DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION RELEASES
CHARTER SCHOOL 10-YEAR ANNIVERSARY REPORT

TALLAHASSEE - The
Florida Department of Education today released a
report commemorating the tenth anniversary of
Florida charter schools, which have provided
parents an additional public education option.
The report highlights the history of charter
schools in Florida, provides student demographic
information, and compares achievement of
students in charter schools with those in
traditional public schools.
"This report marks a decade of progress,
innovation and promise," said Education
Commissioner John L. Winn. "Charter schools can
no longer be considered an educational
experiment, but a vital and integral part of
Florida's public school system."
Like all public school students in Florida,
charter school students are assessed through the
Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test (FCAT).
Overall, the performance of Florida's charter
school students on the FCAT is on par with, and
in some cases exceeds, the performance of
students attending traditional public schools.
Further, charter schools are closing the
achievement gap between white and minority
students at a rate similar to that of
traditional public schools.
A greater percentage of charter elementary
and middle schools students are reading at or
above grade level as compared to their
traditional public school counterparts. In
addition, the percentage of charter middle
school students proficient in mathematics
surpassed their traditional public school peers
for the first time this year. While the
percentage of proficient charter school students
still falls below traditional public school
students at some grade levels, significant
progress has been made to reduce or eliminate
the gap that once existed.
Florida's charter schools have also seen
their student populations become increasingly
diverse. On average, the state's charter schools
serve a slightly greater proportion of minority
students than traditional public schools, with a
significant increase in the enrollment of
Hispanic students from 2 percent in 1996-97 to
29 percent last school year. In terms of
minority student performance on the reading and
mathematics FCAT, charter and traditional public
schools have experienced similar decreases in
the achievement gap between white and minority
students at all school levels.
"During the last 10 years, Florida's charter
schools helped students -- especially our
minority students -- achieve academic success,"
said Florida Board of Education Chairman T.
Willard Fair and founder of one of Florida's
first charter schools, The Liberty City Charter
School. "These schools focus on the individual
needs of students and challenge them to reach
their full potential."
The Hispanic student population at charter
schools appears, on average, to be more
proficient in reading and mathematics than the
Hispanic student population at traditional
public schools. While the achievement gap has
narrowed at a similar rate in charter and
traditional public schools, the magnitude of the
actual gap between white and African-American
and white and Hispanic students at charter
schools is smaller across all school levels when
compared to traditional public schools.
Last year, enrollment in Florida charter
schools topped 92,000, which equates to about 3
percent of Florida's total public school
population during the 2005-06 school year.
Enrollment in Florida's charter schools is
projected to surpass 100,000 students this
school year. Ten years later, there are
approximately 175 times more the number of
students enrolled in charter schools in their
first year (1996-97). Florida is ranked second
in the nation in public charter school student
enrollment.
In May 1996, legislation authorizing the
creation of charter schools as part of Florida's
state system of public education was signed into
law and was effective in July of that year.
Charter school applications were submitted and
approved by schools boards in Escambia, Leon,
Miami-Dade, Polk and Walton Counties, resulting
in the state's first five charter schools -
Escambia Charter School (Escambia County), C.K.
Steele-LeRoy Collins Charter Middle School (Leon
County), The Liberty City Charter School
(Miami-Dade County), the APPLE School (Polk
County), and Seaside Neighborhood School (Walton
County). Today, there are more than 350 Florida
charter schools - the third largest charter
school system in the county.
Charter schools are among the fastest growing
school choice options in Florida. Charter
schools are public schools that are
independently designed and operated and
committed to improving the academic achievement
of every student. Charter schools are largely
free to innovate, and are open to all students,
regardless of income, gender, race, or religion.
Charter schools tend to attract students who
struggle academically and cover a spectrum of
educational needs from specializing in the
performing arts to technical training.
To view the complete charter school tenth
anniversary report, visit
www.floridaschoolchoice.org/information/charter_schools/files/Charter_10Year_Book.pdf.
For more information on charter schools in
Florida, visit
www.floridaschoolchoice.org/Information/Charter_Schools/.
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