Why Is Public Education Being Outsourced to Online Charter Schools?

Virtual charter schools, which offer classes online instead of in a classroom, have become the fastest-growing segment of the charter school industry. And while data on their effectiveness is scarce, state legislators across the country are passing laws to expand cyber schools at the behest of privatization advocates and online education companies at an alarming rate, with little regulation.

The Associated Press reports that more than 200,000 kindergarten to 12th grade students are enrolled in full-time “virtual charter schools” in at least 40 states. That number soars to two million schoolchildren nationwide when one takes into account students who are enrolled in at least one course.

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District’s online enrollment process begins Jan. 3

The Natrona County School District will conduct its annual online school request process Jan. 3-31 at www.natronaschools.org. NCSD is an open enrollment district, meaning that parents may enroll their children in any school with available space, regardless of where in the county they live.

This process is designed to allow families to request their top three choices for schools for the 2012-13 school year. It’s targeted specifically at families who are new to the district, including those whose children are starting kindergarten, and those whose students are changing schools in 2012-13 (by the family’s choice or because a child is moving to middle or high school). Students who’re staying in the same school from this year to next school year don’t have to do anything; they will automatically have a place in their school for 2012-13.

Families of current students in kindergarten through 11th grade should have received detailed information on this process in the mail, including a catalog detailing all of the district’s schools and programs. They also should have received a separate letter providing them with a username and password for the school request process. When they visit www.natronaschools.org, they’ll be asked to enter their username and password, then they’ll be allowed to request three schools for their child. Families that have more than one child to enroll will need to complete the process separately for each child.

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Robotics Club: Extracurricular Activities and Online Learning

Jackson Hole Connections Academy

Jackson Hole Connections Academy

America Is Still the Most Innovative Country in the World

Embracing America’s comparative advantages requires appreciating that, when the world changes, the challenges, as well as the tools, talent, and technology at our disposal, also change. Seeking to provide high-quality instruction to every child in the 21st century is a sea change from our agenda a century ago–when we only expected one student in ten to finish high school and when it was impossible to instruct a child who was 1,000 feet away. Today, we can meet new demands by drawing upon a talent pool and tools unimaginable in 1911.

American K-12 schooling is a hotbed of dynamic problem-solving on this front. Non-profits like Teach For America, Florida Virtual School, The New Teacher Project, Carpe Diem, and Citizen Schools are showing new ways to recruit and utilize educators. For-profits like Wireless Generation, Tutor.com, Pearson, Discovery, and Rosetta Stone are offering up a range of ways to harness new tools and technology to support teaching and learning. Figuring out how to leverage these new problem-solvers is a place where our state systems, districts, and schools have fumbled badly. This is an area where would-be reformers have devoted far too little attention. Meanwhile, not only have the “best” performing nations not done any better on this count, but the schemes promoted by those covetously eyeing Finland inevitably entail oodles of regulations and rule-writing calculated to stifle such providers.

Indeed, if we look to nations that are gearing up to lead the pack in 2052, rather than 2012, we see that countries like Qatar and India are busy spying on these American ventures to help them make the leap. We would be well-advised to take the hint, and to push forward by drawing on what the U.S. has always done best.

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Virtual school offers K-12 distance learning option

It doesn’t happen often, but sometimes education in a brick-and-mortar school just isn’t an option.

The Wyoming Virtual Academy (WYVA) offers an alternative.

The WYVA is an online school in which K-12 students can enroll part-time or full-time. Thought it is based in Lusk, the WYVA offers its services throughout the state.

According to WYVA school head Dr. Ed Weber, the academy began soon after the Wyoming Legislature approved funding for a statewide distance learning initiative. Weber first worked as a consultant in the school’s planning and beginning phases, but later became head of the school.

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Could virtual academy compete with home school?

While some think virtual education programs are drawing students away from traditional schools, the programs also are reaching into the home-school community.

Some home-schooling families are among those who have taken advantage of a recent agreement between Laramie County School District 1 and the Wyoming Virtual Academy, said Daniel Marquart, distance learning coordinator and community liaison.

But he said he isn’t sure how many of the school’s 106 students were formerly home-schoolers.

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Mutually Assured Learning

But if we start with the premise that online education is not only inevitable but desirable, the involvement of for-profit and charter entities in the e-learning marketplace could be a symbiotic relationship that benefits all involved.

First, there’s no question in my mind that for-profit entities have made important investments in the development of their virtual offerings and in doing so have upped the ante of the quality of online teaching and curricula. There is a higher bar to aim for now.

In addition, as Connections Academy co-founder Mickey Revenaugh points out in our story, districts that contract with for-profit companies like hers can offer a wider range of online options than if they had to build it all themselves. It’s not just the rural school in Arkansas that can now offer Mandarin. It’s that amazing online math curriculum that you want your students to benefit from, or the turnkey solution that will allow districts to serve families that opt out of public schooling for religious or political reasons.

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Central Wyoming Fair vendors satisfy cravings intellectual and gastronomical

Grab the side of the rudimentary wheel of fortune at the Wyoming Virtual School exhibit in the Industrial Building at the fair.

Give it a hard tug. Watch the marker trip by the dowels.

Phttttttttttt. Phtphtpht. Phtpht. Pht.

Congratulations. High school technology teacher Sharon Wise hands over the prize: a “Cruzzle”; “it’s a crayon….and a puzzle!”

The Wyoming Virtual School, sponsored through the Niobrara County School District, was among 135 nonprofit and commercial vendors who paid between $275 and $400 depending on location to promote their ideas and push their wares last week at the Central Wyoming Fair and Rodeo, fair manager Tom Jones said.

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Connections Academy TV Commercial — Online Learning Experience that Develops your Whole Child

Jackson Hole Connections Academy

Jackson Hole Connections Academy

Virtual school seeking students

CHEYENNE — Parents looking for public school alternatives for their children have another option this year.

A public virtual school, or online school, is looking to attract students from Cheyenne looking for a different educational path.

The school, the Wyoming Connections Academy, recently moved its home base to Big Horn County School District 1.

However, it is still open to all students in Wyoming, Principal Ben Kolb said. It offers classes for students in kindergarten through 12th grade.

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