Chartering in Georgia 2011-2012 An overview of the academic performance of Georgia's charter schools The Charter Schools Division Annual Report for 2011-2012 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report Dear Members of the Georgia General Assembly, Georgia law requires all charter schools and charter systems to submit an annual report to the Department of Education by October 1 of each year, and the state board must then to report to the General Assembly no later than December 31 of each year on the status of the charter school program. See O.C.G.A. 20-2-2067.1(c) and 20-2-2070 To facilitate the meeting of these requirements, the Georgia Department of Education's Charter Schools Division each year conducts an online Annual Report Survey of charter schools and charter systems. The 2012 survey was open from August 1 to October 1. Each charter school's and charter system's annual report requirement is satisfied by completing this survey. In addition to meeting the legal requirements, the survey also provides several opportunities for charter schools and charter systems to highlight their accomplishments, including a section for schools and systems to provide details, examples and success stories which may not otherwise be captured through the annual report requirement. The Department then compiles the survey data, including financial data submitted by each charter school, adds in academic assessment data, including local district and statewide academic comparisons, and prepares and conveys to the General Assembly the attached report for the State Board of Education. During the 2011-2012 school year, Georgia had 217 charter schools serving 56 school districts. Of these charter schools, 12 were identified as Reward Schools through the new accountability distinction. In addition, several of Georgia's charter schools were recognized nationally for academic excellence and innovative practices. This report will highlight many of these accomplishments. During 2011-2012, the State Board of Education and the Georgia Department of Education adopted new Charter Schools Rules and Guidelines that focus on accountability and transparency. We also launched a comprehensive training program for new and existing charter schools and charter systems. The Georgia Department of Education also developed additional resources for local school districts to strengthen their authorizer practices. Please note that this annual report includes definitions in Appendix A, information on each of Georgia's start-up and conversion charter schools in Appendix B, and information on Georgia's charter systems in Appendix C. Thank you for your ongoing dedication and hard work in helping to strengthen Georgia's public education system. Sincerely, Louis Erste Charter Schools Division Director Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 2 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report Table of Contents Highlights from the 20112012 School Year 4 Characteristics: Charter Students and Charter Schools 6 Georgia Charters vs. Charters Nationally 9 Charter Schools by the Numbers 10 Figure 12: Brand New Charter Schools for 2011-2012 10 Figure 16: Charter Schools Closures or Non-Renewals for 2011-2012 11 Charter School Locations in Georgia 12 Figure 21: Graphical Map of Charter Schools 13 Charter School Enrollment Trends 14 Lottery and Waitlist 14 National Research-Based Educational Models 17 Program and Operating Services and Flexibility Utilization 18 Figure 28: 2011-2012 Charter School Flexibility Utilization 18 The Role of Management Organizations 19 Charter Schools and Accountability 20 Figure 30: Charter Schools Priority, Focus, and Rewards 20 Charter Schools and Academic Performance 21 Elementary and Middle School CRCT Test Performance 21 High School End of Course Test Performance 24 Appendix A - Definitions 28 Appendix B - 2011-2012 Charter School Individual Academic Performance Data 31 Appendix C - 2011-2012 Charter System Academic Performance Data 297 Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 3 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report Highlights from the 2011-2012 School Year The 2011-2012 school year was a successful one for many of Georgia's charter schools, with several recognized locally and nationally for academic success and innovative practices. Examples include: 1. Chamblee Charter High School's German language program caught the attention of officials in the German government and was selected as a PASCH Partnership School one of only a handful of PASCH programs worldwide, a designation that comes directly from Berlin, Germany. 2. 25 Walton High School students were named National Merit Semi-Finalists. 3. World Language Academy second grade students won the national ACTFL video competition focusing on the importance of learning additional languages. 4. Gwinnett School of Mathematics, Science and Technology had five Robotics teams (including one all-girls team) compete in Anaheim, CA at the VEX Worlds Competition 5. Out of 100 students competing worldwide, two students were selected from Elite Scholars Academy for the "Disney Dream" program. 