Charter schools—publicly funded public schools freed from many regulations (including union teacher requirements) in exchange for charting their own program and depending on attracting enough students—represent a 'semi-market' innovation; some are terrible and some excellent, but unlike regular public schools they face at least some market signal, since bad ones struggle to keep students.

definitionpending

Speaker

Eric Hanushek

Evidence Quote

it buys them out of a lot of the regulations that apply to current public schools it often buys them out of having higher Union teachers

Source

Eric Hanushek on Education and School Finance 07/14/2008EconTalk
Created: 6/17/2026, 10:14:22 AM

My Notes

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