PROVIDENCE, R.I. – Each classroom at Blackstone Valley Prep is named after a college or university. Ask a student wandering the halls where they’re headed, and they may answer “Boston College,” “Texas A&M” or “Notre Dame.”
The idea is to instill, from kindergarten on, the charter school network’s mission: to inspire and prepare every scholar for higher education. Each spring, the school hosts a loud, spirited and celebratory “college signing day” ceremony for its high school seniors. One by one, the teenagers step onstage to proudly announce their post-graduation plans. Many are the first in their family to seek a degree.
“We have many charters where 100% of students are graduating with a postsecondary plan,” said Chiara Deltito-Sharrott, executive director of the Rhode Island League of Charter Schools.
Rhode Island is the smallest state in the country, but it’s here — and not in Minnesota, the birthplace of the charter school movement — that this daring experiment in public school education is paying big dividends for students and their families.

More than any other state, Rhode Island’s charter students are making the most significant gains in math and reading compared with their public school counterparts, according to a recent Stanford study.
Strong state oversight and a uniform and robust accountability system for all Rhode Island charter schools ensure a level of stability that has eluded their counterparts in Minnesota and elsewhere. Financial problems are rare. School leaders must be licensed administrators. And the state grades every charter on its performance, making it clear whether a school is meeting or failing its mission.
In addition to high expectations, the state’s charters generate extraordinary demand: Every charter school in Rhode Island has a waiting list averaging a dozen applicants per seat, guaranteeing a steady flow of revenue that follows students.
Over nearly 30 years, not a single charter school in Rhode Island has shuttered for financial reasons.