the charter petition, the curriculum for SSTCS will be based on California State Standards, a rigorous set of standards to which all California students are now held and on which they are tested annually. Technology and science will be em-phasized,and study field trips and hands-on learning encouraged.
Although a charter gives a school the power to oversee its own operation and frees the school from regulations that other public schools must follow, the level of accountability that these schools face is high. These schools are responsible for achieving the goals originally set out in the charter, and they must improve student performance.
Student Statistics:
Framed black and white photos of the nearly all-white classes of the early 1900s hang on a wall in the entrance hall to Sherman Elementary. Since that time, the demographics and the economics of the community have undergone dramatic changes.

66. CALIFORNIA NETWORK OF EDUCATIONAL CHARTERS CONFERENCE - March 23-26, 2000
california NETWORK OF EDUCATIONAL CHARTERS CONFERENCE March 2326, 2000 411-45 school Fiscal Audit Preparedness 411-46 Creating standards Based
http://www.allstartapes.com/Orders/411.html
Back Orders List Print ... www.canec.org CALIFORNIA NETWORK OF EDUCATIONAL CHARTERS CONFERENCE
March 23-26, 2000
San Francisco, California
Thursday, March 23, 2000

411-01 Opening General Session and Welcome
411-02 Building School Culture
411-03 Charter Schools Respond to Students with Special Needs
411-04 School Laws: How do they Impact Charter Schools
411-05 Charter Schools of the New Millenium
411-06 New Funding Model-Part1: Starting from the Beginning
411-07 Comprehensive School Designs and Charter Schools 411-08 "Charter Schools: Charting a Course to Avoid Rough Seas" 411-09 Temecula Learning Center's Volunteer Participation Program 411-10 Aligning Standards, Curriculum and Assessment 411-11 Legal Issues for Charter School Personnel 411-12 It's About Relationships: Powerful People Connections Make Charter Schools Unique 411-13 California Department of Education Question and Answer Session with CDE Staff 411-14 New Funding Model-Part 2: Direct Funding Implementation: The What, the Why, the HOW!!!! 411-15 Grassroots Advocacy 411-16 Intercept Program by Learning Technics or Physio-Neuro Therapy Friday, March 24, 2000

67. National Charter School Week Time To Celebrate California’s Successful Charter
Innovations for Excellence in Education The california charter school The authors profile the six california charter schools that won CANEC’s 1999
http://www.pacificresearch.org/press/rel/2000/pr00-05-01.html
You are here: Press Room Press Releases Contact: Laura Dykes
415-989-0833 x 113
Release Date: May 1, 2000 Innovations for Excellence in Education: The California Charter School Story by the California Network of Educational Charters (CANEC) and the Pacific Research Institute (PRI). Innovations for Excellence in Education: The California Charter School Story traces the California charter school story from founding legislation to the growing numbers of schools today. "May 1 st th , National Charter School Week, is the perfect time to celebrate California’s 239 charter schools and to highlight the most innovative among them," said Sue Bragato, executive director of CANEC. Natomas Charter School in Sacramento and Charter Community School in Placerville for their abilities to evaluate success and measure the accountability of students, teachers, and staff. San Carlos Charter Learning Center in San Carlos for its ability to make the most of available time, talent, and fiscal resources. School of Unlimited Learning in Fresno for its ability to organize and set up the school for success.

68. RAND | Nonclassroom-Based Charter Schools In California And The Impact Of SB 740
charter schools that provide nonclassroombased (NCB) instruction have represented a in the charter school movement in california over the past decade.
http://www.rand.org/publications/RB/RB9112/
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    Nonclassroom-Based Charter Schools in California and the Impact of SB 740
    Abstract
    California Senate Bill 740 was passed to strengthen the oversight of nonclassroom-based (NCB) schools and implement funding cutbacks for schools that failed to meet spending standards. Since the bill was passed, NCB schools have increased both instructional spending and spending on certificated staff salaries as a proportion of revenues. The fiscal transparency imposed by the SB 740 funding determination process has prompted schools to increase their attention to resource allocation, but the process has placed a significant administrative burden on NCB schools. SB 740 should be reformed to provide a cost-effective process that oversees quality while better reflecting the nature of NCB instruction.

