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Copyright Education Next Spring 2009

Abstract

Fertile Soil Located in a farm community an hour south of Minneapolis, New Country is widely known as the school whose observant students tipped off the adult scientific community to large numbers of deformed frogs in the area. Since New Country's creation in 1994, three years after Minnesota passed the nation's first charter-school law, thousands of educators have visited, curious about the school's approach to learning: Each school responds to its respective chartering authority; most EdVisions member schools contract with the co-op for payroll services, benefits administration, and professional development assistance.\n It's a level of functioning that can't be grafted onto one school from another; systems can be copied, but the exact mix has to emerge organically. SUPAR's teachers also meet twice a week, but responsibility is vested differently. Because Wisconsin law says one person must sign a school's charter, Milwaukee's teacher-led schools have lead teachers.

Details

Title
Teacher Cooperatives
Author
Hawkins, Beth
Publication year
2009
Publication date
Spring 2009
Publisher
Education Next
ISSN
15399664
e-ISSN
15399672
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1237818848
Copyright
Copyright Education Next Spring 2009