THE STATE
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT / THE UNIVERSITY
OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK / ALBANY, NY 12234 |
TO: |
EMSC-VESID
Committee |
FROM: |
James A. Kadamus |
SUBJECT: |
Charter School Applications |
DATE: |
September 27, 2005 |
STRATEGIC
GOAL: |
Goals 1 and 2 |
AUTHORIZATION(S): |
|
Issue for Decision
Should the Regents approve two proposed charters submitted by the SUNY Board of Trustees?
Required by State statute, Education Law 2852.
Proposed Handling
This question will come before the EMSC-VESID Committee on October 6, 2005 for action. It will then come before the full Board for final action on October 7, 2005.
Procedural History
Under the New York Charter Schools Act of 1998, the Board of Regents is authorized to make recommendations on proposed charters submitted by another charter entity. Upon receipt of a proposed charter submitted by a charter entity, the Board of Regents shall review such proposed charter in accordance with the standards set forth in the Charter Schools Act. The Board of Regents shall either (a) approve and issue the charter as proposed by the charter entity or (b) return the proposed charter to the charter entity for reconsideration with the written comments and recommendations of the Board of Regents. If the Board of Regents fails to act on such proposed charter within 60 days of its submission, the proposed charter shall be deemed to have been approved and issued by the Board of Regents at the expiration of such period.
Background Information
We have received two proposed charters from the SUNY Board of Trustees that will be presented to you at your October meeting. The proposed charters are for the following:
·
Albany Community Charter
School, Albany City School District
·
Leadership Preparatory
Charter School, New York City Community School District 16/Region 8
The Board of Trustees of the State University of New York (“Trustees”) approved the application for the Albany Community Charter School (“the school”) and submitted a proposed charter to the Board of Regents in August 2005. The school would be located in the City School District of Albany. It would serve 104 students in grades K-1, and it has no management company. By its fifth year, the school will serve 338 students in grades K-4. The school will be strongly influenced by the Community Day Charter Public School in Massachusetts; it will receive support from Community Partners, Inc., a consulting group that will not be involved in management of the school but will provide consultation on curricula, governance, professional development, and leadership training and support.
The Board of Trustees of the State University of New York (“Trustees”)
approved the application for the Leadership Preparatory Charter School (“the
school”) and submitted a proposed charter to the Board of Regents in August
2005.
The school would be located in New York City Community School District
16. It would serve 128 students in
grades K-1, and it has no management company. By its fifth year, the school will serve
320 students in grades K-4. The
school will use 2005-2006 as a planning year and begin operations in August of
2006. The school, if renewed, would
apply to change the grade configuration to K-8.
The following table summarizes the number of
new charters that may still be issued by charter entities in New
York:
Charter
Entity |
SUNY Trustees |
All Other Charter
Entities |
|
Remaining against statutory
ceiling |
8 |
10 |
|
The New York City Chancellor has also
approved eight conversion charter schools and the Buffalo City School District
has approved one conversion school, all of which do not count against the
statutory ceiling.
Recommendation
VOTED: That the Board of Regents return the proposed charter for the Albany Community Charter School, Albany, to the Trustees of the State University of New York for reconsideration.
VOTED: That the Board of Regents return the proposed charter for the Leadership Preparatory Charter School, New York City Community School District 16, Region 8, to the Trustees of the State University of New York for reconsideration.
Timetable for Implementation
The Regents action will become effective on October 7, 2005.
New York State Education
Department
Summary of Proposed Charter
Address:
To be determined
Applicant(s):
Melissa Jarvis-Cedeno
Anticipated Opening Date: September 5, 2006
District of Location:
City School District of Albany
Charter Entity: SUNY Board of
Trustees
Institutional Partner(s): Community Partners,
Inc.
Management Partner(s): None
Grades Served: K-1 (K-4)
Projected Enrollment: 104 (338)
Ms. Jarvis-Cedeno is a school administrator,
a parent, and a resident of Albany.
·
Albany
Community Charter School (“the school”) aims to be a small, financially viable
school that will maximize the skills and knowledge students need to succeed in
life.
·
Although the
school has set no preference for at-risk students, it expects to attract
economically disadvantaged or minority children.
·
The school
will be modeled after Community Day Charter Public School in Lawrence,
Massachusetts.
·
The school’s
principal will spend several months of the 2005-06 school year at the Community
Day Charter Public School, experiencing intensive immersion in its
administration, curriculum, classroom activities, and overall
operations.
·
The school
will partner with Community Partners, Inc. for application consultation;
curriculum, standards, and academic support; and other areas. Community Partners will not have a
management relationship with the school.