6. Georgia charter high schools performed well on the SAT and Advanced Placement (AP) tests: a. 18 of Georgia's charter high schools exceeded the state average on the SAT, with the Gwinnett School of Mathematics Science and Technology and Walton Charter High School ranking #1 and #3 respectively (an AP score of 3-5 qualifies the student to receive college credit or advanced college placement). b. Nine charter high schools exceeded the state average of students scoring a 3 or higher on AP exams. Figure 1: 2011-2012 SAT Performance of Charter High Schools Charter High Schools Gwinnett Charter School of Mathematics, Science and Technology Walton Charter High School Riverwood International Charter School Chamblee Charter High School Decatur High School (charter system) Charter Conservatory for Liberal Arts & Technology Armuchee High School (charter system) Coosa High School Technology Enriched Accelerated Charter High School (TEACH) Pepperell High School (charter system) Cartersville High School (charter system) Morgan County Charter High School Model High School (charter system) Putnam County High School (charter system) White County High School (charter system) Marietta High School (charter system) North Springs Charter High School Baconton Community Charter School State Average SAT Performance Average Composite SAT Score State Rank 1941 1 1743 3 1631 15 1613 18 1570 33 1564 1536 1532 1513 1506 1490 1477 1476 36 Top 15% Top 15% Top 15% Top 20% Top 20% Top 20% Top 20% 1474 1465 1459 1459 1458 1437 Top 20% Top 25% Top 25% Top 25% Top 25% Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 4 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report Figure 2: 2011-2012 AP Performance of Charter High Schools Charter High Schools AP Performance # of AP Test % Scoring 3 or Takers Higher Gwinnett School of Mathematics Science and Technology Walton Charter High School Technology Enriched Accelerated Charter High School (TEACH) Winder-Barrow High School (charter system) Chamblee Charter High School North Springs Charter High School Apalachee High School (charter system) Riverwood International Charter School Armuchee High School (charter system) State Average 402 1,270 42 100 486 431 174 593 44 81.21% 81.20% 75.36% 75.19% 69.26% 62.34% 59.50% 55.08% 54.05% 53.90% Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 5 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report Characteristics: Charter Students and Charter Schools During the 2011-2012 school year, 130,492 Georgia public school students were enrolled in either a conversion or start-up charter school or a charter system school. In the past three years, charter school enrollment increased by over 100% from 61,175 students. Much of the student enrollment growth is concentrated within the charter systems; however, student enrollment in conversion and start-up charter schools continues its annual trend upward increasing more than 16% from the previous year. Figure 3: Charter School Student Enrollment Growth Source: GaDOE Student FTE Collection Period 1 The distribution of students by grade within charter schools mirrored that of non-charter schools within the State. For the 2011-2012 school year, 49% of charter school students were enrolled in elementary school grades, 24% in middle school grades, and 27% in high school. Figure 4: 2012 Charter School Student Enrollment by Grade Level Georgia Charter Schools Grades Served Enrollment Number of Students % of Total Charter School Enrollment Elementary Grades: K-5 65,942 Middle Grades: 6-8 30,948 High School Grades: 9-12 33,602 Total Enrollment 130,492 Source: GaDOE Student FTE Collection Period 1 49.28% 24.32% 26.40% 7.7% Non-Charter Schools Enrollment Number of Students 760,688 353,549 439,701 1,553,938 % of Total Charter School Enrollment 48.95% 22.75% 28.30% 92.3% The racial and ethnic composition of Georgia charter schools also mirrored that of the non-charter schools. However, charter schools as a whole (conversion, start-ups, and charter system schools) served a higher percent of Hispanic and White students and a lower percentage of Black students than noncharter schools. Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 6 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report Figure 5: 2011-2012 Student Demographics Charter and Non-Charter Source: GaDOE Student FTE Collection Period 1 The advent of additional charter system schools has shifted the racial and ethnic composition of the Georgia charter schools charter system schools serve a higher proportion of White students than noncharters. Start-up charter schools serve a higher proportion of Black students but serve the lowest proportion of Hispanic students than any other charter option and non-charter schools. Figure 6: 2011-2012 Student Demographics By Charter Type Source: GaDOE Student FTE Collection Period 1 Services to economically disadvantaged students within Georgia charter schools also mirrored that of the state, although Georgia charter schools served a slightly lower percentage of economically disadvantaged students than non-charters 55.1% of charter school students were eligible for free and reduced price meals compared to 57.8% of non-charter school students. Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 7 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report Figure 7: 2011-2012 Student Demographics Economically Disadvantaged Source: GaDOE Student FTE Collection Period 1 In terms of student support services, Georgia charter schools serve similar percentages of students as non-charters for both special needs and second language populations. Students with disabilities were another program service area where Georgia charter schools are similar compared to non-charter schools 11% to 12% respectively. Among charter schools, 13% of charter system school students, 11% of conversion school students, and 9% of start-up charter schools students received special education services. While serving a slightly lower population of students with disabilities, Georgia charter schools served a higher percentage of students needing language support. In particular, 