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

Our Work

Why Suburban Districts Need Public Charter Schools Too

  • October 2, 2018
  • Emily Langhorne
Download PDF

On November 8, 2016, while the rest of the world anxiously awaited the outcome of the U.S. presidential election, a subset of voters with a keen interest in education had their eyes on Massachusetts. This was the day Bay Staters would vote on Ballot Question 2, a proposal to raise the state’s cap on public charter schools by up to 12 new schools per year.

Massachusetts is home to some of the highest performing charter schools in the country, with especially impressive gains at schools serving urban, low-income and minority students. In Boston, one of the eight districts in the state to have reached its cap on charter schools, students at charters learn the equivalent of an extra year of math and reading each year, when compared to their peers with similar demographics and past test scores at the city’s traditional public schools.1The local school district, Boston Public Schools (BPS), enrolls about 53,000 students in a city of about 77,000 students. Currently, public charters enroll only about 10,000 students, but there are more than 32,000 children on waitlists for these schools.

 

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