PPI - Radically Pragmatic
  • Donate
Skip to content
  • Home
  • About
    • About Us
    • Locations
    • Careers
  • People
  • Projects
  • Our Work
  • Events
  • Donate

Our Work

Osborne, Pankovits for The 74: “In Camden, N.J., Portfolio Schools, an Important School Board Election and a Commitment to Continued Reform”

  • January 22, 2020
  • David Osborne
  • Tressa Pankovits

With 55 percent of its students in chartered public schools or renaissance schools — neighborhood schools operated by charter organizations — Camden, New Jersey, has implemented one of the most ambitious portfolio strategies in the nation in recent years. It has done so under state control, but New Jersey will probably return power to an elected school board within the next few years. So November’s elections for an advisory school board, the first since state intervention, were an important barometer of local sentiment.

Of the three seats up for grabs, two were won by candidates who support the renaissance and charter schools. The third went to a candidate endorsed by the local teachers union, which ran candidates for all three seats. All three new members were sworn in Jan. 3.

With 75,000 people, Camden is one of the poorest cities in America. At the time of the state intervention in 2013, the Camden City School District was suffering from more than two decades of poor results, financial mismanagement, systemic inequity and grade-fixing scandals. Even though the district spends almost double the national per-pupil average, some 23 of the city’s 26 public schools scored in the bottom 5 percent of schools in New Jersey. Fewer than half of students were graduating from high school, and even fewer were proficient in reading and math in elementary and middle school. With half of the district’s buildings constructed before 1928, students attended crumbling schools, some of which even lacked running water.

Read the full analysis here.

Related Work

Op-Ed  |  March 3, 2026

Manno for RealClearEducation: Developmental Education: From Catch-Up to Speed-Ahead

In the News  |  February 26, 2026

Kahlenberg in The Boston Globe: Ending college affirmative action didn’t devastate minority enrollment but only shifted it

  • Richard D. Kahlenberg
In the News  |  February 25, 2026

Osborne in Washington Monthly: Could New Orleans Be the Model for Fixing Public Schools?

  • David Osborne
Op-Ed  |  February 3, 2026

Manno for Real Clear Education: The College Accreditation Makeover

  • Bruno Manno
In the News  |  January 29, 2026

Canter in The St. Louis American: Missouri test scores expose achievement gap

  • Rachel Canter
Op-Ed  |  January 28, 2026

Manno for The 74: Dual Enrollment Is a School Choice Option People Don’t Talk About — but Should

  • Bruno Manno
  • Never miss an update:

  • Subscribe to our newsletter
PPI Logo
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • Donate
  • Careers
  • © 2026 Progressive Policy Institute. All Rights Reserved.
  • |
  • Privacy Policy
  • |
  • Privacy Settings