Virtual High School Meanderings

May 29, 2008

College Board Approves AP Chemistry

I know that this has been an issue for many virtual schools, getting the AP science courses approved under the College Board audit process. This was posted in the NACOL forum late yesterday.

The Center for Talented Youth at Johns Hopkins University has received approval for its online AP Chemistry course. To my knowledge, it’s the first such course to receive approval from the College Board. Last year, all AP Chemistry submissions were rejected.

NACOL, by its steadfast efforts, has made this event possible.

Wonder if there is a link for this course?

May 28, 2008

Report On e-Learning Returns On Investment

This was posted in one of the NACOL forums earlier today.  Not sure if it includes K-12 stuff, but I figured some might be interested.

REPORT ON E-LEARNING RETURNS ON INVESTMENT

“Within the academic community there remains a sizable proportion of sceptics who question the value of some of the tools and approaches and perhaps an even greater proportion who are unaware of the full range of technological enhancements in current use. Amongst senior managers there is a concern that it is often difficult to quantify the returns achieved on the investment in such technologies. . . . JISC infoNet, the Association for Learning Technology (ALT) and The Higher Education Academy were presented with the challenge of trying to make some kind of sense of the diversity of current e-learning practice across the sector and to seek out evidence that technology-enhanced learning is delivering tangible benefits for learners, teachers and institutions.”

The summary of the project is presented in the recently-published report, “Exploring Tangible Benefits of e-Learning: Does Investment Yield Interest?” Some benefits were hard to measure and quantify, and the case studies were limited to only sixteen institutions. However, according to the study, there appears to be “clear evidence” of many good returns on investment in e-learning. These include improved student pass rates, improved student retention, and benefits for learners with special needs.

A copy of the report is available at
http://www.jiscinfonet.ac.uk/publications/…le-benefits.pdf

A two-page briefing paper is available at http://www.jisc.ac.uk/media/documents/publ…ebenefitsv1.pdf

Register Today for Upcoming NACOL Webinar

NACOL Monthly Webinar Series
June 11, 2008
2:00 - 3:00 PM (Eastern)

“Web 2.0: Integrating Social Networking Tools in the Online Classroom

With the advent of Web 2.0 we have seen a proliferation of tools that enable information sharing, collaboration and co-creation of content. We have also seen a shift in what is possible for online teaching and learning. With a seemingly endless list of powerful new tools and possibilities, how do virtual school educators identify and make use of the right tool for the right purpose?

This webinar will feature Kirsten Peterson and Lesley Reilly of EdTech Leaders Online’s capacity-building online professional development program along with Colleen Spinelli, AP Environmental Science Instructor for Virtual Virginia Advanced Placement School.

They will provide an overview to Web 2.0 tools and possibilities; describe key virtual school instructional needs, and showcase best practices using appropriate Web 2.0 tools.

Presenters

Kirsten Peterson and Lesley Reilly, Virtual School Professional Development Providers, EdTech Leaders Online

Colleen Spinelli, AP Environmental Science Instructor, Virtual Virginia Advanced Placement School

Register Now

Or copy this link: http://www.nacol.org/events/webinar/register.php?type=monthly

Registration is open until 2 PM (ET) Tuesday, June 10, 2008.

To ensure proper delivery of our email messages to your inbox (not bulk or junk folders),
add info@nacol.org to your Address Book or Safe Sender List.

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DE Virtual School At-Risk in 2009 Budget

This was posted in one of the NACOL forums.

$29 million in education cuts leave little for Vision 2015 initiative
By JENNIFER PRICE • The News Journal • May 24, 2008

The Vision 2015 reform effort lost what little state money it had coming next fiscal year after lawmakers trimmed about $29 million from the education budget this week.

The coalition of education, business and community leaders aiming to revamp the state’s school system into a world leader by 2015 had been assigned $100,000 in Gov. Ruth Ann Minner’s 2009 budget proposal, but the Joint Finance Committee — the budget-writing panel charged with erasing a projected $217.3 million shortfall for the budget year that begins July 1 — cut the funds that would have benefited the 21 schools participating in the Vision Network.

