School District of Pittsburgh v. Provident Charter School For Children With Dyslexia

134 A.3d 128, 2016 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 99, 2016 WL 756689
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 26, 2016
Docket598 C.D. 2015
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 134 A.3d 128 (School District of Pittsburgh v. Provident Charter School For Children With Dyslexia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
School District of Pittsburgh v. Provident Charter School For Children With Dyslexia, 134 A.3d 128, 2016 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 99, 2016 WL 756689 (Pa. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinions

OPINION BY

Judge MARY HANNAH LEAVITT.

The School District of Pittsburgh petitions for review-of an. adjudication of the State Charter School. Appeal Board (Appeal Board) granting a charter to Provident Charter School for Children with Dyslexia (Provident). In doing so, the Appeal Board concluded that Provident’s application for a charter met the requirements of the Charter School Law4 and reversed the School District’s contrary conclusion. We affirm.

Background

In November 2018, Provident submitted an application to the Board of Directors of the School District of Pittsburgh (School District) for the grant of a charter for its proposed school, which would focus on students with dyslexia in grades two through eight. Provident’s application' contained Í05 petitions of support with over 800 undated signatures from residents in or near Pittsbhrgh. The application also included over 50 letters of support from parents, educators, and other professionals and one student. At the School District’s public [132]*132hearing, 20 individuals spoke in favor of Provident’s application. On February 26, 2014, the School District denied Provident’s charter application.5

On March 14, 2014, Provident resubmitted a revised, 400-page application. Reproduced Record at 636-1027 (R.R.-).6 The revised application offered: (1) additional written support for the charter school plan by teachers, parents, other community members and students; (2) expanded choices for students in the School District; (3) new procedures for the suspension or expulsion of students; (4) a new professional development plan; (5) a new admissions policy; and (6) a new proposed curriculum. Joint Stipulation of Undisputed Facts and Law at 2,- ¶ 7.

Provident’s stated mission is

to offer families an alternative educational program for their children who are diagnosed with dyslexia and are at-risk of educational failure due to academic difficulties manifested through limited language processing skills and whose instructional needs are not met in a traditional setting.

R.R. 647-48. To that end, Provident proposes “specially designed instruction for students with dyslexia that will intensively and specifically address their individual needs at their own instructional level.” R.R. 644. According to the revised application:

The hallmarks that define and distinguish the commitment of [Provident] to the continuous growth and achievement of children with dyslexia include, but are not limited to these:
1. Implementation of multisensory instruction using derivatives of the Orton-Gillingham approach to language arts taught by Orton-Gilling-ham certified teachers
2. Individualization of instruction based on students’ developmental needs
3. Teaching students in small, flexible skill groups with targeted instruction available among 8 tiers based on students’ knowledge and skills, at each level
4. Recognition of parents as partners in their children’s education
5. Maintenance of an overall school average of a 6:1 student to adult ratio
[133]*1336. Incorporation of project-based learning and development and implementation of interdisciplinary, theme-based units of instruction
7. Partnering with families in the development and delivery of education
8. Fostering self-discipline, self-respect and self-defense through a martial arts Tae Kwon Do program
9. Establishment of a fine arts program to include music, art and theater experiences
10. Implementation of a conversational Spanish [program] and the study of Latin to promote vocabulary development
11. Incorporation of assistive technology tools such as, but not limited to, Kurzwell Text To Speech Literacy Software, Dragon Naturally Speaking Voice Recognition Software as well as other instructional technology applications such as, but not limited to, SMART Boards, SMART Interactive Solutions, Microsoft Office and internet application
12. Employment of a two year teacher looping cycle in Levels 3-4, 5-6 to promote stronger student/teacher bonding
13. Development of students’ social consciousness through community service activities
14. Application of formative assessment techniques and providing regular, consistent feedback to students and parents
15. Partnering with local universities to place student teachers including an incentive program
16. Addressing the needs of at-risk students defined as those who are at risk of educational failure because of academic difficulties such as, but not limited to, language processing and dyslexia

R.R. 645-46, 963.

Provident will market the school’s special focus to prospective students and their parents. Nevertheless, Provident will accept any applicant, even one for whom the special programs will have no relevance. Accordingly, Provident attested in its revised application that it

will not discriminate on any basis, including intellectual ability, measures of achievement or aptitude, athletic ability, disability, English language proficiency, race, creed, gender, sexual orientation, national origin, religion, or ancestry or other protected class.

R.R. 984. There will be no admission tests or requirements. Applicants will be accepted on a first-come, first-served basis. If there are more applicants than available spaces, a lottery system will be used for admission.

Provident’s proposed pre-enrollment form requests certain information, including the child’s name and date of birth and “whether special programs are required.” R.R. 720, 985. Provident explained that the pre-enrollment form will not be used to

deny enrollment or otherwise discriminate in its admission policies or practices on the basis of a child’s disability or the child’s need for special education or supplementary aids or services.

R.R. 987. Rather, the pre-enrollment form will help Provident determine “whether the school is oversubscribed and a lottery must be held.” R.R. 985. When an offer of .admission is made, parents have three weeks “to participate in an orientation process and to complete the enrollment process.”7 R.R. 722. Thereaf[134]*134ter a separate registration and enrollment form will be used to effect an enrollment.

Provident’s revised application described its plan to involve the community in the school as follows:

The founding coalition,' along with the Board of Directors, represents a cross section of parents and professionals with an interest in serving the needs of children with dyslexia. Many are actively involved in organizations and' agencies whose mission it is to work with families who have children with dyslexia. ; Among the agencies represented by the coalition are these important institutions that sérve children with dyslexia such as, but not limited to:

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Bluebook (online)
134 A.3d 128, 2016 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 99, 2016 WL 756689, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/school-district-of-pittsburgh-v-provident-charter-school-for-children-with-pacommwct-2016.