    69. RAND | News Release | RAND Study Finds Reform Of California Nonclassroom-Based C
    RAND Study Finds Reform of california NonclassroomBased charter Schools Has charter schools that do not meet the standards face losing some or all of
    http://www.rand.org/news/press.05/02.14.html
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    oec@rand.org David Egner
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    News Release
    FOR RELEASE
    Monday February 14, 2005 RAND STUDY FINDS REFORM OF CALIFORNIA NONCLASSROOM-BASED CHARTER SCHOOLS HAS IMPROVED FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT Reform legislation signed into law in 2001 to improve state government oversight of the financial affairs of nonclassroom-based charter schools in California has reduced possible misuse of funds by the schools, according to a RAND Corporation study issued today.

    70. California Charter Schools Conference 2005
    Our grade specific curriculum supports california State standards and is easy tointegrate into Joining with the california charter Schools Association,
    http://www.charterconference.org/ex_wdes.php

    71. Glossary Of Terms
    In 200304 california had more than 400 charter schools serving about 155000 california standards Tests (CSTs) based on california academic content
    http://www.ed-data.k12.ca.us/Glossary.asp
    Glossary of Terms A B C D ... Z
    Academic Performance Index (API)
    A statewide ranking of schools according to test scores. Most schools have an API, a state ranking (by elementary, middle, or high school), a ranking in comparison to 100 similar schools, and growth targets for the following year.
    Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP)
    A goal of the 2001 federal law No Child Left Behind (NCLB) that requires schools and districts to measure and report students’ annual progress toward proficiency in English/language arts and mathematics by 2013-14. Progress is based on whether the school or district met its Annual Measurable Objectives and demonstrated 95% participation on standardized tests, achieved its target on the Academic Performance Index and, for high schools, met target graduation rates.
    Alternative Schools Accountability Model (ASAM)
    An alternative way of measuring student performance in schools with mostly high-risk students, such as continuation schools, and schools with fewer than 11 valid test scores.
    Annual Measurable Objective (AMO)
    The annual target for the percentage of students whose test scores must be proficient or above in English/language arts and mathematics. Meeting the AMO is the first step toward demonstrating Adequate Yearly Progress under the federal law No Child Left Behind (NCLB).

    72. About Charter Schools - A To Z Home's Cool Homeschooling In California
    charter schools in california that support homeschoolers. NEA s New PolicyRaises standards, Accountability for Public charter Schools
    http://homeschooling.gomilpitas.com/regional/CaliforniaCharters.htm
    YOU ARE HERE: HOME REGIONAL CALIFORNIA
    Earn your certificate from the comfort of your own computer.
    Online Drivers Ed available in California A to Z Home's Cool Homeschooling California I am Ann Zeise , your guide to the best and most interesting and useful sites and articles about home education on the web. Search All of A to Z Articles Calendar Curriculum Explorations 4 Kids Field Trips Jokes Laws Links Methods Older Kids Regional Religion/Cultural The Web Home Recent Articles Events Join Email List ... Curriculum Shopping
    Site Index:
    A B C D ... Z California Homeschooling
    Associations
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    About Charter Schools
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    California Charter Schools Association

    Our mission is to improve student achievement by strengthening and expanding California's quality public charter school movement. CDE Charter School Information
    So you want to operate a charter school in California? Here's what you should know.

    73. Downtown College Preparatory ~ A Charter High School In San Jose, California
    Free of bureaucratic and regulatory micromanagement, charter schools can Studies out of charter-rich states such as Arizona and california show that
    http://www.downtowncollegeprep.org/show.php?action=pg_show_article&id=64

