The school's experience demonstrates that charter schools, which often say parents need more choices, can be stung when parents' decisions don't fall their way. It also bolsters opponents who say that, despite claims of long wait lists and tales of parents craving alternatives, there isn't as much demand for charter schools as supporters say... Lisa Fleisher, WSJ.Lisa Fleisher often writes pieces that are fairly reported. This is another one. I can't think of another ed reporter who has brought up the point we often make about phony demand. Now if the ed press would do a FOIL on those supposed signatures charters use to claim demand.
[I was also pleased to see Lisa tweet some points of contention over the awful NY Times education editorial - I'll try to recover them and add them to a follow-up piece later.]
One interesting point that Lisa doesn't mention is how few of the kids enrolled come from the neighborhood the school is located in -- I believe less than 5%. She does point out that kids come from as far away as Rockaway -- truly astounding when you think of the commute for little kids. I love that she gives recognition to Brooke Parker and WAGPOPS for the work they do in defending the local public schools in Williamsburg and Greenpoint.
Given that by hook or crook, Citizens of the World has managed to get close to their target, don't be surprised to see kids being dragged off the street -- and I bet there are some hidden incentives involved somewhere since so much is at stake.
Nov. 28, 2013 9:33 p.m. ET
A Williamsburg charter school that tried to  attract white and middle-class families needs to find more students in  the next week, or it could be shut down. Citizens  of the World 1, part of a California-based charter-school chain, opened  across from Brooklyn's McCarren Park in September expecting 107  kindergartners and first-graders to totter through the doors.  
But  on the first day of school, teachers welcomed only 56 students. After  the last bus arrived, administrators made call after call to families  who had signed up. They ruled out logistical hiccups and realized that  more students just weren't coming.
                    Sharon Hambright, center, has paperwork in hand to  enroll son Dillon in Citizens of the World 1 in Williamsburg, Brooklyn;  Maribel Martinez is the charter school's office manager.                      Keith Bedford for The Wall Street Journal                    
"Everyone was disappointed," said  Mark Comanducci, executive director of Citizens of the World Charter  Schools-New York, which opened two New York schools this fall. "Families  we had been talking to for days, or weeks, or months decided to go  somewhere else."
The school's experience  demonstrates that charter schools, which often say parents need more  choices, can be stung when parents' decisions don't fall their way. It  also bolsters opponents who say that, despite claims of long wait lists  and tales of parents craving alternatives, there isn't as much demand  for charter schools as supporters say.
The  school was put on probation because of low enrollment in October by  State University of New York trustees, who oversee some New York charter  schools. If Citizens of the World 1 doesn't reach 100 students by Dec.  6, it could be shut down. Alternately, the trustees could accept a  slimmed-down version of the school with about 80 students.
That  is because when it comes to a school's operations, students equal  money. Schools receive funding from the city and the state based on how  many students they teach—about $13,500 per head at Citizens of the World  1.
The school said it wanted to reflect  the diversity of the neighborhood, which is 55% white, 38% black or  Hispanic, and 7% Asian or other, according to the charter school's  application. Only 8% of the students in local public schools, however,  were white, and 88% were black or Hispanic. It also emphasized  project-based academics and said it would offer classes in music, dance,  and art.
"We thought they had a really  promising design," said Susan Miller Barker, executive director at the  SUNY Charter Schools Institute, which evaluates and monitors charter  schools for the SUNY trustees.
From the start, the school faced the  kind of vehement opposition that marks many fights over charter schools.  One group of parents filed a lawsuit in the state Supreme Court in  Brooklyn to prevent Citizens of the World 1 from opening its doors,  claiming the founders hadn't fully engaged the local community. The suit  was dismissed, and the parents are appealing.
Brooke  Parker, one of the parents opposing the school, said the new charter  would sap students and funding from local district schools, many of  which were highly rated by the city.
"Citizens  of the World is a poor copy of the elementary schools that we have,"  said Ms. Parker, who lives in Greenpoint, Brooklyn. She said she and  other parents worked before the school opened to fight the school's  recruitment efforts.
"We went to farmers markets, we went to wherever we knew they were trying to get parents, and we got there first," she said.
Mr.  Comanducci said the low enrollment was probably influenced by Ms.  Parker and others in a group called WAGPOPS!, which stands for  Williamsburg and Greenpoint Parents: Our Public Schools!, though he  called the opposition a "small but vocal minority." New schools have a  tough time selling themselves, he said.
"If the school doesn't exist, it's a challenge to get parents to buy into what you're doing," he said.
Ms.  Miller Barker said most charter schools, even new ones, meet enrollment  targets and she said she couldn't recall another new charter put on  probation for falling enrollment.
Now  Mr. Comanducci and his staff members have regrouped and tried to build  the school anew. The school is close to meeting the target. By Tuesday,  there were 94 students enrolled, from as far away as the Rockaway  peninsula in Queens.
School officials  sent letters home to parents in November telling them about the  probation decision and asked them for help finding new students.
Teachers hit the streets, passing out fliers during their off periods.
Sharon  Hambright, 42, of Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, picked up one of those  fliers while walking her 5-year-old son, Dillon, to school. She wasn't  happy with her son's charter school, where, she said, they had him  tracing the alphabet instead of doing more challenging work.
"I  looked at the brochure, and I was all shaky at first, and I said, 'You  know what, I'm going to make this move,'" she said. She walked into  Citizens of the World 1 on Monday, clutching Dillon's health forms and a  laminated birth certificate, and enrolled him in kindergarten.
"Where  I'm really concerned at is third grade, when they start getting  tested," she said, referring to federally required state tests. "I want  him to be ready."
 Write to  Lisa Fleisher at lisa.fleisher@wsj.com
 
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