6% of Georgia charter school students received second language (ELL or English language learner) services compared to 5% for noncharter school students. Conversion charter schools possessed the largest percentage of ELL students at 8%, followed by system charters 7.5% and start-up charter 2%. Figure 8: 2011-2012 Student Demographics Support Services Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 8 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report Georgia Charters vs. Charters Nationally Nationally, charter school students represent 4.2% of all public school students in the 2011-12 school year.1 Georgia charter school students represent 7.7% of the public school population in Georgia.2 Additionally, Georgia charter schools serve the same percentage (29%) of Black students as charter schools nationally. However, Georgia charter schools serve a significantly higher percentage of White students (50% to 36% nationally) and only half as many Hispanic students (14% to 27% nationally) as do charter schools in the United States. Figure 9: 2011-2012 Student Demographics Charters vs. Non-Charters Georgia charter schools serve a higher percent of economically disadvantaged students than do charter schools nationally, but serve a signifcantly lower percentage of students needing language support. Note that Georgia's population of English Language Learners is lower than the national average, which impacts the number of students served. Georgia serves a similar percentage of students needing special education support as national charter schools. Figure 10: 2011-2012 Program Service Areas Charters vs. Non-Charters 1 The Public Charter Schools Dashboard, A Comprehensive Data Resource from the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools. Accessed online via http://dashboard.publiccharters.org/dashboard/schools/year/2012. 2 Enrollment is based on the October 5, 2010 (FTE 2012-1) count and can be accessed online from the Georgia Department of Education's website http://app3.doe.k12.ga.us/ows-bin/owa/fte_pack_ethnicsex.entry_form. Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 9 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report Charter Schools by the Numbers The growth of Georgia charter schoools continued in the 2011-2012 school year. The total number of charter schools increased 34% from 162 to 217 schools including system charter schools. Charters in 2011-12 comprised 9.5% of all schools in Georgia, higher than the naitonal average of 5.8%. Georgia's percentage of charter schools is more than twice that of the neighboring states of North Carolina (4.0%), South Carolina (4.0%) and Tennessee (2.3%). Florida represented the only geographic neighbor with a higher percentage of charter schools at 12.3%. Georgia's remaining neighbor, Alabama, is one of ten states that did not have a charter law in 2011-12. Figure 11: Five-Year Charter School Growth During the 2011-2012 school year, 11 new start-up charter schools and one new conversion charter school opened their doors. Figure 12: Brand New Charter Schools for 2011-2012 Charter School County / District Served Athens Community Career Academy Clarke County Baldwin County Career Academy Baldwin County Destiny Achievers Academy of Excellence DeKalb County Gwinnett County Online Campus Gwinnett County (virtual) Hapeville Charter Career Academy Fulton County Heart of Georgia College and Career Bleckley, Laurens, and Wheeler Counties, Academy Dublin City Ivy Preparatory Academy at Kirkwood for Boys DeKalb County Ivy Preparatory Academy at Kirkwood for Girls DeKalb County KIPP Atlanta Collegiate Atlanta Public Schools Lamar County College and Career Academy Lamar County Newton College and Career Academy Newton County Spout Springs School of Enrichment Hall County Type Start-up/Career Academy Start-up/Career Academy Start-up Start-up Start-up Start-up/Career Academy Start-up/State chartered special school (SCSS) Start-up/SCSS Start-up Start-up/Career Academy Start-up/Career Academy Conversion Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 10 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report Figure 13: New Charters Switching Authorizers from Charter Commission to State Board of Education Charter School County / District Served Type Cherokee Charter Academy Cherokee County Start-up/SCSS Georgia Connections Academy Statewide (virtual) Start-up/SCSS Heritage Preparatory Academy Atlanta Public Schools Start-up/SCSS Provost Academy of Georgia Statewide (virtual) Start-up/SCSS Figure 14: Existing Charters Switching Authorizers from Charter Commission to State Board of Education Charter School County / District Served Type Atlanta Heights Charter School Charter Conservatory for Liberal Arts & Technology (CCAT) Coweta Charter Academy Atlanta Public Schools Bulloch County Coweta County Start-up/SCSS Start-up/SCSS Start-up/SCSS Fulton Leadership Academy Pataula Charter Academy Fulton County Baker, Clay, Calhoun, Early, and Randolph Counties Start-up/SCSS Start-up/SCSS Figure 15: Existing Charters Switching Authorizers from Charter Commission to Local District Charter School County / District Served Type Ivy Preparatory Academy Gwinnett County Start-up The Museum School of Avondale Estates DeKalb County Start-up Figure 16: Charter Schools Closures or Non-Renewals for 2011-2012 Charter School County / District Served Type Effingham Gateway to College Effingham County Start-up Marietta Charter School Marietta City Start-up Peachtree Hope Charter School DeKalb County Start-up Closure Status Termination mid-year by agreement due to enrollment Non-renewed Denied by local district and not approvable