·
Key design
elements of the school include a relentless focus on attaining standards through
the use of curriculum mapping for each benchmark for every grade level subject,
assignment of approximate time for each, and a comprehensive in-school
assessment system.
·
The school
will establish a strong school culture, including Black Board Configuration
(BBC), which is a way of focusing every lesson at the outset by identifying aims
and activities.
·
The school
will feature a Wall of Fame for highlighting academic accomplishments of
individual students.
·
The school
will teach character development.
·
The school
will have a longer school day and year.
·
The school
will administer weekly assessments and will make decisions informed by data,
including the use of Individual Action Plans for students who are below
proficiency.
·
The school
will provide two instructors per class, a lead teacher and an assistant
teacher.
·
The school
will establish a parent council to advise the Board of
Trustees.
·
The school
will make provision for up to three weeks of professional development annually
for its teachers.
·
Curricula
provided in the proposed charter are not aligned with the State learning
standards.
·
Curricula
provided in the proposed charter are incomplete, with missing subjects and
missing grade levels within subjects.
·
The proposed
school’s daily schedule does not reflect all subjects.
·
The proposed
charter does not describe the processes the school will follow to ensure that
teachers will participate in IEP meetings.
Child Find provisions and IDEA reporting requirements will be observed,
and parents will be kept informed of their children’s progress in meeting their
IEP goals.
·
The school
will have between 5 and 15 members on its Board of
Trustees.
·
Initially, the
school will have 10 members on its Board of Trustees (including one parent, yet
to be named).
·
At least one
seat on the Board of Trustees will be reserved for a parent of a child attending
the school.
·
The Board of
Trustees will appoint a principal, who will be assisted by a Dean of Students
and a business manager.
·
The school
will commence instruction with up to 104 students in grades K-1, including
approximately 50 kindergarten students and 50 first grade
students.
·
The school
plans to add one grade per year until it reaches a maximum of 338 students in
grades K-4 by the 2009-10 school year.
·
In its second
year of operation, the school will expand its kindergarten from 50 to 66
students.
·
Maximum class
size will not exceed 26 students; the school plans for two instructors per
classroom.
·
The school
will implement a uniform dress code policy.
·
In the first
operational year of the school, 2006-07, its projected impact will be
approximately $1.0 million, or about six-tenths of a percent of the district’s
budget.
·
The impact is
anticipated to increase by four-tenths of a percent in each subsequent year of
the school’s charter.
on the Albany
City School District
2005-2010
Charter
School |
Percent
Impact |
| ||||||||||
|
|
2005-06 |
2006-07 |
2007-08 |
2008-09 |
2009-10 | ||||||
Achievement
Academy C S |
0.45 |
0.87 |
1.28 |
1.68 |
1.65 |
| ||||||
Albany Community C S |
0.00 |
0.61 |
1.04 |
1.46 |
1.86 |
| ||||||
Albany
Preparatory C S |
0.59 |
1.16 |
1.71 |
2.24 |
2.20 |
| ||||||
Brighter
Choice – Boys C S |
0.71 |
0.84 |
0.83 |
0.81 |
0.79 |
| ||||||
Brighter
Choice – Girls C S |
0.71 |
0.84 |
0.83 |
0.81 |
0.79 |
| ||||||
Henry Johnson C
S |
0.00 |
0.73 |
1.14 |
1.54 |
1.93 |
| ||||||
KIPP Tech
Valley C S |
0.53 |
1.05 |
1.54 |
2.02 |
1.98 |
| ||||||
New Covenant
C S |
5.49 |
5.43 |
5.32 |
5.22 |
5.12 |
| ||||||
Totals |
8.48 |
11.55 |
13.71 |
15.80 |
16.34 |
| ||||||
Caution: the per pupil payment could increase or
even decrease yearly, affecting the potential impact. Predictions also cannot be made for
charter schools beyond the final year of their charters, so the potential impact
beyond the 2005-06 school year is even less certain.
·
The Albany
Community Charter School will have 12 FTE instructional staff in its first year
of operation, including 4 classroom teachers, 4 assistant teachers, 2 specialty
teachers, and 2 special education teachers (including a
coordinator).
·
The number of
instructional staff will increase from 12 to 32 over the span of the
charter.
·
The school
staff will initially include a principal (already hired), a Dean of Students, an
administrative assistant (or assistants), a business manager and an office
manager, a total of 4 FTE administrative staff, a number which will remain
constant during the term of the charter.
