The rapid increase in charter schools has been fueled by the view that traditional public schools have failed because of their monopoly on public education. Charter schools, freed from the bureaucratic regulation that dominates traditional public schools, are viewed as agents of change that will shock traditional public schools out of their complacency. Among the features of the failed status quo are teacher tenure, uniform salary grids and strict work rules, matters that teacher unions hold dear. Yet unions have begun organizing teacher in charter schools. This development prompts the question whether unionization and charter schools are compatible. In contrast to traditional public schools whose labor relations are based on the tradit...
This paper will explore the prospects for charter school reform to provide curricular innovation and...
It has been ingrained into the American consciousness that our public schools are failing and our st...
Governments increasingly rely on private entities to institute educational reforms. This article exa...
The rapid increase in charter schools has been fueled by the view that traditional public schools ha...
UnrestrictedTeachers at a small but growing number of California’s charter schools are represented b...
Charter schools see as many as one in four teachers leave annually, and recent evidence attributes m...
As charter schools have flourished in form, they have also evolved in variety: parents can send thei...
Charter schools have become a widely accepted and rapidly growing option for educational reform espe...
The status of collective bargaining in public education is in flux. As a result of a movement that b...
Union-management relationships have been filled with fear since the rise of capitalism; public educa...
The status of collective bargaining in public education has been in an almost constant state of flux...
This Comment examines the history of the National Labor Relations Act, focusing on the Supreme Court...
Includes bibliographical references (pages [91]-92)Over 20 percent of 210 million persons in the Uni...
When California legislators passed the California Charter School Act of 1992, it allowed parents the...
This comment discusses the effect of collective bargaining by teachers on the formulation of public ...
This paper will explore the prospects for charter school reform to provide curricular innovation and...
It has been ingrained into the American consciousness that our public schools are failing and our st...
Governments increasingly rely on private entities to institute educational reforms. This article exa...
The rapid increase in charter schools has been fueled by the view that traditional public schools ha...
UnrestrictedTeachers at a small but growing number of California’s charter schools are represented b...
Charter schools see as many as one in four teachers leave annually, and recent evidence attributes m...
As charter schools have flourished in form, they have also evolved in variety: parents can send thei...
Charter schools have become a widely accepted and rapidly growing option for educational reform espe...
The status of collective bargaining in public education is in flux. As a result of a movement that b...
Union-management relationships have been filled with fear since the rise of capitalism; public educa...
The status of collective bargaining in public education has been in an almost constant state of flux...
This Comment examines the history of the National Labor Relations Act, focusing on the Supreme Court...
Includes bibliographical references (pages [91]-92)Over 20 percent of 210 million persons in the Uni...
When California legislators passed the California Charter School Act of 1992, it allowed parents the...
This comment discusses the effect of collective bargaining by teachers on the formulation of public ...
This paper will explore the prospects for charter school reform to provide curricular innovation and...
It has been ingrained into the American consciousness that our public schools are failing and our st...
Governments increasingly rely on private entities to institute educational reforms. This article exa...