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As educators with more than 70 years of experience with Minnesota public schools, we think thousands of families have made wise decisions to select charter public schools and Star Tribune readers deserve a much more nuanced, balanced account than provided by the recent attacks (“100,000 Twin Cities lives ruined by segregation,” Opinion Exchange, June 4) and “Minnesota is an education leader in racial inequality,“ Opinion Exchange, June 16).
It’s not just us who think so:
• The Minnesota Historical Society judged chartering as one of Minnesota’s most important developments in our first 150 years.
• A statewide Minnesota study found that 70% of Minnesota charters are providing critical state-law-required information about PSEO (Post Secondary Enrollment Options) to students and families, compared with just 36% of traditional districts. Extensive research shows that PSEO has a strong, positive impact on closing graduation gaps.
• Minnesota’s Court of Appeals ruled unanimously in favor of research that students at two Minnesota charters conducted with huge positive results: $30 million to high school students who had been laid off during COVID-19.
• Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government gave Minnesota’s charter law an award as “an outstanding innovation.”