Princeton, New Jersey Public Schools
This captivating story is told by Chiara Nappi, one of the parents who took part in the struggle for rigorous academic standards in the public schools of Princeton. Why Charter Schools? is an abridged version of a book she is writing. Dr. Nappi is a theoretical physicist at the Institute for Advanced Study. (During the 1999-2000 school year she is a visiting professor at the University of Southern California.) Disappointed by what she encountered in the public schools attended by her children, Dr. Nappi ran for a seat on the school board. She was elected and served on the Board of Education of the Princeton Regional Schools from 1993 to 1996. She later enrolled her youngest child in the Princeton Charter School. (Her other two children were already in high school and thus could not attend.) The story she tells in Why Charter Schools? The Princeton Story is a first-hand look at the obstacles that make education reform so difficult, even-one might say especially-in the most highly regarded of public school systems. Readers wishing to contact Dr. Nappi directly may write to her at the Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0484 or send e-mail to nappi@physics.usc.edu.
The Thomas B. Fordham Foundation is a private foundation that supports research, publications, and action projects in elementary/secondary education reform at the national level and in the Dayton area. Further information can be obtained from our web site ( http://www.edexcellence.net ) or by writing us at 1627 K St., NW, Suite 600, Washington, DC 20006. (We can also be e-mailed through our web site.) This report is available in full on the Foundation's web site ( http://www.edexcellence.net/library/wcs/wcs.html ), and hard copies can be obtained by calling 1-888-TBF-7474 (single copies are free). The Foundation is neither connected with nor sponsored by Fordham University.
Chester E. Finn, Jr., President
Thomas B. Fordham Foundation
Washington, DC
October 1999
The story of the Princeton Charter School is the story of a long struggle with a happy ending. It is the tale of a community that was divided over what a good school is and does. The divisions were deep and could not be bridged by compromise or through local politics, but the charter school law passed by New Jersey in 1996 offered a solution-and a lesson: that sometimes the only way to satisfy groups that strongly disagree is to offer more than one choice.
The public schools of Princeton, New Jersey have long enjoyed an outstanding reputation, yet not all Princeton parents in the mid-1990s felt that the reputation was deserved. Some were dismayed to find that the schools lacked clear standards for what students should learn. Parents who expected the schools to have a sequential and systematic curriculum were constantly frustrated by their encounters with teachers. Fads such as "creative spelling" seemed to have penetrated many classrooms. While students from privileged backgrounds still succeeded in school, less fortunate students struggled.
A group of parents who wanted challenging standards and clearly-stated expectations attempted to reform the schools, but these "curriculumists" became locked in battle with "minority advocates." The latter, while not members of minority groups themselves, argued that the rigorous, structured academic program sought by the "curriculumists" would not suit all children, particularly not minorities.
Every attempt the "curriculumists" made to change the system from within was thwarted, not only by opposition from "minority advocates" but also from the "education establishment", especially the local teachers' union. Teachers rejected the demands of the reform-minded parents as unwarranted intrusions into the purview of professionals. In an attempt to bring about the reforms they favored through local control of public schools, the "curriculumists" managed to gain a majority on the school board. Yet this majority was unable to effect the desired changes. Teachers refused to accede to the board's wishes, arguing that the reforms the board was calling for would undermine teacher morale.
Some parents became convinced that the only way to resolve this dispute-and find the kind of education they wanted for their children-was to create their own new school, a charter school embodying the educational philosophy of the "curriculumists". In January 1997, a group of them received a charter from the state to start a school that would provide a rigorous and challenging education for all its students. Although termed elitist by its critics, the Princeton Charter School attracted applications from one out of every four eligible youngsters in the district, including many from minority backgrounds. The school opened in September 1997, and its test scores and parental satisfaction have since surpassed all expectations. What is more, in response to this challenge-and the new competition-the local public schools have begun to make their curriculum more rigorous.
The theory behind local control of public education is that the schools should reflect a community's own vision of the education best suited to its children. But what happens when a community is deeply divided? What happens when compromise is not feasible? Charter schools offer a new kind of local control; instead of forcing all groups in town to accept a single sort of school, they allow a multiplicity of communities to form around shared visions of what a good school can be and what sort of education is best for children.
You can call for a free copy of the full report (1-888-TBF-7474), or read it on the web at: http://www.edexcellence.net/library/wcs/wcs.html