Virtual Schools
Wednesday May 14th 2008, 3:47 pm
Filed under: Education, NCLB, Online Education, Resources

According to this article in the CS Monitor, more and more parents are keeping their kids home and sending them to virtual schools in which the teachers and coursework are accessed online. Any extra supplies are sent by mail to the students’ homes. One mom describes the idea of sending her kid to a virtual school as “the 21st-century, middle-class version of the private tutor.”

Kids who attend virtual schools can spend the extra time on the subjects they have a harder time grasping, and can more speedily attack the subjects they’re comfortable with. In an actual classroom, the teacher has the difficult job of having to walk that middle road: teaching at the average students’ learning pace. The unavoidable results of this are that the kids who are having a tough time get left behind, which affects them academically as well as socially and emotionally, and the kids who understand the information immediately can end up feeling bored and unchallenged.

The idea of sending kids to virtual school is gaining popularity:

Enrollment in online classes last year reached the 1 million mark, growing 22 times the level seen in 2000, according to the North American Council for Online Learning. That’s just the start, says a new paper by the Hoover Institute, a conservative think tank at Stanford University. Its authors predict that by 2019 half of courses in Grades 9 to 12 will be delivered online.

But, as with every new notion, the implementing of it often involves some working out of the inevitable kinkage. Monitoring learning hours accurately, issues with funding, and having better “official oversight” in place is still being worked out. I think it’s worth the effort to have it be a workable option for kids who either don’t have access to adequate schools, or who don’t fit into their available school for whatever reason.

I’m fortunate enough to live in a city with a decent public school system, and (so far) I have the time and energy to be there when my daughter is doing her homework and to spend time helping her with her extra reading every day. Which is all by way of saying I feel confident that between her day at a good public school and being home in the evenings with her not-utterly-exhausted parents, my kid is going to be covered on all educational fronts.

However, if Seattle schools sucked or if my daughter had issues that I didn’t feel the public education system was handling effectively, I would be stoked of I had solid online options available.

Further Reading:

NPR: Public Schools Expand Curriculum Online

Resources:

North American Council for Online Learning
Virtual School Clearinghouse
University of California College Prep
K12

Posted by Alexa Harrington




Interesting post, Alexa. A buddy of mine is a teacher and offers most of his curriculum (and assignments, etc) online, and it seems to be working out well with students and parents. Another intersection of innovation and education is Intel’s International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF), which is wrapping up today in Atlanta. I’m quite proud to be helping Intel out on this – ISEF is a collection of some of the world’s brightest minds. I urge you and your readers to check it out!

Best,
Paul

http://www.intelisef2008.org/

Comment by Paul 05.16.08 @ 10:33 am

Alexa –

I just came across your “Virtual Schools” article on your blog and wanted to point you to a new website I’m starting that lets students teach each other online. Unlike traditional “online education,” we don’t provide any content — we just make it easier for people to meet and teach each other online. For grad students, it is a way to earn some money on the side. For younger students, it is an easy way to find tutors without going off-campus. You can check it out at http://www.revoluminary.com or read about it on http://www.darngoodreviews.com/a-darn-good-look-at-revoluminary/.

Since you write a lot about issues related to education, I’d love to get your feedback on the site. Thanks!

Comment by Max 06.02.08 @ 10:57 am

Indeed a very informative write-up. I think just hiring the ‘best’ online learning service is of no use unless students themselves take some initiatives. Involvement of parents with online tutor, perfection of using the suggested ‘system’ ahead of time, familiarization with the topic of upcoming tutoring session, assessing your weakness yourself and revision of previous lessons etc may make online learning more convenient, interesting and effective. To know more about other aspects of online learning, Http://tutorskingdom.com/ too may be a good source.

Comment by MEGHA 01.06.09 @ 11:09 pm

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