Paul Herdman — president of the Rodel Foundation of Delaware, the educational nonprofit that helped develop the Vision 2015 plan — said he wasn’t surprised the state won’t be funding the reform effort directly given the significant deficit facing next year’s budget. Herdman, however, thinks the Delaware General Assembly should be looking at long-term solutions instead of short-term cuts.

“What I hope happens at the end of the day is that we don’t just cut essential programs like professional development for teachers and principals rather than make the tougher systemic changes that will be harder to make in the short term but have deeper benefits for students in the long run,” he said.

Professional development and other initiatives aligned with the reform effort, such as a virtual school that offers online classes and support for early childhood education programs, also were cut from next year’s budget.

Professional development funds for teachers will be reduced by $1.3 million while paraprofessional training will be wiped out. Tuition reimbursement to teachers pursuing advanced degrees will be cut by $1.1 million. The Delaware Principal Academy is being zeroed out while the University of Delaware’s Academy for School Leadership, which provides intense training for staff members at schools participating in the Vision Network, will lose $150,000.

The Joint Finance Committee cut $250,000 from Delaware’s Virtual School, which was in its pilot program this year offering six online courses to high school students. Since the school will not receive any money next fiscal year, there will be few opportunities for online learning.

Wayne Hartschuh, executive director for the Delaware Center for Educational Technology, said students who had participated successfully in the virtual school this school year will have the option of taking a second course next year.

“But it’s going to be very limited in what we can provide,” he said.

The committee also voted to cut $200,000 from Early Success, which would have provided professional development for early childhood educators.

Though Herdman understands the constraints of a budget crisis, he also sees an opportunity to look at how the state maximizes every dollar going to educate Delaware children. He points to the many cost savings identified in the Leadership for Education Achievement in Delaware report released earlier this year. The governor-commissioned committee, which found up to $158 million in annual savings, made recommendations including consolidation of purchasing and coordination of administrative services among districts. Other Leadership for Education Achievement in Delaware suggestions, such as exploring the consolidation of school districts and offering employees retirement plans such as 401(k)s instead of pension plans, would take more time and political will to accomplish.

Expected to cost more than $100 million over several years, the Vision 2015 plan, which was released in October 2006, suggests reforms such as more time in school each year, a statewide curriculum, more power and accountability for school principals, a uniform statewide pay scale for teachers and greater state investment in preschool education.

While the Vision 2015 has generated some private support, it has never received direct support from the state.

Included in the $29 million reduction in the education budget is a $2.7 million cut to the Delaware State Testing Program. The writing portion of the test will not be given in grades three, four, six, seven and nine. That leaves grades five, eight and 10 taking the writing test, which is not part of the federal No Child Left Behind requirements but rather a state standard, said Robin Taylor, associate education secretary.

http://www.delawareonline.com/apps/pbcs.dl…EWS03/805240339

May 27, 2008

US Dept of Education’s 5/29 Briefing:, The Condition of Education 2008 - NCES

Another item from the NACOL forums a week or so ago.

YOU’RE INVITED TO AN NCES BRIEFING ON…

THE CONDITION OF EDUCATION 2008

WHO: Grover J. “Russ” Whitehurst, Director, Institute of Education Sciences (IES)
Mark Schneider, Commissioner, National Center for Education Statistics (NCES)

WHAT: Findings from The Condition of Education 2008

WHEN: Thursday, May 29, 2008, at 10:00 a.m. ET

WHERE: The Sumner School (1201 17th Street, N.W., Washington, DC, 20036)

RSVP: online at http://ies.ed.gov/whatsnew/conferences/?id=243&cid=2 (use registration code 411); via email to Ruth.Harris@ed.gov (send name, organization, and contact information); or via telephone at (202) 502-7365

BACKGROUND

The Condition of Education is a congressionally mandated annual report that contains 43 indicators on conditions and trends in elementary, secondary, postsecondary, and adult education. The report measures, among other key indicators, the performance of U.S. students on national and international assessments; trends in school enrollments; student-teacher ratios in public schools; trends in public school expenditures; federal grants and loans to undergraduate students; and the educational attainment of young adults.

