During this decade, American education will shift from print to digital, from
flat and sequential content to engaging and adaptive, and from batch
processing to personalized learning. There will also be a slow enrollment shift from traditional district-operated schools to schools and programs operated by organizations authorized under contracts or charter. As chief executive officer and chair of the International Association for K-12 Online Learning (iNACOL), the authors believe that one of the most important drivers of this historic shift is online learning. It is growing by more than 40 percent annually and creating new full- and part-time options for students and families. This paper refers specifically to online schools where instruction is delivered remotely by live teachers on a full- and part-time basis, also known as virtual or cyber learning. In many states, online learning began as a state-sponsored program with dedicated line item funding that became unsustainable with growth (because students were being double funded). To provide scalable, quality full- and part-time options, more than half of the states have authorized statewide charter or contract schools. However, most charter school legislation was drafted in the early 1990s and did not contemplate online opportunities. This paper deals with the three key questions that state policymakers and authorizers need to answer: (1) Who will operate and authorize online schools? (2) How will students be enrolled? and (3) How will they be funded? It concludes with advice on innovation and quality in online learning.
Authors
- Authorizing Institution
- National Association of Charter School Authorizers
- Education Level
- Elementary Secondary Education
- Location
- ['Arizona', 'Arkansas', 'Florida']
- Peer Reviewed
- F
- Publication Type
- Reports - Evaluative
- Published in
- United States of America
Table of Contents
- Online learning is rapidly evolving. In addition to virtual schools it is increasingly being incorporated into traditional settings that blend the best of online and face- to-face learning. 2
- Learning online full time may provide cost savings of 10-15 percent over traditional schools given reduced need for facilities transportation and administration. 3
- Schools should be rewarded for accelerating student progress. States should create innovation spaces for competency- based models where funding follows the student and is outcomes based. 4
- Non-renewal of underperforming operations is the most important act that an authorizer can take. 5