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Sunday, March 25
by
deanmillot@mac.com
on Sun 25 Mar 2007 11:01 AM EDT
It is clear why the California School Boards Assiciation opposes the idea. It hopes to constrain competition with traditional public schools. San Diego has decided that charters are here to stay, and if it hopes to compete, it must focus on running traditional schools better. But why should we believe that multiple chartering authorities prompt a "race to the top" for quality, when in every other sphere of policy they generally start a race to the bottom? more »
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