The full text of the report will be available online at http://nces.ed.gov/programs/coe/ on May 29 at 10:00 a.m. ET.

I have another commitment at that time, but if anyone else attends please let us know how it was but adding a comment below.

May 25, 2008

Virtual Schooling in the News

Beginning with the Yahoo! News Alert for virtual school.

New online school targets Hispanics, at-risk students
The Olympian Sat, 17 May 2008 0:20 AM PDT
The state’s newest virtual charter school is expected to go online this fall, but only after a strategic campaign to recruit Hispanics and teenagers at risk of quitting or getting kicked out of public high schools.

School Board makes tough decisions on budget
KOTA Rapid City Fri, 16 May 2008 4:10 PM PDT
The board did vote to cut the virtual high school program, a gifted program, the Academy daycare, and some math and literacy coaches.

New online school targets Latinos
The Salt Lake Tribune Sat, 17 May 2008 11:46 PM PDT
BOISE, Idaho - The state’s newest virtual charter school is expected to go online this fall, but only after a strategic campaign to recruit Hispanics and teenagers at risk of quitting or getting kicked out of public high schools.

LRN: Court Judgment Ends Suit Filed by Wisconsin Education Association
Nasdaq Mon, 19 May 2008 12:54 PM PDT
K12 Inc. (LRN) announced that a judgment has been entered by the Circuit Court of Ozaukee County in Wisconsin, bringing to a close a lawsuit brought by the Wisconsin Education Association against the Northern Ozaukee School District and K12 Inc. for operating the Wisconsin Virtual Academy (WIVA). The Court stated that the “parties and the Court agree that the recent enactment of Act 222 obviates …

K12 Inc. Announces End of Lawsuit in Wisconsin
Centre Daily Times Mon, 19 May 2008 12:07 PM PDT
K12 Inc. (NYSE:LRN) is announcing that a judgment has been entered by the Circuit Court of Ozaukee County in Wisconsin, bringing to a close a lawsuit brought by the Wisconsin Education Association against the Northern Ozaukee School District and K12 Inc. for operating the Wisconsin Virtual Academy (WIVA). In an order filed May 6, 2008, the Court stated that the “parties and the Court agree that …

K12 Inc. Announces End of Lawsuit in Wisconsin
Business Wire via Yahoo! Finance Mon, 19 May 2008 11:44 AM PDT
HERNDON, Va.—-K12 Inc. is announcing that a judgment has been entered by the Circuit Court of Ozaukee County in Wisconsin, bringing to a close a lawsuit brought by the Wisconsin Education Association against the Northern Ozaukee School District and K12 Inc. for operating the Wisconsin Virtual Academy .

School system providing students opportunity to attend the Louisiana Virtual School (LVS) Summer Session
Beauregard Daily News Tue, 20 May 2008 9:24 AM PDT
The Beauregard Parish School System is providing students the opportunity to attend the Louisiana Virtual School (LVS) Summer Session, according to Director of Curriculum Karen Cunningham.

Online High Schools Draw Students — and Worry Some Educators
KTRE-TV East Texas Tue, 20 May 2008 9:17 AM PDT
Rather than send her kids off on the yellow bus, Briana LeClaire has school come to her home. Her kids attend a virtual public school, connecting online to teachers and coursework. Everything from books to microscopes to radish seeds arrives via brown trucks.

‘Virtual tutor’ for Hampshire schools
Hampshire Chronicle Wed, 21 May 2008 4:32 AM PDT
EVERY school in Hampshire is set to have a new “virtual tutor.” Hampshire County Council has signed up with educational software provider Etech to provide Studywiz, a secure on-line learning platform, to 530 primary and secondary schools across the county.

