Virtual schools are schools of the future. They provide the ultimate level
playing field for students living in poverty or affluence. The phenomenal
growth of internet learning is happening across the education spectrum. This
has been played out in the growth of massive open online courses (MOOC).
In 2012 one internet platform provider had 300,000 students. Also, 6.7 million
or a third of all college students now learn online according to the Babson
Survey Research Group. The 200,000 students already enrolled in K-12
virtual schools are only about 3% of this number. At this rate of growth,
virtual learning has surpassed the number of K-12 students in public schools in
the US.
In light of these developments, perhaps, there are too few initiatives in
internet learning.
I work at an independent Cyber Charter School
in Pennsylvania.
We live in a changing world that is requiring our students to change with it.
Cyber Schools are schools of choice. Parents who have a negative experience at
a cyber school can choose another form of education. This is not the case with
traditional schools. They have a default population who are assigned to a
school on the basis of where the family resides.
Students and teachers at Cyber Schools collaborate online. At our school,
(www.palcs.org) we use an open source Moodle platform to teach asynchronously. Students
are assigned a learning module where teachers have placed a motivational hook,
review, a lesson, and an assessment. Students can contact teachers at our
buildings by instant messenger, built into the platform, or phone which allows
for quick collaboration to catch a student processing their learning. We also
teach synchronously and use Adobe multi-media classrooms. In addition, we have
six centers where students can meet and collaborate in a blended learning
environment. Virtual schools rent hundreds of rental facilities across the
Commonwealth to implement standardized tests. In addition, students can travel
to locations on leadership, language immersion, and family trips. They can stay
current on their school work and travel the world at the same time with the aid
of a laptop and an Internet connection.
We have 1100 high school students who are members of a student government
organization at our school. They create and implement student funded projects
and trips like... a Chinese exchange program, Panama, Quebec, Washington, New
York City, and Harrisburg trips, proms on both sides of the state, talent
shows, a protected social media discussion board, a Students Against
Destructive Decisions (SADD) event, a yearbook, numerous fundraisers, and
community service projects. There is a certain irony in these activities
because our school receives 25% less funding than other public schools because
we are not paid to provide extracurricular activities.
Pennsylvania Representative Dan Truitt has introduced
two new bills to protect Cyber Schools. House Bill 970 and 971 will allow Cyber School
funding to be reformed by having schools report their expenses versus their
revenues on an annual balance sheet. Unfortunately, cyber schools currently
seem to be an easy target for funding cuts. When Dan attempts to defend cyber
schools, he has heard one consistent rebuttal, “Cyber schools deserve a cut
because they have no buildings.” When you ask someone if they have ever
visited a cyber school they normally respond, “no.” Many people will never
believe that we have buildings until they visit. We welcome them to come to 1332 Enterprise Drive, West Chester, PA 19380 or any of our other five
centers. I am sure that the other cyber schools will be happy to invite you as
well. The truth is Cyber Schools have many of the same expenses that
traditional schools do at the K-12 level. However, charter schools only receive
75% of the tuition allocated for a student at
his or her local public school.
In an age where no child should be left behind pulling Cyber School
funding has already created an uneven playing field. Recently Monica Allison,
the President of the Pennsylvania Families for Public Cyber Schools sent me
this question, “Is my child a second-class student?” I present the following
question to you as you consider the online education debate, “Do we want to
relegate any child to the status of second-class student?”
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