by the State Figure 17: Charter Schools Converted Back to Traditional Public School for 2011-2012 Charter School County / District Served Type Dougherty Comprehensive High School Dougherty County Conversion Dougherty International Education Middle School Dougherty County Conversion Closure Status Withdrew rather than have renewal petition denied Withdrew rather than have renewal petition denied Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 11 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report Figure 18: New 2011-2012 Charter Systems Charter System Barrow County Schools Calhoun City Schools Dawson County Schools Dublin City Schools Gordon County Schools Morgan County Schools Figure 19: New Schools Added to Existing Charter Systems New Schools County / District Glennwood Elementary School Decatur City 4/5 Academy at Fifth Avenue Decatur City Type Charter System School Charter System School New Status Primary (K-3) 4/5 Academy Charter School Locations in Georgia The proliferation of charter schools across the State of Georgia continued within the 2011-2012 school year. Consistent with prior years, approximately 60% of charter schools are clustered around the Metro Atlanta area. However, 14 school districts, excluding charter system districts, have more than 8% of their schools under a charter contract. Figure 20: Percent of Schools under Charter Contract System Name Total Non System Charters Total School Count Webster County 1 2 Thomas County 2 6 Lamar County 1 4 Hall County 8 33 Berrien County 1 5 Greene County 1 5 Mitchell County 1 5 Toombs County 1 5 Baldwin County 1 6 Fulton County 14 103 Atlanta Public Schools 13 107 Clarke County 2 21 DeKalb County 12 133 Newton County 2 23 Note: Excludes the 14 charter systems in operation during 2011-2012. Percent Charter School 50.0% 33.3% 25.0% 24.2% 20.0% 20.0% 20.0% 20.0% 16.7% 13.6% 12.1% 9.5% 9.0% 8.7% While charter schools are clustered within the Atlanta metro area, the distribution of charter schools across the state is seen below, including southwest Georgia (Thomas County, Mitchell County, and Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 12 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report Berrien County), southeast Georgia (Glynn County), northwest Georgia (Whitfield County, Gordon County, Calhoun City, and Floyd County), and northeast Georgia (White County). Figure 21: Graphical Map of Charter Schools Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 13 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report Charter School Enrollment Trends The range of student enrollment within Georgia charter schools varied widely, from Moore Street School (in the Dublin City charter system) with 36 students to Odyssey School/ Georgia Cyber Academy with 10,289 students. The average charter school enrolled 640 students. Start-up charter schools averaged 507 students (or 360 when removing the Odyssey Charter School), conversion charter schools averaged 820 students (Walton High School in Cobb County was the largest with 2,636 students), and charter system schools averaged 672 students. Figure 22: Number of Charter Schools by Student Enrollment Lottery and Waitlist During the 2011-2012 school year, 50 charter schools held a lottery, which represents a 6.4% increase from the previous school year. Seventeen conversion and 33 start-up charter schools held lotteries ranging from five students participating at Futral Road Elementary (a conversion) to 2,700 students at Cherokee Charter Academy (a start-up state chartered special school). In addition to Cherokee Charter Academy, six other charter schools (Elite Scholars Academy, Fulton Sunshine Charter Elementary, Gwinnett School of Mathematics, Science and Technology, Hapeville Charter Academy, Kennesaw Charter School, and KIPP South Fulton Academy School) held lotteries with more than 500 participants. Ten charter schools opened their doors with a waitlist greater than 300 students. The three largest waiting lists were at Cherokee Charter Academy (1,500), Kennesaw Charter (762), and DeKalb Academy of Technology and the Environment Charter School (422). The average waitlist at Georgia charter schools was 172 students, with start-ups averaging 232 students and conversions 82 students. Figure 23: 2011-2012 Lottery/Waitlist Summary Lottery Participants Seats Available Mean Median Mean Median All Charters 302 178 128 67 Start-up 420 202 189 128 Conversion 121 53 36 22 Wait List Students Mean Median 172 61 232 101 82 26 Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 14 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report Figure 24: Conversion Charter Schools Requiring a Lottery for at Least One Grade Charter School Name District Lottery Participants Seats Available Chamblee Charter High School DeKalb County 283 40 Chesnut Elementary School DeKalb County 298 0 Clubview Elementary School Muscogee County 37 37 Futral Road Elementary School Spalding County 5 0 Martin Elementary School Hall County 60 40 McEver Elementary School Hall County 35 60 Peachtree Middle School DeKalb County 359 0 Reese Road Leadership Academy Muscogee County 65 35 Ridgeview Charter School Fulton County 53 20 Riverwood International Charter School Fulton County 332 150 Sandy Springs Middle School Fulton County 15 10 Sardis Elementary School Hall County 22 25 Sedalia Park Elementary School Cobb County 28 11 Smoke Rise Elementary School DeKalb County 262 6 Spout Springs Elementary School Hall County 22 22 Wauka Mountain Elementary School Hall County 39 13 World Language Academy Hall County 145 140 Wait List Students 238 276 61 5 15 0 359 35 32 182 0 0 17 