Indiana
Related: About this forumLegislation would dissolve IPS, four other school districts. Then charters take over
Indiana lawmakers have introduced a bill that would dissolve the states largest public school district.
House Bill 1136, authored by Rep. Jake Teshka (R-North Liberty), proposes converting 50 schools in the Indianapolis Public Schools district into charter schools due to enrollment shifts.
Four other school districts would also be disbanded under the legislation: Gary Community Schools, Tri-Township Consolidated Schools in LaPorte County, Union Schools southeast of Muncie, and Cannelton City Schools near the Kentucky border in Perry County.
The bill states that if more than 50% of students residing within a school districts boundaries were enrolled in schools not operated by the district as of Oct. 1 of the previous year, the district must be dissolved. School districts average daily enrollment is determined on that date annually.
If the bill is passed and signed into law by incoming Gov. Mike Braun, the process to dissolve all five school districts would begin in July. While Braun is a strong advocate for school choice and expanding options for private school attendance, he has not specifically emphasized charter schools in his agenda.
The legislation is drawing local and national attention, with parents and pundits taking to social media to voice alarm or praise, ahead of this week's start of the Indiana General Assembly's 2025 legislative session.
The bill, if approved, would require 68 public schools across the five districts to convert to charter schools by July 1, 2028, according to the bills fiscal impact report. Schools with the lowest scores on state assessments, such as ILEARN and IREAD-3, would transition first.
Continued at: https://www.wfyi.org/news/articles/indiana-house-bill-1136-disband-ips-gary-union-cannelton-tri-township-schools
Lovie777
(15,428 posts)and pocket the funding so how will Indiana in the long run fund charter schools?
Probably no education for the many, and forced to work with no benifits and low pay, while more open minded and caring states working with states like minded will work together and insure education and well paying jobs with benefits.
Emile
(31,295 posts)had to be closed because test scores were so low and received F ratings. Same thing will happen in these schools and maybe thats the best thing is for the state to see taking away from public schools doesnt help anything.
rurallib
(63,321 posts)What kind of a. system do they have now?
Emile
(31,295 posts)had set up a few charter schools in problem areas with poor test scores. The charter schools showed no impact and so they ended up closing and the funding went back to public schools.