·
The number of
assistant teachers will increase from 4 in the school’s first year of operation
to 13 in the last year of its charter.
·
Specialty
teachers and special education teachers will increase from two to three over the
term of the charter.
Community
Support
·
The applicants
have provided evidence in the form of survey responses from the parents of 195
students who would be eligible for grades K or 1 in 2006-07 indicating their
desire to submit applications for their children’s admission to the Albany
Community Charter School.
·
Such evidence
would exceed the standard for adequate community support.
·
The applicants
have surveyed Albany residents and received signatures in support of the Albany
Community Charter School from over 1,600 residents.
·
The City
School District of Albany has written with their objections to the proposed
charter school, chief of which is the increase in fiscal impact on a district in
which the impact is already well above five percent.
Recommendation
Return the proposed charter to the Trustees of the State University of New York for reconsideration.
Reasons for Recommendation
The proposed charter does not meet all of the criteria for general acceptance, and the projected increase in fiscal impact would be too great a burden for the district of location.
New York State
Education Department
Summary of
Proposed Charter
Name of Proposed
Charter School: Leadership Preparatory Charter School
(LPCS)
Address: To be determined. The applicant is seeking a facility, in
collaboration with the New York City Department of Education, in Region 8,
District 16 (the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood in
Brooklyn).
Applicant(s):
Max Koltuv, Carrie Abramson, Candis Best,
Gail Brousal, Caroline R. Curry, Ben Esner, Steve Meacham, Jeff
Wetzler
Anticipated
Opening Date: August 21, 2006
District of
Location: New York City CSD 16/Region
8
Institutional
Partner: None
Management
Partner: None
Grades
Served: K-1 (K-4)
Projected Enrollment: 128 (320)
Applicant(s)
The lead applicant, Max Koltuv, is a fellow of Building Excellent
Schools, a Boston-based not-for-profit organization, which is “focused on
improving elementary and secondary education by providing support for designing,
launching and sustaining charter schools.”
Mr. Koltuv was a Planning Team Coordinator of New Visions’ World Academy
for Total Community Health (WATCH) High School in Brooklyn during 2003. The applicant worked as a strategic
consultant for the Monitor Company in Cambridge, Massachusetts and is a former
sixth grade teacher at Community Day Charter School in Lawrence,
Massachusetts. During his
fellowship, the lead applicant conducted site visits to several charter schools,
including Amistad Academy (New Haven, CT), North Star Academy (Newark, NJ), The
Marva Collins Preparatory Charter School (Milwaukee, WI) and PS 141, The Crown
School (Brooklyn, NY). Mr. Koltuv
will serve as the Head of School and an ex officio member of the Board of
Trustees. Mr. Koltuv is a graduate
of Yale University and a member of Phi Beta Kappa.
Carrie Abramson is a Manager of Strategy for the Robin Hood Foundation, a
former Engagement Manager for McKinsey and Company, and a former analyst in
investment banking and government and regulatory affairs for Morgan Stanley and
Co. Ms. Abramson holds an MBA from
Stanford University.
Candis Best is the Network Chief Operating Officer/Chief Information
Officer for the New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation. Ms. Best holds a JD from Villanova
University, an MBA from Adelphi University and a doctorate from SUNY Stony Brook
in Social Welfare Research and Policy Development.
Gail Brousal is the Head of High School at Saint Ann’s School in
Brooklyn. Ms. Brousal is a former
teacher of basic English classes to pre-GED students and of fifth grade language
arts. The applicant holds an MPA
from New York University and a BA from Saint Francis College.
Caroline B. Curry is the Managing Director of Eagle Capital Management,
LLP. The applicant is a former
equities analyst for Elm Ridge Capital and Goldman, Sachs and Co. Ms. Curry holds an MBA from the Wharton
School of Business and a Bachelor’s Degree from Swarthmore College.
Ben Esner is the Deputy Director of the Independence Community
Foundation. He is a former Vice
President of Renee Sacks Associates, Inc.
The applicant is a former Chief of Staff for the New York City Department
of Environmental Protection.
Mr. Esner presently serves as Vice-President on the Board of Directors
for the Bedford-Stuyvesant Restoration Corporation. The applicant earned a Bachelor of Arts
degree from the University of Michigan.
Steve Meacham works in the Office of General Counsel for the New York
City Department of Housing Preservation.
The applicant is also the Program Director for Saturday SAT Prep and
Honors at Discovery High School in the Bronx. He is the former program director of the
SAT Prep program at Brooklyn’s Bishop Loughlin High School. Mr. Meacham is a graduate of Harvard Law
School and the University of Massachusetts.