Online school targets Hispanics, at-risk
Casper Star-Tribune Thu, 22 May 2008 1:20 AM PDT
BOISE, Idaho — The state’s newest virtual charter school is expected to go online this fall, but only after a strategic campaign to recruit Hispanics and teenagers at risk of quitting or getting kicked out of public high schools.

Online school accepting applications
Pahrump Valley Times Wed, 21 May 2008 5:54 PM PDT
Insight School of Nevada, is accepting applications for the fall semester 2008. It is a tuition-free, diploma-granting, online public high school opening its virtual doors to students throughout the state.

Online school targets Hispanics, at-risk
Casper Star-Tribune Fri, 23 May 2008 1:19 AM PDT
BOISE, Idaho — The state’s newest virtual charter school is expected to go online this fall, but only after a strategic campaign to recruit Hispanics and teenagers at risk of quitting or getting kicked out of public high schools.

Online school targets Hispanics, at-risk
Casper Star-Tribune Sat, 24 May 2008 11:45 AM PDT
BOISE, Idaho — The state’s newest virtual charter school is expected to go online this fall, but only after a strategic campaign to recruit Hispanics and teenagers at risk of quitting or getting kicked out of public high schools.

Tulpehocken School Board OKs contract to allow online classes
Reading Eagle Fri, 23 May 2008 8:08 PM PDT
The Tulpehocken School Board has voted 6-0 to approve a contract with Virtual High School Inc. that will allow some high school students to take classes online while attending Tulpehocken.

Next the Yahoo! News Alert for cyber school.

GNA considers cyber school
The Citizens’ Voice Sat, 17 May 2008 0:13 AM PDT
Greater Nanticoke Area school district officials are tired of losing money from sending students to charter schools and computer-based cyber schools. So they’re trying to get into the act themselves.

Cyber school undergoes metamorphosis
Newport News-Times Mon, 19 May 2008 11:37 AM PDT
School officials say it’s a change in status, not a change in service. Insight School of Oregon (ISO), Lincoln County School District’s (LCSD) public online charter high school, has morphed into what’s known as a private alternative school

Cyber academy plans move forward
The Indiana Gazette Wed, 21 May 2008 11:12 AM PDT
FORD CITY - Armstrong School District administrators received approval Monday night to move forward with the creation of the district’s own cyber academy.

Dr. Nancy Minshew, Autism Researcher, to Speak at Regional Learning Alliance in Cranberry Township
PR Newswire via Yahoo! Finance Fri, 23 May 2008 7:02 AM PDT
Dr. Nancy Minshew, a leading researcher on the thinking processes of children with autism will talk about her work in a presentation co-sponsored by the Pennsylvania Cyber Charter School.

Troy signs cyber charter school letter
The Daily & Sunday Review Sat, 24 May 2008 0:07 AM PDT
TROY — Troy Area School District officials signed a letter this week in support of a House Bill dealing with the funding of cyber charter schools.

Moving on to the Google News Alert for virtual school.

New online school targets Latinos
Salt Lake Tribune - United States
By Jessie Bonner AP BOISE, Idaho - The state’s newest virtual charter school is expected to go online this fall, but only after a strategic campaign to …
See all stories on this topic

New online school targets Hispanics, at-risk students
The Olympian - Olympia,WA,USA
By JESSIE BONNER | AP Writer • Published May 17, 2008 The state’s newest virtual charter school is expected to go online this fall, but only after a …
See all stories on this topic

Horace Mann school survives cuts
Rapid City Journal - Rapid City,SD,USA
The labored discussion continued with a debate about cutting the Virtual High School, math coach and literacy coach positions and administrative jobs. …
See all stories on this topic

Finally, the Google News Alert for cyber school.

