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Reporting on the state of education in your community and across the country.

Study Says Ohio Pupils Not Hurt by Switching Schools

The growth of charter schools has caused the closing of both traditional public schools and failing charters.

A new study has found that closing schools in Ohio can be a good thing. A report from the non-profit Thomas B. Fordham Institute finds students generally do better in math and reading when they move to new schools. Investigators from Ohio State and the University of Oklahoma followed some 23,000 students in Ohio’s 8 large urban districts and 200 shuttered schools.  

 

The kids moved to new schools after their traditional public schools or underperforming charter schools closed.  The researchers wanted to know if the upheaval of moving to a new school with new peers and routines could hurt a student’s performance. Fordham’s research director Aaron Churchill the study examined reading and math scores over a number of years “If one student is at the 20th percentile you’d expect them to be about the 20th percentile the next year.  But you want to look at whether they’d make any incremental gains over time in terms of how they compare against their peers statewide.” They found that pupils from traditional public schools improved in reading by the equivalent of 49 extra days of learning and in math by an extra 34 days. Kids from charter schools gained about the same in math but saw little gains in Reading. Almost all the district students moved to other district schools but only half of the charter students went to another charter school. Churchill said one downside was that schools that absorbed kids from a closed school sometimes saw their average scores go down slightly. “I think that’s the big takeaway is that closures of low-performing schools can benefit kids.  The 2nd takeaway is that it has to also be done thoughtfully and judiciously.” The Fordham Institute advocates for school choice and is a sponsor of 11 charter schools around the state.