Education board OK's 3 charter schools
By Suzanne Sataline, Globe Correspondent, 2/25/2004
Three Commonwealth charter schools that hope to lure students from
Cambridge, Lynn, and the Marlborough area were approved yesterday by the state
Board of Education.
The approval followed weeks of letters, phone calls, and stormy public
hearings in which residents criticized the proposals as a threat to the fiscal
stability of their public schools.
Approved were the Advanced Math and Science Academy Charter School, a
rigorous math and science program for grades 6 through 12 slated for the
Marlborough region; Community Charter School of Cambridge, a 7th-through-12th
grade school with a high-tech and community service focus; and KIPP Academy
Lynn Charter School, geared toward putting middle-school students on a college
track.
The Lynn school, said Commissioner David P. Driscoll, should be open next
fall while the others must address curriculum and enrollment issues and will
not be ready until 2005.
Board member Roberta R. Schaefer said she was convinced of the need for a
rigorous high school in the Marlborough area after receiving letters from
students lacking grammatical skills. One letter she released contains no
punctuation at all. "I don't think it should be gone through with if it does
get excepted Marlboro High School will lose money it doesn't have," the letter
said.
"If I didn't think this charter was necessary, this [letter] would have
convinced me that [Marlborough] schools are not doing an adequate job of
teaching English language arts," Schaefer said.
Rose Marie Boniface, Marlborough school superintendent, denied that
students had been pushed to write letters.
The lone board member to vote against all three proposed charter schools
was Jeff DeFlavio, a Belmont High School senior and member of the Student
Advisory Council. "There's the fiscal crisis, which makes it inappropriate to
impose a charter school on a community," DeFlavio said.
Local school officials and teachers said they are concerned that the new
schools will drain thousands of dollars from public schools, which lose money
with each child who transfers to a charter school. Officials in Marlborough
and Lynn said a new charter school could lead to further cuts in districts
that have already suffered severe teaching losses.
A Cambridge teachers' union official said it would start advertising the
strengths and successes of Cambridge Rindge & Latin High School to keep
students there, and officials in and around Marlborough are exploring filing a
lawsuit to block the new school.
Opponents charge that the proposal to create the Marlborough school was
changed after the public comment period, when founder Julia Sigalovsky told
state officials that she did not intend to "track" students, but to "group"
them according to their abilities.
Residents were never able to comment on those changes, said Sheldon Berman,
superintendent of schools in Hudson. "This final proposal did not receive
public review," Berman said. "To create an elitist academy is antithetical to
the role of public education."
State education officials said the proposal did not change, but was
supplemented by Sigalovsky's comments.
James Peyser, the board's chairman, recused himself from voting on the
Cambridge and Lynn proposals. Peyser said that an organization in which he is
a partner, NewSchools Venture Fund, gave a grant to High Tech High, which will
be working with the Cambridge charter school. Peyser also said he will be
serving on another board with the head of the KIPP charter school.
Charter school opponents have repeatedly questioned whether it was ethical
for Peyser to vote on charter school applications while he was working to
promote and fund charter schools. He said he has been cleared by the state
Ethics Commission.
Suzanne Sataline can be reached at sataline@globe.com.
This story ran on page B4 of the Boston Globe on 2/25/2004.
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2003 Globe Newspaper Company.