¹ÏÉñapp

Bringing The World Home To You

© 2025 ¹ÏÉñapp
120 Friday Center Dr
Chapel Hill, NC 27517
919.445.9150 | 800.962.9862
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
¹ÏÉñapp's American Graduate Project is part of a nationwide public media conversation about the dropout crisis. We'll explore the issue through news reports, call-in programs and a forum produced with UNC-TV. Also as a part of this project we've partnered with the Durham Nativity School and YO: Durham to found the ¹ÏÉñapp Youth Radio Club. These reports are part of American Graduate-Let’s Make it Happen!- a public media initiative to address the drop out crisis, supported by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and these generous funders: Project Funders:GlaxoSmithKlineThe Goodnight Educational FoundationJoseph M. Bryan Foundation State FarmThe Grable FoundationFarrington FoundationMore education stories from ¹ÏÉñapp

State School Board Adopts Policy For Cutting Newer Charters Some Slack

teacher in a blur with classroom
Bart Everson
/
Flickr/Creative Commons

The State Board of Education has approved that allows struggling charter schools to stay open if they are less than five years old.

Therequired the board to begin procedures to close any charter school that didn't meet certain standards for student performance. Charters had to have at least 60 percent of students rated proficient on state standardized tests and meet or exceed growth for at least two out of three consecutive years.

Now, if a struggling charter is less than five years old, the board can direct the school to come up with an improvement plan, rather than start the closing process.

Lee Teague with the calls the policy a step forward. He says new charter schools face greater challenges and need more time to get academic growth up to par.

"It's a struggle the first three years," Teague said.

Office of Charter Schools Director Adam Levinson said the new policy gives the board of education and the many options besides closure dealing with new and struggling charters.

"They could discuss any other type of agreement with the charter school," Levinson said.

Levinson said the new policy does not prohibit the board from closing new charters that are failing.

"Though the policy strongly suggests that the course of action for a school less than five years old be the strategic plan/implementation, the board would not be limited to following that course of action," Levinson wrote in an email.

The General Assembly directed the state board to create the policy in 2014.  It could allow two charters on academic notice to stay open: North East Carolina Preparatory in Tarboro, and Oxford Preparatory School.

Rep. Larry Hall (D-Durham), an outspoken critic of charter schools, denounced the new policy in an email. Hall said the policy tells charters "they can be even less responsive and even less responsible than they were before–despite many instances of proven financial impropriety and academic failure."

Around 30 of the state's charter schools have closed their doors since 2000 for academic, financial or governance problems. However, none of them would have been eligible to stay open under the newly created policy.

Jess is ¹ÏÉñapp's Fletcher Fellow for Education Policy Reporting. Her reporting focuses on how decisions made at the North Carolina General Assembly affect the state's students, families, teachers and communities.
Related Stories
More Stories