The McEducation of Charter Students is a very impressive essay at NPR. It’s written by Natalie Hopkinson. Here’s an excerpt:

Public schools that enjoy certain socioeconomic privileges (and a minimal number of needy kids) are thriving and will continue to be left alone. But for the “failing” communities and students, there will be no public system. Instead they are required to navigate the education marketplace, choosing between neighborhood schools that have been creamed of their best students and the new experimental start-ups that on average perform worse than traditional public schools. “This strategy plays a shell game with low-performing students, moving them out and dispersing them, pretending they don’t exist,” Ravitch wrote.

I’m adding the article to The Best Posts & Articles Analyzing Charter Schools.