Choosing a Charter · July 11, 2026 · CharterScorecard Editorial

The 6 Types of Charter Schools (and How to Tell Them Apart)

"Charter school" is a legal category, not a school model. Two charters a mile apart can be as different as a Montessori classroom and a military academy. Here are the six models you will actually encounter, and what each one means for your family.

1. Classical academies

Latin roots, Great Books, explicit phonics, uniforms more often than not. Strong on knowledge-building and order; families seeking progressive pedagogy will chafe. Growing fast in Arizona, Florida, and Texas.

2. College-prep / high-expectations schools

Extended school days, frequent assessment, intensive tutoring, and an explicit college mission. The model produces strong test results in many cities; ask how discipline works and whether the intensity fits your child.

3. Project-based and progressive schools

Interdisciplinary projects, exhibitions instead of some tests, more student choice. The experience can be wonderful; the data can be harder to read, which makes growth measures especially important here.

4. Virtual charters

Fully online public schools. Flexible for families who need it, but as a category, virtual charters post some of the weakest outcomes in the sector. If you are considering one, scrutinize its results and ask what live instruction actually looks like week to week.

5. Specialized and recovery schools

Dropout recovery, arts conservatories, schools designed for students with specific needs. A letter grade can mislead here, which is why our methodology flags specialized schools rather than grading them on the standard scale.

6. Homeschool and independent-study charters

Mostly a California phenomenon, with cousins elsewhere: the charter enrolls your child, assigns a credentialed teacher who checks in, and provides instructional funds you spend on approved curriculum and classes while educating at home. If that sounds like the best-kept secret in public education, it roughly is. We wrote a full guide.

How to use this

Decide model first, school second. A great school in the wrong model is still the wrong school for your kid. Then pull up your state's list, shortlist by model, and compare the shortlist on data. Filters first, visits last.