View All

Top Jobs

Latest featured videos from DaytonDailyNews.com

Dayton Public Schools to absorb East End charter school

Deal to allow partner to operate independently under city district control is called a first.

Staff Writer

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

The city school board on Tuesday, May 20, entered into what may be a first-of-its-kind partnership when it inked a deal to absorb an independent charter school and allow it to operate independently under the district's control.

Construction of the district's new Ruskin Elementary in the Twin Towers neighborhood is nearing completion, but East End Community School had operated in a nearby district-owned school building and draws many students from that neighborhood.

Extras

East End is an independently run and sponsored charter school founded in 2002. The school board will have ultimate authority for the school under the agreement, but its day-to-day operations will be overseen by a five-person committee with two representatives from the school board. School officials said they believed the deal is the first such partnership in Ohio.

The school, with about 200 students, will roughly double in size when it moves to Ruskin. Its students will become part of the district's enrollment count for school funding and the students' state test scores will count toward the district averages.

Dayton schools made a similar move two years ago with World of Wonder. That charter school was independently run, but had been sponsored by the school board and operated out of a district school building from its inception in 1999. It converted to a district school through a similar agreement.

Tuesday night, a group of East End students asked the board to allow the school to keep its name and "eagle" mascot rather than return to the Ruskin name and its "ram" mascot.

School board President Yvonne Isaacs said the board made a commitment to the neighborhood to bring back Ruskin, so that will be the school name.

However "an East End community school" will be added to the school sign to honor the new school's charter school heritage, she said.

"We will bring the community to agreement on the name and mascot," said board member Joe Lacey, a site committee member for the new school. "I will be happy if that is our biggest problem."

Vote for this story!

Copyright © 2008 Cox Ohio Publishing, Dayton, Ohio, USA. All rights reserved.

By using DaytonDailyNews.com, you accept the terms of our visitor agreement and privacy policy. You may wish to note our other business policies.