It's Saturday in East Nashville, Tenn., and LaTonya White finds herself knocking on a stranger's door. It's awkward. Someone peers out at her through the window. White looks away, pretending not to notice. After an uncomfortable few seconds, the door finally cracks open. White seizes her chance:
"My name is LaTonya White. I'm the principal at Rosebank Elementary School. How are you doing?" she asks, glancing at the clipboard in her hands. On it: a list of families in the area with soon-to-be kindergartners. "Yes, you should have a child ready to come to school soon."
Canvassing for potential students — and honing this kind of front-porch pitch — are standard for charter schools. But for traditional public school leaders like White, it's unfamiliar territory. Still, it may quickly become an expectation as urban districts around the country grapple with destabilization related, at least in part, to the growth of charter schools.
"I think we're just moving to the place where we do have to sell ourselves, where we do have to market ourselves, where we do have to say, 'Hey, look, this is what we're doing,' " White says.
Here's the challenge: Nearly half of all students in East Nashville don't attend their zoned school. Part of that is the district's own doing. Open enrollment, a rising trend in districts around the country, made it so that students in Nashville can attend school just about anywhere they want — as long as there's an open seat. And in East Nashville, competition is fierce among a crowd of private schools and charters.
Traditional public schools stand to lose a lot. With every student who chooses to leave his zoned school, roughly $10,000 of per-pupil funding goes with him. That's why superintendent Jesse Register wants his schools pounding the pavement.
"I think [charter schools] have done a better job of getting out and recruiting and canvassing in neighborhoods, and I think we need to learn from that," Register said following a meeting with parents at one of East Nashville's struggling, undercapacity schools.
But there's a sense that marketing schools shouldn't fall on teachers. Judging from the amount of coffee and doughnuts set out for the volunteers at Rosebank's inaugural canvassing event, they were hoping for more than the half-dozen teachers who actually showed up.
Art instructor Carla Douglas took time out of her Saturday to canvass but says many of her fellow teachers think recruiting is someone else's job.
"I'm sure there are plenty of teachers that are thinking that way. I'm sure there are. And they're not here," she says.
On a tree-lined street, several cousins — all Rosebank students — run up to Douglas and White.
"Hey, how are ya'll doing?" White asks. "You're not used to seeing me on Saturday."
The kids live with their grandmother, Melba Hardison, who offers some reconnaissance help.
"That house right over there and that house over there have got like pre-K kids, I think," Hardison says, pointing across the street. "They may be going to private school, so you may want to go talk to them."
Hardison's block is typical of East Nashville — very mixed income. In some homes, multiple families live under one roof. Across the street, mother Danielle Sloane is a partner at one of the city's biggest law firms.
"It sounds bad. I love the diversity of East Nashville. I want to promote the diversity. We moved here for a reason, but you still want the opportunity for your children to continue to progress even while those kids are coming along," Sloane says. "So it's a very difficult line, and, for families, you don't want to take a chance with your kids, right?"
Sloane says she visited several charter schools before landing a spot for her daughter in one of the district's most sought after elementaries: Lockeland Design Center.
Sloane admits she doesn't want to see her neighborhood school wither away but wishes Rosebank teachers had reached out earlier.
"You know, now we're sort of set," she says. "And you're not going to just transfer schools that easily."
It may take a lot more door-knocking for zoned schools to see any bump in their enrollment numbers. And, if the bump never comes, undercapacity schools have been threatened with closure or possibly conversion — to charter schools.
Transcript
STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:
The spread of school choice and charter schools has left some traditional public schools struggling. In East Nashville, Tennessee, competition is so fierce that some public schools operate at half capacity. So the school district is trying something relatively new. It's going door to door to recruit students. Here's Blake Farmer of our NPR member station WPLN.
LATONYA WHITE: There's somebody in there. Hi.
BLAKE FARMER, BYLINE: On a recent Saturday a couple of educators find themselves on porch doing that thing where you see someone through the window and look away. The door cracks open.
WHITE: My name is LaTonya White. I'm the principal of Rosebank Elementary School. How are you doing?
UNIDENTIFIED MAN: Rosebank?
WHITE: Rosebank.
MAN: Oh.
WHITE: Yes. You should have a child ready to come to school soon.
FARMER: White and a handful of volunteer teachers are working their way through a list of names and addresses. The families live in the Rosebank school zone, but their kids don't go there. While a little nervous, White says she's excited about meeting families where they live instead of waiting for them to walk in the door.
WHITE: I think that we're just moving to the place where we do have to sell our self. We do have to market our self. We do have to say, hey, look, this is what we're doing.
FARMER: Nearly half of the students in East Nashville don't attend their zoned school. Part of that is the district's own doing. Open enrollment made it so students can go just about anywhere in the city. Private schools have always lured some students away, and now charters. That's why superintendent Jesse Register is taking a page from their playbook.
JESSE REGISTER: I think they have done a better job of getting out and recruiting and canvassing in neighborhoods. And I think we need to learn from that.
FARMER: Judging from the amount of coffee and donuts set out for the volunteers at Rosebank's inaugural canvassing event, they were hoping for more than the half-a-dozen teachers who actually showed up. Art instructor Carla Douglas took time out of her Saturday, but says there's a general sense that marketing shouldn't fall on teachers.
CARLA DOUGLAS: I'm sure there's plenty of teachers that are thinking that way. I'm sure there are, and they're not here. (Laughter).
FARMER: Douglas says she accepts that recruiting may just become one more unpaid duty.
WHITE: Yeah, these are our children.
UNIDENTIFIED STUDENTS: This is awesome.
WHITE: Hey. How are y'all doing? You're not used to seeing me on Saturday.
FARMER: On a tree-lined street, a group of cousins run up to Principal White. They live with their grandmother, Melba Hardison, who offers some reconnaissance help.
MELBA HARDISON: Yeah, that house right over there, and that house over there. They've got, like, pre-K kids, I think.
WHITE: OK.
FARMER: This block is typical for the area, very mixed income. There are homes, like Hardison's, where multiple families live under one roof and across the street, mother Danielle Sloane. She's a partner at one of the city's biggest law firms.
DANIELLE SLOANE: It sounds - I love the diversity of East Nashville. We moved here for a reason, but you still want the opportunities for your children to continue to progress even while those kids are coming along. And you want to support that, so it's a very difficult line. And for families, you don't want to take a chance with your kids, right?
FARMER: Sloane says she visited several charter schools before landing a spot for her daughter in one of the district's most sought after elementaries, Lockeland Design Center. But even Sloane says she doesn't want to see her neighborhood school wither away, adding that she wishes Rosebank teachers had been out in force earlier.
SLOANE: But, you know, now we're sort of set. And you're not going to just going to transfer schools that easily.
FARMER: It may take many more door knocking days for the traditional public schools to see the fruits of their labor. If unsuccessful, schools that remain under capacity have been threatened with closure or possibly conversion to a charter school. For NPR News, I'm Blake Farmer in Nashville. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.
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