128 0 26 15 Figure 25: Start-up Charter Schools Requiring a Lottery for at Least One Grade Charter School Name District Lottery Participants Amana Academy School Atlanta Heights Charter School Neighborhood Charter School Baconton Community Charter School Brighten Academy Charles R. Drew Charter School Cherokee Charter Academy Coastal Empire Montessori Charter School Fulton County Atlanta Public Schools Atlanta Public Schools Mitchell County Douglas County Atlanta Public Schools Cherokee County Chatham County 90 157 189 143 448 480 2,700 105 DeKalb Academy of Technology and the Environment Charter School Elite Scholars Academy School Forsyth Academy Fulton Science Academy High School Fulton Sunshine Charter Elementary DeKalb County 489 Clayton County 775 Forsyth County 81 Fulton County 204 Fulton County 607 Gwinnett School of Mathematics, Science and Technology Gwinnett County 611 Hapeville Charter Career Academy Fulton County 540 Hapeville Charter Middle School Fulton County 350 International Academy of Smyrna Cobb County 81 Seats Available 200 131 49 92 55 130 1,150 84 67 400 58 100 279 300 205 250 26 Wait List Students 46 159 147 47 393 350 1,500 21 422 375 23 104 328 311 85 15 158 Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 15 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report Charter School Name International Community School Ivy Preparatory Academy at Kirkwood for Girls Ivy Preparatory Young Men's Leadership Academy at Kirkwood Kennesaw Charter School KIPP Atlanta Collegiate KIPP South Fulton Academy School KIPP STRIVE Academy KIPP VISION KIPP West Atlanta Young Scholars Academy Lake Oconee Academy Leadership Preparatory Academy Odyssey School Oglethorpe Charter School Pataula Charter Academy Scholars Academy Charter School The Kindezi School Museum School Avondale Estates Main Street Charter Academy Middle Unidos Dual Language Charter School Wesley International Academy District DeKalb County DeKalb County DeKalb County Cobb County Atlanta Public Schools Fulton County Atlanta Public Schools Atlanta Public Schools Atlanta Public Schools Greene County DeKalb County Coweta County Chatham County Randolph County Clayton County Atlanta Public Schools DeKalb County Fulton County Clayton County Atlanta Public Schools Lottery Participants 129 200 200 1,211 178 515 160 58 226 208 166 99 268 10 260 94 115 375 116 215 Seats Available 47 169 169 449 142 114 95 30 125 71 74 117 140 2 117 24 68 39 132 88 Wait List Students 92 31 31 762 36 401 61 28 98 127 92 10 130 8 153 70 47 336 0 86 Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 16 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report National Research-Based Educational Models Charter schools were surveyed on the types of instructional models that each school uses. A total of 20 charter schools reported using one of four models: (1) Expeditionary Learning, (2) International Baccalaureate, (3) Montessori, or (4) Core Knowledge. Of the 20 schools, all but five were start-ups. Five conversion charter schools reported using the International Baccalaureate program. Figure 26: 2011-2012 Charter Utilization of National Research-Based Education Models Charter School Charter Type National Model Destiny Achievers Academy Of Excellence Start-up Core Knowledge Lake Oconee Academy Start-up Core Knowledge Lanier Charter Career Academy Start-up Core Knowledge Oglethorpe Charter School Start-up Core Knowledge Amana Academy Start-up Expeditionary Learning Bishop Hall Charter School Start-up Expeditionary Learning DeKalb Academy of Technology and Environment Charter School Start-up Expeditionary Learning Heritage Preparatory Academy Start-up Expeditionary Learning Pataula Charter Academy Start-up Expeditionary Learning Scholars Academy Start-up Expeditionary Learning The Museum School of Avondale Estates Clubview Elementary International Academy of Smyrna Start-up Conversion Start-up Expeditionary Learning International Baccalaureate International Baccalaureate International Community School Start-up International Baccalaureate Morgan County Charter High School Conversion International Baccalaureate Ridgeview Charter School Riverwood International Charter School Sawyer Road Elementary Wesley International Academy Coastal Empire Montessori Charter School Conversion Conversion Conversion Start-up Start-up International Baccalaureate International Baccalaureate International Baccalaureate International Baccalaureate Montessori In addition to these 20 schools, 53 other start-up or conversion charter schools (66% of all non-system charter schools) reported using another instructional or teaching model, including: x Academies of Inquiry and Talent Development x Constructivist Teaching x Developmental Approaches in Science, Health and Technology (DASH) x Ford Partnership for Advanced Studies Next Generation Learning (Ford PAS) x Gateway to College x Learning Focused x Museum School Model x Multiple Intelligences x Science and Technology Program for Children (STC) x Thematic Learning Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 17 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report Program and Operating Services and Flexibility Utilization More than 80% of charter schools reported using one or more innovative scheduling feature to increase student achievement. Extending the school day was the most popular approach, followed by block scheduling. Only 10% of conversion and start-up charter schools reported using a shortened school day. Figure27: 2011-2012 Charter School Scheduling Features While charter status provides schools with broad-based flexibility, it appears that charter schools