    74. The Charter Conundrum - Vol 14 No 3 - Rethinking Schools Online
    The charter school movement provides both opportunities and dangers — which A University of californiaLos Angeles study of california charter schools
    http://www.rethinkingschools.org/archive/14_03/char143.shtml
    Search Rethinking Schools Help Home Archive Volume 14, No. 3 - Spring 2000 The Charter Conundrum
    The Charter Conundrum
    By Leo Casey When New York City's public schools opened last September, they included four charter schools for the first time. Two schools, International High School and Middle College High School, were small alternative high schools that converted to charter school status. Two elementary schools, Sisulu Children's Academy and the John A. Reisenbach Charter School, were new charter schools. Among the city's more than 1,000 public schools, no two are more different than International High School and Sisulu Children's Academy. Their differences highlight the complex and contradictory potential of the charter school movement, and of the need to engage that movement in positive ways.
    A TALE OF TWO SCHOOLS
    International High School is located in Queens, in a neighborhood of commercial warehouses, small manufacturing plants, and large populations of Latin American, Caribbean, and Asian immigrants. The school was founded 15 years ago as a collaboration between the City University and the Board of Education, dedicated to providing a "multicultural educational environment" for students who were recent immigrants and English language learners. The only criteria for entrance to the school is that prospective students have been in the United States for less than four years and have scored in the bottom 20th percentile on the citywide language assessment skills test. "We are the only school which requires that you fail a test to gain admission," International teacher Claire Sylvan jokes.

    75. CSUN: California Academic Content Standards Site
    The california standardsBased Tests california charter Schools Governor sProfessional Development Initiatives - AB466 (Strom-Martin)
    http://www.csun.edu/~hcbio027/k12standards/
    Featuring Documents Adopted by the State Board of Education
    The Standards
    Printed publications can be purchased from CDE Press Educational Resource Catalog The Curriculum Frameworks Reading-Language Arts
    (1,309 K)
    Mathematics
    (1,777 K)
    ...
    (1,400 K)

    Additional documents available for Foreign Language Health Physical Education, and the Visual Performing Arts

    How are the Curriculum Frameworks developed in California?

    The Standards-Based Instructional Materials
    (Adopted by the State Board of Education)
    English-Language Arts K-8 Mathematics K-8 Science History-Social Science ... Where can I get information about California's instructional materials adoptions?
    The California Standards-Based Tests English-Language Arts Blueprints Mathematics Blueprints Science Grades 5,9-11 Blueprints History-Social Science Grades 8,10-11 Blueprints

    76. Charter Schools - Information, Legislation, Laws
    Leading charter school resource. Find out what charter schools are, where theyare and Catching the Wave Lessons from california s charter schools ,
    http://www.allianceforschoolchoice.org/charter_schools.aspx
    Legislators
    topics: FAQ Charter Schools School Vouchers About Home Schooling
    Charter schools are public, government-operated schools that offer their organizers exemption from many state regulations in exchange for the guarantee that they will meet certain performance standards. Charter school laws vary widely across the nation with regard to autonomy, teacher certification and accountability requirements. Examples: 41 states and the District of Columbia have charter school laws, with 2,996 schools serving approximately 741,949 children.
    Measures of a charter law’s strength
    • Number of charter schools permitted; Creation of multiple chartering authorities and a binding appeals process; Wide variety of acceptable applicants to run charter schools allowed; New start-ups permitted; Formal evidence of local support not required of new charter schools; Automatic waiver from laws and regulations extended to charter schools; Charter schools that enjoy relative legal and operational autonomy; New charter schools guaranteed full funding;

    77. Charter Schools For American Indians
    purposes of charter schools are to encourage student learning, meet highstandards, california Department of Education s charter school Home Page
    http://jan.ucc.nau.edu/~jar/LIB/LIB11.html
    Learn in Beauty
    books conference articles columns ... home Chapter 11 (pp. 132-151) of Learn in Beauty: Indigenous Education for a New Century Also available as a pdf file
    Charter Schools for American Indians
    Brian Bielenberg
    The charter school movement is a reform through which American Indians can gain back their sovereignty, a way in which they can step forward on their own behalf and on behalf of their children. However, the existence of such schools alone is not enough, as is shown in this paper through a small-scale ethnographic study of an urban charter school serving students from some 30 tribes. This study indicates that despite the best of intentions, it is often difficult to change common mainstream educational practices. Rather than simply changing what we teach, it is necessary to look more deeply at how we teach and how we structure the learning environment. Taking such issues into consideration can provide America Indian children with the education they deserve and the education indigenous people, both urban and rural, have been requesting for over a century. In effect, the Indian has rejected the American educational system because it first rejected him: Indians have desired education, but within a system that includes the home and community in the educational process. It is through this process that Indian children learn their tribal language, custom, tradition, religion, and philosophy. If the Native American Indian appears to be apathetic about supporting the efforts of his children to succeed in school, it is not because of hostility to the educational process, but rather because of his rejection of the narrowness of the system that controls the education process. (Otis, 1972, p. 72)

