The key to your argument is that it is a charter school, so I assume the parents had to do something proactive to get their kids into those schools. That means they were also supporting the school's policies. That parental involvement is probably worth far more than the uniforms and many other trappings.
You also mention the other key element: better teachers. Doubling the number of charter/private schools will not double the number of good teachers. "Better" teachers are often those with more experience and with the zeal to withstand the pain of administivia. That means they often have enough senority to get the charter school positions.
Yes, a combination of better teachers, more involved parents, and a focused agenda tailored to attract a matching group of students is likely to produce better results. That is the easy part.
Take students who have no support at home (or often an educational hostile atmosphere), no parental support for the school, the second or third tier of teachers, and see if that works in any environment, charter or private or traditional public. Odds are it won't.
Throwing more $ alone will not fix it.
Decreeing tougher standards alone will not fix it.
And using the schools as a political football sure won't.
Originally Posted by Old-T
You really should watch the movie "Waiting for Superman". It was a real eye opener for me. Far and away the most important element in improving schools is better teachers. The movie drives this point home; good teachers get dramatically better results that typical teachers.
Because of tenure and teacher's unions it's become essentially impossible to fire bad teachers. The average cost to fire a teacher is several hundred thousand dollars because the unions fight it in court. In New York City they warehouse the really bad teachers. They have a building where they send them instead of going to class. They get full pay and benefits but don't teach anymore. It's cheaper to keep paying them for doing nothing than it is to fire them. They do this to the worst teachers, the drug addicts, pedophiles and violent ones.
There are private and charter schools that take problem kids from bad home environments in rough inner city neighborhoods and turn them around. The entire movie is on Youtube if you have the patience to watch fourteen separate videos. I'm sure it's on Netflix streaming video and Blockbuster streaming video.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8rmSldhnSDc