are judicious in their use of flexibility. Class size was the most utilized flexibility, with 41% of charter schools utilizing such provision. Only 25% of start-up and conversion charter schools reported using teacher certification flexibility. Fewer charter schools reported using administrator certification flexibility, employee compensation flexibility, or fiscal independence. Figure 28: 2011-2012 Charter School Flexibility Utilization Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 18 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report The Role of Management Organizations Georgia charter schools reported partnering with 11 Educational Management Organizations (EMOs) or Charter Management Organization (CMO) during the 2011-2012 school year. EMOs are for-profit organizations and CMOs are a non-profit organizations that contract with a school or group of individuals to provide administrative and management services to operate a public school. The only CMO operating in Georgia, the nationally-acclaimed Knowledge is Power Program (KIPP), operated five schools in 2011-2012. Edison Learning operated three schools, Charter Schools USA operated two schools, and two schools reported that Academica provided EMO services. The remaining seven EMOs each operated a single school. Figure 29: 2011-2012 Charter EMO/CMO Partnerships Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 19 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report Charter Schools and Accountability In previous years, Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) served as federal accountability for all schools within the State of Georgia. In February 2012, Georgia was approved by the U.S. Secretary of Education for a flexibility waiver from the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) commonly known as No Child Left Behind as well as the Waiver of Requirements to Determine AYP. Due to this flexibility, GaDOE did not calculate AYP determinations for schools for the 2011-2012 school year. In place of the AYP determinations, and to satisfy federal accountability for the 2011-2012 school year, GaDOE calculated three lists of schools: 1) Priority Schools; 2) Focus Schools; and 3) Reward Schools. Priority Schools are the lowest 5% of the Title I schools (78 schools), SIG (School Improvement Grant) schools, or high schools with a graduation rate of less than 60% for two consecutive years. Focus Schools are the 10% of Title I schools (156 schools) who have the largest within-school gap between subgroup performance on statewide assessments and graduation rate. Reward Schools (234 schools) can be classified in two years as Highest-Performing (among the 5% of Title I schools in the State that have the highest absolute performance over three years for the "all students" group on the statewide assessments that also made AYP for the "all students" group and all of its subgroups in 2011) or HighProgress (among the 10% of Title I schools in the State that are making the most progress in improving the performance of the "all students" group over three years on the statewide assessments. For the 2011-2012 school year, one charter school was designated a Priority School Challenge Charter Academy. Additionally, six Georgia charter schools were designated as Focus Schools for having the gap within school gap. No start-up charter schools received the Focus Schools designation. Twelve Georgia charter schools were identified as Reward Schools, with four of them within the 95th percentile on statewide assessments. Figure 30: Charter Schools Priority, Focus, and Reward Accountability Distinctions: Priority, Focus, and Reward Schools System name Newton County Priority Schools School Name Challenge Charter Academy Reason Achievement Charter Type Start-up System name Fulton County Fulton County Richmond County Gainesville City Marietta City Marietta City Focus Schools School Name Ridgeview Charter School Sandy Springs Middle School Murphey Middle Charter School Gainesville Middle School Marietta High School Marietta Middle School Reason Achievement Achievement Achievement Achievement Grad Rate Achievement Charter Type Conversion Conversion Conversion System System System System name Fulton County White County Marietta City Reward Schools School Name KIPP South Fulton Academy School Mount Yonah Elementary School West Side Elementary School (continued) Reason High Performing High Performing High Performing Charter Type Start-up System System Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 20 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report Reward Schools (continued) System name Ivy Prep School Name Ivy Prep School Warren County Warren County Middle School Warren County Warren County High School White County White Co. Intermediate Atlanta Public Schools Charles R. Drew Charter School Cartersville City Cartersville Elementary School Decatur City Decatur High School Marietta City Sawyer Road Elementary CCAT CCAT High School Note: Distinctions are based on the 2010-2011 school year. Reason High Performing High Progress High Progress High Progress High Progress High Progress High Progress High Progress High Progress Charter Type Start-up System System System Start-up System System Conversion Start-up Charter Schools and Academic Performance The following section summarizes the academic performance of Georgia charter schools on key statewide assessments for elementary, middle, and high schools. Elementary and Middle School CRCT Test Performance Georgia charter schools have outperformed non-charter schools on the CRCT reading assessment for each of the past five years. Additionally, the rate of increase over the past four years has been nearly identical, with charter schools increasing their passing percent by 3.5% and non-charter schools by 3.2%. Figure 31: 5-Year CRCT Reading Charters vs. Non-Charters Over the past four years all charter school types have experienced at least a 2.5% increase in the percent of students passing the CRCT Reading assessment. However, charter system schools have experienced the largest growth in the percent of students passing the CRCT reading assessment, increasing their passing percent by 4.3%. Only start-up charter schools (2.5%) have experienced a slower growth in their passing percent than non-charter schools (3.2%). Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 21 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report Figure 32: 5-Year CRCT Reading, by Charter Type The 2012 CRCT Reading assessment illustrates similarities amongst charter schools and with non-charter schools. Start-up charter schools demonstrated the highest percentage of students exceeding the reading standard, but also have the third-highest percentage of students not meeting the standard. Neither conversions nor system charter schools outperformed non-charter schools on the percent of students exceeding the standard. Figure 33: 2012 CRCT Reading Performance, by performance levels Unlike Reading, charter schools have failed to outperform non-charter schools on the CRCT Math test during the past five years. However, charter schools have demonstrated double-digit growth (11.6%) in the percent of student passing the assessment compared to the 9.3% growth of non-charters. Finally, in 2008 the performance gap between charters and non-charters was 2.6% and in 2012 that gap has decreased to 0.2% Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 22 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report Figure 34: 5-Year CRCT Math Charters vs. Non-Charters Amongst charter schools, start-up charters have experienced significant growth in the percent of students passing the CRCT Math assessment (up 11.1%) compared to conversion and system charter schools who each increased their passing percent by 7%. Charter system schools have outperformed both conversions and start-ups in each of the past five years. Figure 35: 5-Year CRCT Math, by Charter Type For the 2012 CRCT Math assessments, none of the charter school types outperformed non-charter schools on the percent of students exceeding the standards although more charter system school than non-charter students (86.6% to 84.7%) met or exceeded the CRCT Math standard. Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 23 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report Figure 36: 2012 CRCT Math Performance, by performance levels High School End of Course Test Performance Over the past five years, Georgia charter schools have outperformed non-charter schools on the ELA End-of-Course tests (EOCTs). Charter schools have increased their passing percentage from 86.5% in 2008 to 89.5% in 2012. Traditional schools have increased their passing percent from 76.7% to 86.3% during the same time period. Figure 35: 5-Year EOCT ELA Charters vs. Non-Charters Conversion charter schools have outperformed both start-up and conversion charters on the ELA EOCT in each of the past five years. However, both start-ups and conversations have made significant increases in their passing percent on the ELA EOCT over the past five years 9.3% and 8.2% respectively. Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 24 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report Figure 36: 5-Year EOCT ELA, by Charter Type Examining 2012 performance on the ELA EOCT, conversion charter schools had a signficantly higher persentage of students exceeding the ELA standard. Start-up charter schools exhibited the highest rate of charter school students not meeting the standard during the 2012 testing period. Figure 37: 2012 EOCT ELA Performance, by performance levels Georgia charter schools have also outperformed non-charter schools on the EOCT Math assessment for each of the past five years. However, the performance gap between charters and non-charters has decreased from 9.3% in 2008 to 3.1% in 2012. Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 25 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report Figure 38: 5-Year EOCT Math Charters vs. Non-Charters Performance on the EOCT Math assessment by charter school type illustrates a similar patter as ELA performance. Both charter system and conversion schools outperform start-up charter high schools, with conversion high schools outperforming charter system high schools during the past two years. Performance on the EOCT Math assesment has increased for both conversion (3.3%) and charter system (14.3%) schools, while decreasing for start-ups (-8.4%) over the past five years. Figure 39: 5-Year EOCT Math, by Charter Type For the 2011-2012 school year, conversion charter high schools again demonstrated the highest percentage of students exceeding the EOCT Math standard (25%), while start-up charter high schools had 49% of their students not meeting the math standard. Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 26 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report Figure 40: 2012 EOCT Math Performance, by performance levels Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 27 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report Appendix A - Definitions Charter Types referred to in this report 1. Conversion: a charter school that existed as a local public school prior to becoming a charter school. To apply as a conversion, a majority of the faculty and instructional staff members and a majority of parents or guardians of students enrolled in the petitioning school must vote by secret ballot to apply for a charter. 