GNA considers cyber school
Citizens Voice - Wilkes-Barre,PA,USA
If GNA starts a cyber charter school for those students to attend, the state funding would stay in the district, Perrone said. He said he has been going to …
See all stories on this topic

Cyber school undergoes metamorphosis
Newport News Times - Newport,OR,USA
By Terry Dillman Of the News-Times Insight School of Oregon (ISO), Lincoln County School District’s (LCSD) public online charter high school, …
See all stories on this topic

May 23, 2008

Textbooks Face Ban Under e-Learning Finance Bill, Arizona

This was just posted in one of the NACOL forums - which would be interesting if pass because it would mean that virtual schools would have to use virtual content, maybe even open source content (see The Open High School of Utah).

Textbooks face ban under e-learning finance bill
Books would be banned from computer curricula
by Mary Jo Pitzl - May. 23, 2008 12:00 AM
The Arizona Republic

Textbooks would have to be eliminated from classrooms that move to a digital curriculum under legislation that would provide a new way for schools to pay for computers necessary for “e-learning.”

“The modern world has moved beyond textbooks,” said Sen. Barbara Leff, R-Paradise Valley.

Computer-based learning is becoming the norm, she said, and can provide a variety of viewpoints, instead of those in just one textbook.
And, she added, “This is the less-expensive tool than textbooks in the long run.”

Leff is the sponsor of an amendment to House Bill 2475, which would allow school districts to ask their voters for approval to issue bonds for computer purchases.

Currently, schools can pay for computers through capital-outlay overrides, but money from those elections flows in equal annual amounts for the length of the override. General-obligation bonds provide all the money up front, to be paid back over the length of the bond.

The amendment received preliminary, but narrow, Senate approval on a voice vote Thursday. It requires that any bond used to purchase computers last only as long as the lifespan of the computer. That is designed to avoid long-term borrowing for a product that might last only a few years.

If a school launches a digital curriculum and provides a computer for every child, textbooks for that subject would be removed in favor of the digital version.

The proposal, added to a bill that deals with disciplinary procedures for school bullies, drew a skeptical reaction from some.

Sen. Ken Cheuvront, D-Phoenix, said it could lead to inequities between school districts, as wealthy school districts have a much better chance than those in poorer parts of the state to get their voters to approve a specific bond issue for computers.

“The rising inequities we have in our schools greatly concerns me,” he said.

The amendment allows for more borrowing by school districts, he said, which could lead to bigger bills for taxpayers in those districts.

But Minority Leader Marsha Arzberger, D-Willcox, said the Legislature is not imposing an automatic tax increase on anyone.

“Voters do get to vote for themselves if they want to make this expense,” she said.

Cheuvront said he is not opposed to equipping schools with more computers, but expanded technology should not hinge on whether a district’s taxpayers are wealthy enough to support bond elections. “If this is so important, we should put it in the budget,” he said.

While the senators focused primarily on the financial aspects of the bill and its amendment, Leff said she views this as a way to usher in a new chapter in learning.

“The fact that attracted me the most was the digital learning,” she said after the Senate debate.

“You’d have vast amounts of information available to students at their fingertips.”

Leff said she got “no push-back” from school officials on her proposal to eliminate textbooks if digital-learning programs for a given subject are available. For those subject areas where such e-learning is not available, textbooks would still be allowed.

Digital learning is in its “infancy” in Arizona, said Chris Cummiskey, director of the Government Information Technology Agency.

Bids are being accepted for a pilot program that would use a digital curriculum for middle-school math classes, said Cummiskey, who also is a member of the E-learning Task Force established by the Legislature two years ago.

The Legislature set aside $3 million for the pilot program, which will be launched in 10 schools.

Other schools are already involved in computer-based learning, although the ability to purchase computers in bulk could expand programs much more quickly, said Rep. Rich Crandall, R-Mesa and president of the Mesa Public Schools board.