    78. Freedom And Innovation In California's Charter Schools (Full Text)
    53 of the 67 charter schools operating in california, winter 1995;; 46 comparisonschools in california that were Graduation/learning standards
    http://www.wested.org/policy/pubs/full_text/pb_ft_freedom.htm
    Freedom and Innovation
    in California's Charter Schools
    (Executive Summary- 29 pages) Ronald G. Corwin and John F. Flaherty, Editors
    Southwest Regional Laboratory

    Prepared under a subcontract with Far West Laboratory for Educational Research and Development (contract no. 91002006, Office of Educational Research and Improvement, U.S. Department of Education). The content does not necessarily reflect the views or policies of Far West Laboratory or the U.S. Department of Education, nor does the mention of trade names, commercial products, or organizations imply endorsement by these agencies.
    The Southwest Regional Laboratory (SWRL) is a nonprofit, public educational agency that exists to address challenges resulting from changing demographics and increasing numbers of at-risk children in the metropolitan Pacific Southwest. The Laboratory addresses its mission by engaging in research, development, evaluation, training, technical assistance, and policy analysis.
    Table of Contents:
    List of Contributors
    Introduction School Autonomy
    • Do Charter Schools Have Freedom?
    • What Are the Differences Between Those Charter Schools That Have a High Degree of Automony and Those With Less Autonomy?

    79. Opinion - Daniel Weintraub: Charting A Course For Schools - Sacbee.com
    The state has already set detailed standards reflecting what we, One in 20public schools in california is a charter, and one out of every 50 students
    http://www.sacbee.com/content/opinion/story/13052817p-13898491c.html
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    Daniel Weintraub: Charting a course for schools
    California has the chance to change the path of education, thanks to two little-noticed trends
    By Daniel Weintraub Bee Columnist
    Second in a series: For California, the coming decades will be a time of enormous changes, many of them unprecedented in scope. Over the next few months, Daniel Weintraub will explore the dynamics of these changes, the challenges and opportunities that they pose for California and what the state must do now to prepare for them. SAN DIEGO - Sometimes it seems as if California's political class never stops fighting over the public schools. But even as that battle turns into what looks like a struggle to the death between Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and the teachers unions, there is reason to hope that the coming decade eventually will bring an end to the education wars. Amid the unrelenting rancor that dominates the landscape today, two little-noticed trends hold the potential to transform the way we think about the schools.

    80. Joannejacobs.com: Charter Success
    california charter schools showed greater improvement than traditional public With over 90% of the students failing the standards test, I think they
    http://www.joannejacobs.com/mtarchives/014381.html
    « Online again Main Choice for the better »
    September 09, 2004
    Charter success
    Charter students outperform non-charter students in nearby schools, according to Caroline M. Hoxby, a Harvard economics professor. Charter students were 3 percent more likely to be proficient on their state's reading exam, and 2 percent more likely to be proficient in math. While the American Federation of Teachers' negative findings relied on 3 percent of fourth-grade students in charter schools, Hoxby analyzed scores for "virtually 100 percent" of fourth-graders in charter schools and compared them to students at the nearest public school, reports the New York Post. California charter schools showed greater improvement than traditional public schools on the state's Academic Performance Index, says the state's Charter Schools' Association. According to the latest data, which looked at API growth gains from 2003 to 2004, 64.4 percent of charter schools increased their API scores, compared to 61.1 percent of non-charter schools. Charter schools increased their API scores by an average of 12.9 points, compared to 7.3 points for non-charter schools. In addition, 60.4 percent of charter schools met or exceeded their API growth targets, compared to 54.1 percent of non-charter schools. On average, charter schools also surpassed their API growth targets by 7.5 points, compared to 2.1 points for their non-charter counterparts. California now has 537 charter schools with 180,000 students.

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