All You Need to Know About Charter Schools

Want to see something hilarious?

First, observe these photos of a luxury mansion:

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Huge, eh?

Now see the backyard:

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And this is how it looks inside:

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There is a lot more, as you can see in this article from the Washington Post.

In case you are wondering why I’m showing this to you, here is the punchline: the owner of the mansion has been working for over a decade as “president of Building Hope, a nonprofit that provides business, technical and financial assistance to public charter schools.”

I have nothing more to add.

17 thoughts on “All You Need to Know About Charter Schools

      1. Yes, but some charter schools actually EDUCATE kids — which most public schools haven’t don’t in decades.

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        1. First of all, they jack up stats by picking out the kids who are already doing well out of public schools. And second of all, I can easily educate any kids about a million times better than any charter at a fraction of the cost. And actually, that’s what I do.

          The guy is a con artist, a fraud. Any administrator in education who lives like this is a scammer.

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          1. I agree with your first paragraph. People like YOU could certainly educate your children (or anybody else’s) exceptionally well — just like some people can get rich by intelligent investing in the stock market, so they won’t need Social Security in their dotage. But the average family can’t do either successfully. They depend on whatever schools are available to educate their children.

            Private schools like Catholic and charter schools have a much better track record (and I wouldn’t recommend Catholic school to anyone, unless the nuns have stopped beating on the pupils after all these years).

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        2. The public schools I went to provided a perfectly adequate education. I see politicians on TV all the time whose knowledge of science and history could be vastly improved if they went to my High School.

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  1. Clarissa, I agree with you. There have been a lot of charter school scams, but the pillaging isn’t limited to schools. We have heads of major charities who take home excessive pay. (I stopped contributing to the PBS station in Philadelphia for that reasons as well as to the American Red Cross.) The governance problem that plagues US corporations has infected nonprofits to the point of hindering their missions.

    Dreidel is wrong by defining “doing well” in terms of looting and pillaging. That’s not what life is about.

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  2. Life is about taking good care of yourself and enjoying the trip, before it all dissolves into zero at the end. Helping others / your country is noble if that’s what you choose (I’m a retired physician and career military officer), but those options are secondary.

    If I’ve outlived my conscience along the way to a comfortable old age, I really don’t see how that’s a problem.

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    1. That explains a lot. I’m in my 60s, and I believe in karma and accountability. And my experience with military medicine is very negative.

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  3. To be fair, the guy was a CPA for 35 years and a partner in two international accounting firms, so I imagine that is how he made his money. He’s owned the property since 1989, fifteen years before he got involved with the Charter Schools. Of course, maybe he should think about donating some of his wealth to the schools instead of spending it like this, but that’s a different issue. I can’t imagine he’s the only well-paid accountant to have a fancy house.

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    1. Just imagine how much it costs to maintain this kind of a mansion. This requires an enormous and steady stream of income.

      As an educator with decades of experience, I can absolutely guarantee to you that there is zero value this fellow can bring to an educational process. He’s stupid, vulgar, and a total disgrace. Schools don’t need this type of clown to exist. We should stop donating our taxpayer money to fund his extremely bad taste.

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    1. David, that’s not the experience with charter and for profit schools in Philadelphia. While there are a few stars, there have been a lot of scams and failures. There are also highly successful public schools.

      There have also been field experiments about how to motivate student performance. It’s not that hard to do, regardless of the type of school.

      The biggest issue I have in education is faddism. Educators seem to be able to focus only on one idea at a time to the exclusion of all else. They destroyed the “whole language” concept through an all-or-nothing approach that failed to recognize and address the weaknesses of the concept. Now the fad du jour is charter school.

      In the South, the charter concept was seen as a way to funnel public money to private christian academies. Of course, the people driving that don’t want to see catholic schools sharing in the largess. The underlying issue is greed, not education.

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      1. “The underlying issue is greed, not education.”

        • Exactly. And we can see that put proudly on display in this fellow’s house.

        We hear so much belly-aching about overpaid college administrators and even professors. But I’ve been to the house of my university’s #1 administrator and that house is nothing like this one. WE ARE NOT THE ONES WHO WASTE MONEY IN PUBLIC ED.

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  4. For some reason, this post makes me want to say “Look at me! I have an amazing house that’s much better than that one! And it only cost me thirty dollars! What? Where is it? …Minecraft.”

    I apologize for my loopiness. It’s the end of the academic year.

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