Jeff Wetzler is a Senior Team Leader for the Monitor Group. Mr. Wetzler is a graduate of Brown
University. The applicant is a
doctoral candidate at Columbia University pursuing a degree in Adult Learning
and Leadership.
Institutional
Partner
None.
Management
Partner(s)
None.
Curriculum/Assessment/Instruction
§
The mission of
the Leadership Preparatory Charter School (LPCS) is to prepare students to excel
in demanding, college-prep high schools by fostering unparalleled academic
success in elementary and middle school.
§
The educational
philosophy, or core programmatic elements, of LPCS is a mixture of values that
include expecting excellence, recruiting and retaining excellent teachers,
issuing ongoing assessments, focusing on literacy, using research-based
curricula, and promoting character development and parental
involvement.
§
The school will
focus on literacy and provide 200 minutes of instruction every day in
kindergarten through grade three and 100 minutes per day thereafter. A balanced literacy approach with a
significant focus on phonics using Open Court Reading and SRA Reading Mastery
will be used.
§
The school will
also use the Waterford Early Literacy Program, a computer-based literacy tool,
which will enable teacher-led reading groups of 10
students.
§
LPCS will
utilize a guided reading program such as Scholastic Guided Reading or Junior
Great Books; Worldly Wise 3000 will be used to build
vocabulary.
§
For mathematics
instruction, the school will use the Saxon Math Program curriculum as its
fundamental program. Teachers will
also develop curriculum for higher level problem-solving skills during the
summer professional development session.
§
For science
instruction, social studies, music and art, the proposed school will utilize the
Core Knowledge Sequence.
§
The school will
provide instruction in health, physical education and consumer sciences.
§
The school
excluded curriculum and performance standards for the following subjects:
Languages Other Than English (LOTE); Health, Physical Education, Family and
Consumer Sciences; Technology; the Arts;and Career Development and Occupational
Studies (CDOS).
§
LPCS will
administer all assessments required by New York State and the No Child Left
Behind Act. The school will
administer nationally-normed exams in ELA and math, beginning in first
grade. The school will gather and
report value-added data assessments in Year 5 of the charter based on the
performance of first grade students tested during Year 2.
§
DIBELS or
E-CLASS assessments will be administered to determine performance by
students. LPCS will also administer
the TerraNova series.
§
LPCS will create
internal comprehensive assessments and request external teachers and reviewers
to independently verify, on a pro bono basis, the accuracy, validity, and
alignment of the assessments to New York State tests.
§
The school’s
academic day will begin at 7:35 on Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday. Monday through Friday the school day
concludes at 3:45 p.m. On
Wednesday, dismissal is at 1:35 p.m.
The Saturday program runs from 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
§
The school will
provide tutoring, Homework Club (for students failing to complete assignments of
the previous day) and additional support services from 3:45 until 5:00
p.m.
§
The school
proposes to assign 30 minutes of homework each night to students in kindergarten
through grade 2. In third grade,
students will receive 60 minutes of assignments.
§
The school
calendar provides 27 days for professional development throughout the
year.
§
Wednesday
afternoons, following the early student dismissal, will be dedicated to
professional development.
§
The school
proposes a 193-day school year.
§
The average
class size will be 16.
Governance
§
LPCS proposes to
govern this school with a Board of Trustees charged with oversight for financial
and management decisions.
§
The Head of
School will serve as a non-voting ex-officio member of the board.
§
The Board does
not exceed the State Education Department requirement that no more than forty
(40) percent of the members be affiliated with another
organization.
§
Qualifications
for Board members include experience in financial, legal, business, fundraising,
management, governance, real estate development or education.
§
The Board shall
include an Academic Achievement Committee, a Governance Committee and a Finance
Committee.
§
The initial
Board of Trustees consists of 12 members.
The Board consists of 11 voting members.
§
The minimum
number of Board members is 9. The
maximum number is 17.
Students
§
The proposed
charter school will begin with a planning year. At full enrollment in Year 2, LPCS will
serve 64 students in kindergarten and grade 1. In Years 3 through 5, the school will
add 64 students to the incoming kindergarten class.
§
In Year 3, the
school will serve 192 students. In
Year 4, the school will serve 256 students. In Year 5, the school will serve 320
students.
§
The school has
assumed an attrition rate of seven percent in its fiscal and enrollment
plans. Under this scenario, the
school anticipates serving 128, 188, 243, and 294 students in Years 2 through 5,
respectively.