Reach the reporter at maryjo.pitzl@arizonarepublic.com.

http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/200…puters0523.html

Florida Virtual Education Legislation

Bill Tucker e-mailed me this a few days ago (maybe yesterday, I’m not sure anymore).  Below you can see the text of an entry he posted to the Education Sector’s blog about this issue

Hi Michael,

I know that you follow these issues, so wanted to alert you to legislation in Florida…

–Bill Tucker

A Wrong Turn for Virtual Education in Florida
http://www.quickanded.com/2008/05/wrong-turn-for-virtual-education-in.html

Last December I flew to Tallahassee to testify as part of the Florida State Legislature’s K-12 Virtual Education Workshop. As a native Floridian, I’ve been proud of my home state’s leadership in virtual schooling. Florida Virtual School is the largest and one of the most successful state-run virtual schools in the country. It’s widely regarded as a nationwide model. And, while I’m less intimate with the details of the state’s two full-time K-8 programs, Florida Connections Academy and Florida Virtual Academy, they have consistently achieved As and Bs in Florida’s state accountability system. At the legislative workshop in December, most participants emphasized that Florida was doing things the smart way.

So, I was shocked to read the new virtual education bill that has just recently cleared the legislature (the governor has not yet signed the bill). The bill has a number of flaws, but the most egregious is its mandate that each of Florida’s 67 school districts contract with a provider or develop its own program to provide a full-time K-8 virtual schooling program, beginning in the 2009-10 school year. Thus, Florida will move from a well-run, successful, state-authorized program to a system that forces each district to manage and authorize its own program.

This is a horrible idea for a number of reasons:

Reduced Accountability and Quality: From the charter movement, we’ve learned that high-quality authorizing is one of the essential components leading to high-quality educational experiences. Moving to a district-by-district model, especially when many of the districts have neither the capacity, nor desire, to authorize this type of program, almost ensures that there will be much weaker authorizing and relatively little oversight for these programs.

Reduced Competition and Fewer Student Options: Ironically, this change will likely reduce student options. Under the current statewide model, families in Florida have at least two options. And, there’s no reason that this number couldn’t grow. But, it’s highly unlikely that districts will provide multiple options. It’s almost certain that they will contract with either one of the current providers or start their own program. So, not only do students have fewer programs to choose from, but it’s likely that a mini-monopoly will develop in each individual district.

Wrong Emphasis: A district-by-district scheme makes sense if it allows each district to customize virtual education programs to integrate and strengthen its current educational offerings. But, districts can already do this by working with the state’s existing supplemental program, the Florida Virtual School. This bill addresses full-time virtual education–a parallel system that does not integrate with the district’s current programs. And, as noted above, it’s very likely that the providers and offerings will be the exact same.

To date, Florida has been wise in its virtual education program design, avoiding the problems in a number of states such as Colorado, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania. While almost every other state looks to Florida’s
current programs as a model, this bill takes that model in the opposite direction.

Bill Tucker - Chief Operating Officer

EDUCATIONSECTOR
Independent Analysis, Innovative Ideas
www.educationsector.org

1201 Connecticut Ave., NW, Ste. 850, Washington, DC 20036
[t] 202.552.2848 * [f] 202.775.5877 * [e] btucker@educationsector.org
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SUBSCRIBE to our Biweekly Digest and other updates at
http://www.educationsector.org/subscribe.
I’ll try and tack a close look at this legislation myself later this month or early next month and post my own entry.

May 22, 2008

Online Options for ‘Credit Recovery’ Widen

This was a news item posted in the NACOL forums yesterday.

Online Options for ‘Credit Recovery’ Widen

Districts turn to commercial providers and virtual schools to help students make it to graduation.
By Andrew Trotter

Under pressure to raise graduation rates, some high schools are turning to online courses to help faltering students revive their academic careers and retrieve the credits they need to earn their diplomas.

As alternatives to remedial lessons, summer school, and other traditional ways of getting struggling high school students back on track, technology-based options for credit recovery have been expanding.

“It’s a huge area of growth, especially in the last three years,” said Susan D. Patrick, the president and chief executive officer of the North American Council for Online Learning, a Vienna, Va.-based trade association for online schools. The group is preparing a white paper on “promising practices” in credit recovery that it plans to publish this year.

