Last night, Virginia’s
Albemarle County School Board unanimously approved the opening of a new charter
school, an arts-infused middle school.What makes this decision an historic first for Virginia public education
is that it is the first “true” charter school to open in the state – led by
community leaders who developed the plan on their own and brought it to the
school board who approved it.
Students in grades 5-8 can attend the CommunityPublicCharterSchool
free of charge starting in Fall of 2008.It will offer both a smaller learning environment and different
approaches to learning designed to meet the needs of at-risk children.
Virginia’s
General Assembly overhauled the state’s charter school laws in 2004.At the time, leaders expressed their hope
that the changes would lead to an increase in the number of high quality
charter school applications being submitted around the state.Prior the Albemarle
decision, Virginia’s
other charter schools had all been opened and operated, with varying autonomy,
by their school districts to meet the needs of students considered to be
at-risk.
“We have to remember that creating charter schools is really
about improving the lives of everyday, real people,” said the new law’s author,
Delegate Scott Lingamfelter.“I
sponsored the Charter School Excellence and Accountability Act to make it
possible for families to have greater educational options for their children at
no additional cost to the taxpayers.”
Virginia
now has 4 charter schools, down from 8 in 2004.Charter schools are public schools granted flexibility and autonomy from
regulations and operations in traditional public schools, in exchange for
meeting agreed-upon standards for students’ academic performance.
Nationwide, over one million students are enrolled in over
3,500 charter schools in 40 states.Virginia’s charter
school law, which gives local school boards sole authority to approve charter
schools, is considered weak compared with other states that allow multiple
chartering authorities.
But since the changes to the law in 2004, there has been a
marked increase in the number and strength of charter school applications
submitted around the state, in such locations as Richmond,
Norfolk, and LoudounCounty.
The school’s leaders, Bobbi Snow and Sandy Richardson, began
their project 3 years ago.Both are
experienced public school teachers and administrators.In 2005, they received an important stamp of
approval in the form of a startup grant from the U.S. Department of Education.
“Ms. Snow, Ms. Richardson, and the Albemarle School Board
have helped us show what good things can happen if we give innovation and
change a chance,” added Delegate Lingamfelter.