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Ripples of Innovation

Charter Schooling in Minnesota, the Nation's First Charter School State
by
Jon Schroeder

Executive Summary

This report traces the origins, evolution and impact of Minnesota's pioneering charter school law -- on its own schools, students, and communities and on the development of charter laws in many other states. It notes that, unlike what is now happening elsewhere, new schools are now being chartered at an accelerating pace in Minnesota. And because Minnesota has been chartering schools for more than a decade, the report found that many fundamental pieces of the infrastructure needed to maintain and accelerate that expansion are now in place.

This is happening at a time when Minnesota faces several critical challenges, including huge gaps in achievement levels and graduation rates among different demographic groups in an increasingly diverse school-age population. Those gaps will become even more evident under the testing and reporting requirements of the federal No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) of 2001. In addition, like most states, Minnesota faces tight budgets and strong resistance to authorizing new spending -- creating heightened competition for available resources and intense resistance to creating new public schools from established interests intent on protecting the status quo.

Minnesota's charter school movement has experience, assets, and new perspectives it can draw upon to overcome this resistance and help give leadership to a new generation of policy initiatives and ideas -- not just in Minnesota, but elsewhere in the country as well. Minnesota's next generation of national leadership on charter schools and chartering can draw upon:


This report also makes seven broad recommendations -- addressed to Minnesota's education and public policy leadership. Although each state is different, these recommendations include important lessons that are just as relevant for policy discussions now going on in other states. They include:

This is not an agenda for the complacent or faint of heart. Nor is this a time to presume Minnesota's historic education policy leadership and innovation can run on past success -- or even on current momentum. Maintaining Minnesota's historic position of leadership -- and meeting the state's new educational challenges and opportunities -- now requires moving chartering to a new level as a proactive strategy for changing and improving public education.

Thirteen years ago this spring, Minnesotans made a huge contribution to addressing their own and the nation's educational challenges by passing America's first charter school law. Minnesota's education and policy leaders have a new obligation in 2004 -- to make sure the revolution they began in 1991 is retooled and reinvigorated, to address challenges that now face us as a state and nation, and to realize exciting new opportunities that now lie ahead.

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Download the complete text of this report (PDF). Adobe Acrobat Reader required.
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This policy report was made possible through a generous grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to the 21st Century Schools Project of the Progressive Policy Institute.

Jon Schroeder is coordinator of Education/Evolving, a joint venture of the Center for Policy Studies and Hamline University, both in St. Paul, Minn. For more biographical information, see the PDF version of this report.


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