
 
		April 1 deadline looms to apply for charter schools 
 Caribbean Life, Feb. 28-Mar. 5, 2020 35  
 BY GRANT LANCASTER 
 As New Yorkers have seen increased test scores  
 and more personalized school experiences at  
 charter schools in the city, the number of applicants  
 for these schools has jumped 26% in the  
 last fi ve years.  
 Charter school students make up about 11% of  
 New York City public school students, with an estimated  
 126,400 students. Each year, about 33,000  
 seats  open  up  for  new  students  at  260  charter  
 schools across the fi ve boroughs. 
 The fi rst  step  for  getting  one  of  these  seats  is  
 applying. 
 Many charter schools have their own application  
 forms that parents can get from the school’s  
 website, but some schools use the Common Online  
 Charter  School  Application,  allowing  parents  to  
 apply for multiple schools at the same time. 
 The  deadline  for  the  common  application  is  
 April 1. Some charters may have a later deadline,  
 but  in  general,  any  applications  submitted  later  
 than April 1 could be denied or result in the students  
 being immediately waitlisted. 
 Next,  the  schools  will  narrow  down  a  fi eld  of  
 more than 81,000 applicants. Because of the high  
 demand,  some  students  are  sure  to  get  put  on  a  
 waitlist. In order to keep the selection system fair,  
 these  schools use  a  lottery system to decide who  
 they will accept. 
 But  the  lottery  system  is  not  completely  random  
 –  charter  schools  are  required  to  give  preference  
 to returning students, siblings of enrolled  
 students and students that live in the same Community  
 School District as the school. So students  
 that  apply  to  a  local  school have  a  better chance  
 of getting in, and once one child in a family is accepted, 
  others will have an easier  time getting a  
 seat. 
 Some  schools  also  choose  to  offer  enrollment  
 preference  to  students  that  are  academically  at  
 risk  or  come  from  low-income  families,  English  
 language learners, students with disabilities and  
 children of school staff. 
 One  of  the  reasons  so  many  people  apply  for  
 spots at charter schools is that these students tend  
 to  test  better  than  other  public  school  students,  
 with charter students  testing at about 57% profi - 
 ciency  in English Language Arts and about  63%  
 in math  in  2019,  compared  to  public  school  students  
 who  had  about  45% profi ciency  in English  
 Language Arts and about 46% in math, according  
 to the New York City Charter School Center. 
 Another aspect that may attract parents is that  
 charter  schools  have  the  chance  to  offer  special  
 learning  programs  or  specialized  curriculum  to  
 their students. For some students, this might help  
 them think and learn differently. 
 Although some of these programs could be considered  
 experimental, charter schools have a high  
 success rate, with 113 operating in New York City  
 for more  than  10 years and only  20  closing since  
 New York charter schools were created in 1998. 
 The  demographics  of  charter  schools  looks  
 different than the demographics of public school  
 students  as  a  whole,  with  a  greater  percentage  
 of black students at charter schools  than  in public  
 schools as a whole, according to the New York  
 City Department of Education. 
 While 52% of charter students are black, 25.5%  
 of  the  students  in  public  schools  as  a  whole  are  
 black.  The  percentage  of  Hispanic  students  is  
 about the same, with 39% of charter students and  
 40.6%  in  public  schools  overall.  Charter  schools  
 lack  a  signifi cant  percentage  of  Asian  students,  
 compared  to  the  16.2% Asian  students  in  public  
 schools as a whole. 
 Of  charter  school  students,  80% are  economically  
 disadvantaged,  18%  are  students  with  disabilities  
 and 7% are multilingual learners. 
 Charter schools are free public schools that operate  
 off of public money but have a private board,  
 putting them outside the direct control of the New  
 York  City  Department  of  Education.  There  are  
 three groups in New York City that can authorize  
 these schools, with the  largest, the State University  
 on New  York  Charter  School  Institute,  supporting  
 161 of the city’s charter schools. 
 EDUCATION