Charter Schools in the United States: The Question of Autonomy
- 1 December 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Educational Policy
- Vol. 9 (4) , 331-358
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0895904895009004001
Abstract
By the end of 1994, 11 states had passed legislation authorizing charter schools. Following the argument that charter schools need to be autonomous, self-governing organizations to enhance their potential for high performance, this study explores legislative conditions that promote charter school autonomy. The study applies a conceptual framework of autonomy to assess variations among state charter school policies. 7he results suggest that state policies offer different levels of autonomy and thus charter schools will vary in their ability to innovate and in their potential for high performance. Differences in autonomy across charter school laws appear to be related to state political cultures and to the state's history of decentralization reform.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Charter School Movement in California and ElsewhereEducation and Urban Society, 1995
- Political Culture and Policy in a State-Controlled Educational System: The Case of Educational Politics in Hawai'iEducational Administration Quarterly, 1994
- The Changing Politics of State Education Policy Making: A 20-Year Minnesota PerspectiveEducational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 1993
- Central Policies and Local Autonomy: the Case of WalesUrban Studies, 1993
- Autonomy in school provision: Meanings and implications — review essayEconomics of Education Review, 1992
- The Link between School Decentralization and School PoliticsUrban Education, 1991
- Autonomy and Liberal DemocracyThe Review of Politics, 1990
- Politics, Markets, and the Organization of SchoolsAmerican Political Science Review, 1988