§
LPCS’ philosophy
of serving students with disabilities is, “to minimize the impact of
disabilities and maximize the opportunity for learning.” The school will hire a full-time Special
Education certified Learning Support Coordinator during Year 1 of
operation.
§
The school has
provided a statement of assurances concerning services to students with
disabilities.
§
LPCS’ approach
to the education of English Language Learners (ELL) will be structured
immersion.
§
All oral and
written communication to families of students identified as ELL students will be
translated into the family’s native language to the extent possible.
§
Additional
support for ELL students may include modified English language instruction,
pull-out intensive tutoring in English, push-in services by a teacher or aide
fluent in the native language of the student, home visits by a staff member who
speaks the language of the student and other support
services.
Budget/Facilities
§
The school
anticipates a $150,000 Federal PCSP Grant, a $90,000 New York City Operations
grant, $70,000 from the New York City Center for Charter School Excellence and
$70,000 in private donations.
§
The proposed
charter school anticipates receiving space in a New York City Department of
Education (NYCDOE) school. The school has budgeted a charge of
$6/sq. ft. for NYCDOE space based on fees charged to other charter schools. The budget reserves $60,000 for
rent. LPCS budgeted $10,000
for maintenance and construction and $4,000 for maintenance.
§
The budget
provides for teachers to be paid at the following rates: Master Teachers -
$51,000; Teachers ($46,000); Learning Support Coordinator ($51,000); Specialty
Teachers ($46,000). $3,000 will be
paid to as many as four teachers electing to teach the Saturday Academy. $25,000 has been budgeted for the
services of a part-time development specialist to assist the Head of School in
fundraising efforts.
§
The proposed
charter school is engaged in conversations with NYCDOE to secure a
facility.
Personnel
§
During its
planning year, the school will hire, on a part-time basis, the Head of School,
the school principal, a business manager and an office manager.
§
In Year 2, the
school will add four Master Teachers, four teachers, one specialty teacher, one
Learning Support Coordinator (special education certified), and a Dean of
Students.
§
In Year 3, the
school will add two Master Teachers, two teachers, and a .5 FTE specialty
teacher.
§
In Year 4, the
school will add two Master Teachers, two teachers, and a .5 FTE specialty
teacher.
§
In Year 5, the
school will add two Master Teachers, two teachers, a specialty teacher, and a
second Dean of Students.
§
The school will
contract for the services of a nurse.
§
The proposed
Head of School is Max Koltuv.
Fiscal
Impact
§
When fully
enrolled with 320 students, the charter school will receive no more than 0.017%
of the New York City Department of Education budget (See Potential Fiscal Impact
Chart).
§
The school’s
first-year anticipated budget total is $0 due to the use of Year 1 as a planning
year. The start-up budget is for
$327,706. The applicant anticipates
a budget surplus of more than $17,000 entering the first year of the
charter.
§
Programmatic and
fiscal audits will comply with all requirements made of public schools. The school will employ a New York State
licensed public accountant or certified public accountant to perform the fiscal
audit. In addition, the school will
ensure that the audit is conducted in accordance with GAAP issued by the U.S.
Comptroller General.
Potential Fiscal
Impact of
Leadership Prep
Charter School
School
Year |
Number of
Students |
Projected
School Payment |
Projected
Impact |
2005-2006 |
0 |
$
0 |
0.0000% |
2006-2007 |
128 |
$
1,312,627 |
0.008% |
2007-2008 |
192 |
$
1,943,410 |
0.012% |
2008-2009 |
256 |
$
2,572,763 |
0.016% |
2009-2010 |
320 |
$
2,940,350 |
0.017% |
* Assumes a 3
percent annual increase in the district’s budget from a 2003-2004 base
allocation of $13.8 billion, and a 4.5 percent annual increase in the average
expense per pupil per year from the 2004-2005 final average expense per pupil of
$8,586.
Community
Support
§
More than 280
signatures from parents were collected on the Parent Petition of Support.
§
The school has
received letters of support from over 35 community-based organizations and/or
elected officials serving the educational, cultural, business and political
interests of central Brooklyn.
§
Several
community organizations have pledged to support LPCS is recruiting parents and
conducting outreach.
Recommendation
Return the
proposed charter to the Trustees of the State University of New York for
reconsideration.
Reasons For
Recommendation
The proposed
charter does not include each of the 11 subjects and 28 performance standards
required by the Board of Regents.
The subjects excluded from the application are Languages Other Than
English (LOTE); Health, Physical Education, Family and Consumer Sciences;
Technology; the Arts; and Career Development and Occupational Studies
(CDOS).