Most of the new credit-recovery options are online programs offered by virtual schools and commercial curriculum providers. They offer approaches to individualizing instruction that are targeted and packaged for credit recovery, according to the companies and other providers offering the programs.

With graduation day nearing in high schools across the country, students are working in such classes to cobble together the credits they need.

“Right now, my classroom is chaos,” Kim Feltner, the teacher in charge of the credit-retrieval lab at Pine Ridge High School, in Volusia County, Fla., said last week. “I probably have 30 to 35 seniors who have six days to complete their course in order to participate in graduation ceremonies. They are in full panic mode.”

Credit recovery, or credit retrieval, is usually defined as an in-school opportunity for students to earn academic credits that they have lost, or are about to lose, by failing a regular course.

Such options are available from an array of online-curriculum companies, such as Apex Learning Inc. and Plato Learning Inc., as well as nonprofit providers such as the Orlando-based Florida Virtual School and the Atlanta-based Georgia Virtual School.

Providers say they tailor learning to individual students, by using flexible pacing and schedules, extra practice, frequent assessment, and robust monitoring and reporting on participation and progress, while also allowing openings for personal interaction with teachers.

Their learning-management systems tend to have such typical online tools as e-mail, online assessments, and databases. Courses mirror, and are cross-referenced to, states’ academic standards.

Though complete, the courses in some cases are subdivided into short “learning objects” that can be pulled out to address gaps in individual students’ understanding. In many cases, the programs are billed as ways to enable students not only to salvage credit for a class, but also to develop skills and work habits that will contribute to their continued academic success.

Data Elusive
Overall statistics on credit-recovery participation are hard to come by. Course providers often do not ask students why they are enrolling in their courses.

The Florida Virtual School, a state-run online program for grades 6-12, found that 17 percent of its current in-state high school students enrolled for “grade forgiveness”—essentially because they have failed required courses, said Cindy L. Lohan, the FLVS “eSolutions manager.”

“They need to get their previous grade forgiven—that’s credit recovery,” said Ms. Lohan, who markets FLVS online courses out of state. She added that student self-reported data are not always reliable, and that “the chances are the 17 percent number is a little low.”

The virtual school, which expects its number of course enrollments to hit 100,000 this school year, also markets its online courses outside the state to school districts and other course providers. In the past year, Ms. Lohan said, “I became well aware many of our [out-of-state] students are taking our courses for credit recovery.”

While national statistics are elusive, analysts say several forces are pushing school districts toward credit recovery.

One is a general push to raise graduation rates by many groups representing leaders from business, higher education, and state and local government.

Against that backdrop, the U.S. Department of Education recently proposed regulations that would change how school districts report graduation data under the No Child Left Behind Act, which may lead to increased scrutiny on those that graduate fewer seniors on time. (”States to Face Uniform Rules on Grad Data,” April 9, 2008.)

Another factor is financial, because districts lose state funding when students drop out or opt into alternative programs outside the district.

The impact on revenues can make districts more willing to enlist outside organizations to provide credit-recovery services, according to Marc Dean Millot, the editor of the School of Improvement Industry newsletter, based in Alexandria, Va.

“We don’t need a very high level of student success in order to break even for the district,” said Mr. Millot, who also writes a blog, edbizbuzz, hosted on edweek.org.

Moreover, he said, many school leaders do not view the credit-recovery services as competition.

“If you’re a business and trying to earn revenue, you’d like to do things that the district does not consider competition,” Mr. Millot said. “The credit-recovery business is probably the least-competitive offering, particularly from the online or virtual school.”

In a book slated for publication next month, the business author Clayton M. Christensen cites credit recovery as one of the most likely areas for technology-fueled “disruptive innovation” to find a foothold in K-12 education, because upstart online-learning providers can address the needs of students and families not being directly met by the local district. (”Online Education Cast as ‘Disruptive Innovation’,” May 5, 2008.)

