Title
Declaring April 30-May 4, 2001 National Charter Public Schools Week.
Body
WHEREAS, Charter schools are nonsectarian public schools and are accountable for academic results and fiscal practices to several groups: their authorizer, the parents who choose them and the public that funds them. The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania is one of the thirty six states that have passed charter school laws; and
WHEREAS, More than half a million students attend the nation's charter public schools. Nationwide, students in charter public schools have similar demographic characteristics to those in traditional public schools. In some states and municipalities, charter schools serve significantly higher percentages of minority or economically disadvantaged students with a wide variety of curriculum and programs; and
WHEREAS, The theme of the nation's first-ever National Charter Schools Week, held May 1-5, 2000, was "New Choices in Public Education" and considered an unqualified success; and
WHEREAS, National Charter Schools Week is intended primarily to showcase the accomplishments of the more than 2,100 charter schools that are now in operation all across the country. Stories of innovative programs, ever rising individual pupil and school achievements and involved, enthusiastic and committed parents will be the focus of this week; and
WHEREAS, National Charter Schools Week is co-sponsored by more than seventy organizations in over forty states and supported by President Bush, U.S. Secretary of Education Rod Paige in addition to many other bi-partisan national and local political and educational leaders.
WHEREAS, Charter schools bring American education to an unprecedented level of accountability. Having detailed, written contracts, their existence is directly linked to performance and give parents a new freedom, and greater flexibility, to choose both the public schools and curriculums best suited for their children; and
WHEREAS, Activities planned in...
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