An Inclusive Litany
8/3/98
Operating out of a church basement in Durham, North Carolina, the
Healthy Start Academy has done a dramatically good job educating poor
children. After a full year at the charter school, performance of
kindergartners on standardized tests jumped from the 42nd percentile
to the 99th percentile, first-graders from the 21st percentile to the
34th, and second-graders from the 34th to the 75th—all for $2,800
less per pupil than the state's public schools. But the state Board of
Education is now threatening to close down the school because its
student body is not racially balanced. While the surrounding school
district is 45 percent black, Healthy Start's student body is 99
percent black. Twelve other charter schools, eleven of which are
majority-black, are also threatened with closure.