Five groups apply to open Maine charter schools

• The Maine Virtual Academy is an online K-12 school. The applicant is Maine Learning Innovations, a nonprofit group.

According to the letter of intent, Maine Learning Innovations would contract with K12 Virtual Schools for “curriculum, teaching and school management services.” K12, a for-profit company, is the largest U.S. provider of proprietary curriculum and online education programs.

• Baxter Academies of Maine will apply to open the Baxter Academy for Technology and Science on York Street in Portland. The high school would accept 160 students in the first year and later double to 320.

While Baxter Academy would seek students interested in science, technology, engineering and mathematics, it also would offer “a strong humanities and foreign language curriculum.”

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‘Virtual world’ helps real Maine students escape rural isolation

When the virtual world went live in September 2010, it had just one “level,” which was a dead ringer for Mount View High School. Students can use their avatar to socialize with others and then use them to walk into virtual classrooms, where they sit at a computer terminal and begin their actual lessons in classes such as biology, English and math. Real teachers can pop in and out of the world, checking in on the students and their progress.

“They’re very excited to talk to other people,” Hughes said of the students. “This is what our students wanted — a very customized, human touch. They respond to it very well.”

In order to get the credit for their school efforts, students need to demonstrate proficiency in the subject, not just log hours in the world.

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Online Classes Accelerate Math for Middle Schoolers, Research Finds

Eighth-graders who take an online Algebra I course score higher on end-of-year algebra assessments than other students who take the standard instructor-led math program offered by their schools and are twice as likely to follow an advanced course sequence in high school as their peers. Those results came out of a multi-year study done in 68 mostly rural schools in Maine and Vermont and could influence decisions by more middle schools to begin offering Algebra I classes.

The research was conducted by a team at Regional Educational Laboratory Northeast and Islands (REL-NEI), one of 10 laboratories funded through the Institute of Education Sciences at the United States Department of Education to perform research for informing policies and educational practices in the area of improving student achievement.

As described in “Access to Algebra I: The Effects of Online Mathematics for Grade 8 Students,” a team of eight researchers randomly assigned a group of volunteer schools in both states to offer either an online Algebra I course to their “algebra-ready” students during the 2008-2009 school year or to serve as a control school by offering their standard math curriculum. At the end of the school year, the researchers collected results of an algebra achievement test and a general math achievement test for each of the 440 students who participated.

In spring 2009 they also collected information from the students about what high schools they planned to attend and which math classes they planned to take. Then the researchers followed them into high school to collect additional data, including which ninth grade math classes they took and what grades they earned and what 10th grade classes they were enrolled in.

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K12 (LRN) Announces Quarterly Results

K12 Inc. (K12) is a technology-based education company. The Company offers curriculum and educational services designed to facilitate individualized learning for students in kindergarten through 12th grade, or K-12. The Company delivers its learning system to students primarily through virtual public schools and are building an institutional business with sales directly to school districts. K12 offers virtual public schools its curriculum, online learning platform and varying levels of academic and management services, which can range from targeted programs to complete turnkey solutions. In addition, parents can purchase its curriculum and learning solutions directly to facilitate or supplement their children’s education. In April 2010, K12 formed a joint venture with Middlebury College known as Middlebury Interactive Languages LLC (MIL) to develop online foreign language courses. In July 2010, the Company acquired all of KC Distance Learning, Inc. (KCDL).

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Time for Virtual Schooling to Grow-Up

Virtual schooling is a good idea. Over the past decade or so, online education has proven itself a valuable component of the learning system, from elementary to post-secondary. I personally use a lot of online learning in my own teaching, so I am a tried and true advocate for online learning.

But, it needs to grow up. And fast. As online learning approaches the knee of the exponential curve, we can’t ignore it as just a small tangential sandbox. With 200,000 full-time virtual students nationwide and growing, it is core to the system now and we need to treat it that way.

In a new brief my partners Gene Glass and Kevin Welner, of the National Education Policy Center, articulate many of the current problems in the P-12 online learning space. There are serious, documented quality concerns and in some cases a near total lack of traditional accountability and oversight. The Washington Post this morning provided a good summary. The abuses are appalling and could cause a national backlash against the use of online learning in the P-12 learning system.

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The Universal Notebook: Are virtual schools real schools?

“Maine’s schools face a number of challenges in the years ahead, but digital learning holds the promise of improving student outcomes at a time of declining school funding and plunging student enrollment. The time has come for a major digital learning initiative, led by Maine’s next governor. With the right policies in place, Maine could ensure that all of its students have access to the digital learning programs they need to assure their success in school and beyond.”

Bowen then goes on to tout the virtues of the Virtual Learning Academy Charter School in New Hampshire as a model of what he foresees for Maine. The N.H. school serves some 7,000 high school kids with an online curriculum borrowed from the Florida Virtual School.

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Group touts plan for charter schools in Maine

The Community School puts together a budget from donations and tuition payments from eight districts that send students. A charter school law would give the school a steadier stream of funding, said Joseph Hufnagel, who directs the school’s residential program.

Mike Muir said a charter school law would allow his virtual high school program, which works with a dozen Auburn students, to work with more districts.

And the law would let the school in Cornville reopen, after it was closed last year by School Administrative District 54.

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Educational overhaul looms for Sanford, SAD 60

While the training of faculty and staff will begin right away, other changes will not go into effect until fall when the new learning pathways coordinator begins working with first-year high school students and first- and second-year technical school students (juniors and seniors) and Virtual High School.

“The online high school learning program will allow students for whom their needed pathway to high school completion does not exist at Sanford High School to go online and take the courses they need to complete their pathway, for example Mandarin Chinese language or associate degree courses not offered at York County Community College,” St. Cyr said.

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School Choice Offers Opportunity for the Teaching Profession

As technology changes and evolves, the world of education and teaching will undoubtedly change. Teachers across the country must stay ahead of the curve.

Although some teachers and the unions see school choice as foreboding for the public school outlook, school choice encompasses empowerment for the parent to choose an environment that employs teachers in all arenas. A new era has been ushered in for education. Once limited to rigid traditional school terms and schedules, teachers are employed in traditional public schools, charters, private schools, religious schools, and online schools just to name a few. Educators will in turn have choices themselves when deciding when, where and how to teach kids.

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Gov.-elect LePage discusses plans for higher education

LePage also clarified his proposed five-year high school plan, which would allow participants to earn an associate degree while going to high school an extra year.

The normal four-year option for students to graduate with a diploma would still stand. He said students in the five-year program could utilize online education and video courses and physically attend community college courses at one of seven campuses statewide.

“It’s not unusual for a Waterville High School student to go to Colby [College] and take a couple courses,” LePage said. “If the college is right local, you can do it right on-site. If it’s not, you can do it virtual or do it online.”

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