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CER Applauds Report Validating Charter School Effectiveness

Schools and Libraries

November 3, 2023


WASHINGTON, DC – A new study finds that “charter schools tend to demonstrate greater efficiency on both metrics of cost-effectiveness and return on investment, using fewer dollars to achieve better outcomes, relative to traditional public schools.”  

The pathbreaking report from the University of Arkansas’ Department of Education Reform, Still a Good Investment: Charter School Productivity in Nine Cities, also finds that charter schools earn higher NAEP scores for every $1,000 spent, and that the lifetime earnings of charter students are double those in traditional public schools.

“The reason this is so valuable is because on a daily basis people discount the importance of charter schools,” says Jeanne Allen, Founder and CEO of the Center for Education Reform (CER). “But it turns out when public schools have freedom and flexibility to do their work, are not hamstrung by traditional rules and regulations, and parents have these choices, students thrive. It's no surprise that students who attend public charter schools in cities like Indianapolis and Washington DC, despite receiving much less funding, achieve at a rate that is two to three times higher than their traditional public school counterparts.”

The University of Arkansas studied nine cities which are representative of the charter school movement at large, including Camden, Denver, Houston, Indianapolis, Memphis, New Orleans, New York City, San Antonio, and Washington, DC. The results reinforce that charter school laws have an impact on charter outcomes.  According to the Annual Charter School Law Rankings and Scorecard developed and published by CER annually, states with strong charter school laws that ensure funds follow students and that charter schools have autonomy do indeed perform better. Most of the cities studied in the report are in strong law states.

The full University of Arkansas report is available here.