As it should be:
Online schools are losing support, creating divisions in the national charter school movement.
They will gladly take the money and promise result sometime in the future. What is the cost to the students and taxpayers? Online schools have been very good for the owners.
http://www.cleveland.com/metro/index.ssf/2015/11/online_schools_are_losing_supp.html
Poor test results at online schools are creating divisions in the charter school community in Ohio and nationally, leading some national leaders to question whether e-schools should even be part of the charter school movement anymore.
At the top of the list is
Nina Rees, head of the nation's largest charter school organization, the
National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, who is distancing herself from online schools and the damage they are causing to the public perception of charters overall.
After a visit to Ohio earlier this month, Rees said e-schools - schools where kids take all their classes by computer at home, instead of in classrooms - are dragging down the overall performance of charter schools in Ohio and other states.
"If you were to eliminate the (test scores of) online schools, the performance of the state would dramatically improve," Rees said.
Stanford study creating waves
The
study in question, and one that has sparked a renewed debate over the entire online school model, came late last month from Stanford University's
Center for Research of Educational Outcomes (CREDO). Researchers found that students in online schools – – learn far less than students in other schools.
Nationally, students learned the equivalent of 72 days of school less in reading and 180 days less in math, each school year, CREDO found.
CREDO found the scores of kids not only fell when they switched to online schools, but they rose when students went back to traditional schools.
Marie Hanna, executive director of Ohio Connections Academy, also had criticisms of the CREDO report, saying the virtual twin comparison "doesn't make sense."
That school is owned by Pearson, the international education giant that recently drew criticism in Ohio for its handling of the PARCC Common Core exams.
Hanna was far more reserved than the others and said that despite her reservations, CREDO's report is a call for more research.
"CREDO brings up some concerns," Hanna said. "No doubt about it. It brings up the need for more research in the e-school environment to really understand what's working and what isn't.''
Online schools receive about $6,800 per student a year in state tax dollars to run their schools, regardless of how much students learn.