Mr. Christensen, a business professor at Harvard University, and two co-authors suggest in the book that credit recovery may be a proving ground for methods that will be adopted for regular education.

Outside Offerings
Seattle-based Apex Learning, better known for its online Advanced Placement courses, has broadened its course catalog in recent years to provide credit recovery, as well as dropout recovery, remediation, intervention, and alternative school programs.

To address students’ different learning styles, its redesigned digital curriculum makes use of audio, video, graphics, images, and animations. On some sections, the students can tap brief audio lectures on the material, which can help students who read below grade level or for whom English is a second language.

Annotated readings and a method called “guided instruction” aim to improve reading comprehension. Other new features, such as graphic organizers and study sheets, are designed to help students complete schoolwork and learn good study habits.

Plato Learning has shifted toward credit recovery after converting a curriculum business that had previously focused on computer-based remedial instruction in basic math and literacy skills.

During a five-year transition completed in 2006, the Minneapolis-based company developed a “personalized one-to-one model” of complete courses delivered online, said Todd Brekhus, a company executive.

The company has incorporated technologies and databases from other companies, such as a platform to manage learning and a database of state academic standards and textbooks that allows teachers to look up standards, and automatically assign content, based on an assessment.

The result, Mr. Brekhus said, is a browser-based “learning-management system that has assessment that can be structured around a course, so content can be assigned to students, and they can exempt out of content areas they know.”

Some critics are concerned that the online credit-recovery options run the risk of simply shuffling students out the door without their having received the full value of a high school education.

But officials in the 66,000-student Volusia County district say their credit-retrieval program, which has operated for more than a decade using various outsider providers, has been fruitful for both students and schools.

“We have thousands of credits generated for thousands of students,” said Chris Colwell, the district’s deputy superintendent for instruction.

He said the district has reviewed its program regularly, changed providers when necessary, and used its own teachers and homegrown strategies, such as providing extra periods, special centers, counseling, flexible hours, and alternative settings. The district currently uses courses from Apex Learning.

Pine Ridge High
At Volusia County’s Pine Ridge High School, Ms. Feltner manages the school’s “Apex lab,” which enrolls students from throughout the 2,200-student school. As students work on whichever of Apex Learning’s courses they need, she offers academic support.

“I try to make it as fun as possible,” she said. “I tell kids they are smarter than I am. There is nothing they cannot do, especially at their age; young brains are like sponges. Just because they cannot do it in a regular classroom, doesn’t mean they cannot do it.”

Ms. Feltner said students sometimes enter the lab believing that learning on computers will be easy. That’s not necessarily true, she said, noting that Apex Learning’s courses demand a lot of reading.

After realizing how much work is required, “you’ll see them put their head down in the first two weeks, if they start to feel overwhelmed,” Ms. Feltner said.

Besides her own observations, Ms. Feltner relies on the online system’s frequent assessments and monitoring tools to signal problems; for example, she gets an immediate e-mail whenever a student fails an online quiz.

“It is my job to analyze very quickly who needs a little more assistance,” she said.

Infrequently, she will end up steering a student to the Florida Virtual School’s courses, which in this district students would have to take at home.

“I personally think that if you have a student who may need more structure and guidance, they are better off in the Apex lab, rather than at home without a parent, or with one without the skills to guide them,” she said.

With the semester nearing the finish line, Ms. Feltner said she reassures the 12th graders that even if they complete their final courses too late to cross the stage with their classmates, they can still earn a 2008 diploma. Even so, she said, not sharing in the celebration “is a devastating prospect” to them.

“It’s end-of-the-year panic time,” she said.

http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2008/05/…dit_ep.h27.html

Wyoming Online High School on Public Radio

This was posted to one of the NACOL forums yesterday.

Wyoming e Academy of Virtual Education was featured on Wyoming Public Radio’s “Open Spaces”

Click here to listen to their story. WPR’s Open Spaces

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