2. Start-up: a charter school created by a petition brought forth by private individuals, private organizations, or a state or local public entity. a. State-Chartered Special School: a charter school created as a special school operating under the terms of a charter between the charter petitioner and the State Board of Education (SBOE). Petitioners may apply to become a state chartered special school if their petition is first denied by a local board of education and they apply for state chartered special school status to the SBOE. Conversion charter school petitioners may not apply to be state chartered special schools. b. Charter Commission School: a charter school created as an independent school that operated under terms of a charter between the charter petitioner and the Georgia Charter Schools Commission. Petitioners applied to become a Charter Commission School if their petition was denied by a local board of education or if they drew students from five or more counties. The Commission ceased operations following the 2011-2012 school year following a decision by the Georgia Supreme Court. c. Locally Approved Start-up: a charter school operating under the terms of a charter between the charter petitioner and the local district. 3. Charter System: a local school district that operates under a charter between the district as the charter petitioner and the SBOE. Conversions, start-ups, and charter system schools are under the management and control of their local board and their charters are three-party contracts between the State Board of Education, the local board and the charter school's governing board. State chartered special schools manage themselves and are treated as LEAs (local education agencies). Commission Schools also managed themselves and were treated as LEAs; however, since the Commission disbanded no more Commission schools currently exist. Commission schools were either approved by their local districts, became State Chartered Special Schools or closed. Testing History In 2000, the State instituted the first year of the state assessment, the Criterion Referenced Competency Tests (CRCT), for grades four, six, and eight. Spring 2002 and 2004 marked the first operational administrations in all grades, which included English/Language Arts, Mathematics, and Reading in grades 1 through 8. Science and Social Studies are covered in grades 3 through 8. Academic Data Data on academic performance was extracted from the GaDOE data warehouse. In past reports, academic performance data from the Governor's Office of Student Achievement annual Report Card was used. However, at the time of initial production of this report, the Report Card had not yet been Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 28 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report finalized. Once that data is completed and published an update will be produce and attached to this report to ensure accuracy and transparency. Once that data become available on Georgia's public schools, readers will be able compare the charter school's achievement level to the local district and the State as well as to compare the charter school's rate of improvement to the local district and state. Further disaggregated data can be found for each charter school on the Governor's Office of Student Achievement website (www.gaosa.org). Progress Towards Goals and Financial Audit For locally-approved charter schools, information on academic goals and the financial audit was provided by each charter school. This report also contains information about the financial condition of each charter school, including whether each school had a surplus at the end of the reporting period and how much each school spent on facilities costs. Charter schools' progress towards the academic goals stated in their charters is important because, in conjunction with state and national accountability systems, charter schools are held accountable for meeting these goals. Acronyms Throughout the report, a number of acronyms appear. Among these are: AYP or Adequate Yearly Progress; CRCT or Criterion Reference Competency Test; GHSGT or Georgia High School Graduation Test; GaDOE or Georgia Department of Education; LEA or Local Educational Agency; SBOE or State Board of Education. Acknowledgements A special thank you from the Charter Schools Division to the following individuals and teams for contributing time and data to this report: State Board of Education Charter Schools Committee: Mr. Brian Burdette, Chair Mr. Kenneth Mason, Vice Chair Mr. Daniel Israel Dr. Grant Lewis Georgia Department of Education: Dr. Garry McGiboney, Associate Superintendent Policy, External Affairs and Charter Schools Mr. Dennis Kramer, Senior Research and Policy Analyst Policy Division Mr. Danny Ayoubi, Education Statistics Analyst Policy Division Charter Schools Division Contact Information Georgia Department of Education 2053 Twin Towers East 205 Jesse Hill Jr. Dr. SE Atlanta, Georgia 30334-5040 (404) 657-0515 (404) 657-6978 (Fax) Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 29 2011-2012 Georgia Charter Schools Annual Report Charter Schools Division Staff Ms. Jacqueline Clarke Dodd, Administrative Assistant Mr. Louis Erste, Director Ms. Morgan Felts, Program Manager Ms. Tracey Glen, Program Associate Mr. Terence Washington, Fiscal Analyst Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent December 31, 2012 Page 30