CHARTER SCHOOL'S BOARD BACKS CLOSURE BY JUNE: OFFICIALS BLAME DECLINING ENROLLMENT, BUT PARENTS MAY FIGHT THE DECISION, January 7, 2009, The Denver Post.
A troubled charter school that survived an effort last year by Denver's school board to shut it down now has been closed by its own governing board.
The board of Denver Arts and Technology Academy, a charter school in northwest Denver that offers kindergarten through eighth grade, voted Dec. 19 to close the school by June 30…
A group of parents and the school's for-profit management company are fighting the board's decision, hoping to overturn the closure vote and keep the school open.
Known as DATA, the school is in a 5-year-old building and operating at half-capacity with 300 students, down from 450 students the year before.
School officials say parents removed children from the school after Denver's school board in February voted 4-3 to revoke the charter and close the school because of ongoing academic problems.
That decision was overturned, and the district placed the school on a two-year probation…
DATA officials say declining enrollment has cost the school about $1.5 million this year. The school is still paying for the $8.5 million school building erected in 2003. The school also gives 16.5 percent of its state funds to its for-profit management company, Mosaica Education Inc…
And just a little less than one year before…
DENVER ARTS CHARTER SCHOOL SHUTTERED: DPS SLAMS DOOR ON DATA, February 22, 2008, The Denver Channel, ABC 7 news.
DENVER -- The Denver Arts and Technology Academy lost the battle to continue as a charter school, as the school board voted Thursday to close it…
"In this case, I think we found that their growth was not high enough and certainly their performance has not met our expectations," said Michelle Moss, DPS board member...
Citing declining enrollment and below average state test scores, the board decided not to give DATA another chance.
No comments:
Post a Comment