Questions about school bond

The Alpine School Board will be sending out a survey to ask residents what they think about a proposed $200 million school bond.

We hope they ask how many parents plan to home-school their children, or want them to attend charter schools, or think their kids might be happiest taking part in a cyberschool.

The information revolution is affecting schools too. There are a lot of young children in Utah Valley, but today’s big school buildings might look like old-fashioned relics when today’s infants get to grade school, or when today’s toddlers are attending high school.

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Virtual School? Some States May Replace Teachers with Laptops

With public school systems across America hurting for cash, several states are considering extreme cost cutting measures.  One of the most controversial possibilities is the potential of putting children in virtual classrooms.   There’s little research into how online classes work for K-12 students, or whether they will work at all, but Florida and Utah are already in the process of pushing through mandatory switches to online only courses for some high schools.

Naturally, teachers and parents are skeptical.  Available online courses vary greatly in the amount of student teacher interaction required – some are little more than computerized workbooks that provide little or no help for students struggling to learn the material.  Like regular classrooms, what little study there is on the effectiveness of these courses suggests that small student to teacher ratios are key.  Teachers trying to supervise learning from afar need as much time, if not more, per student to be effective as teachers working in the classroom according to those who’ve taught this way in the past.  Of course, bringing in more teachers to work with kids in digital classroom defeats the cost cutting benefits of online course work.

For the rest of the article, go to Virtual School? Some States May Replace Teachers with Laptops

Welcome to Williamsburg Academy

Welcome to Williamsburg Academy

Best Online High Schools gets new design

Best Online High Schools has now been updated with a new design and new features. This new version will continue to provide you with the best information available on the Internet about online high schools.

Come take a look!

Abbeville school had role in rise and fall of enterprise for serving troubled teens

These days Kay serves as the superintendent of the Browning Distance Learning Academy, which bills itself as “an alternative school for a quality education.”

Kay said his son Jay, the former director at Tranquility Bay, is dying of liver disease.

Meanwhile Narvin Lichfield is searching for investors so that he can reopen the former Carolina Springs Academy boarding school in 2011. Its new name will be Magnolia Christian School, he said.

For the rest of the article, go to Abbeville school had role in rise and fall of enterprise for serving troubled teens

Abundant Life Academy has employee shake-up

Owner Craig Rogers, in a phone interview, said of ALA, “we don’t have any money.” He cited the economy as being a factor, and him not being at the helm due to surgery. Rogers said his blog on the academy’s website was improper and inappropriate. He said he wrote it out of anger.

He said there are two companies involved – Abundant Life Academy and Virtual High School – of which he co-owns with Rod Quarnberg.

“Our attempt was to heal the divide,” said Rogers, of the shake-up and subsequent offer to key staff a percentage of ownership in Abundant Life Academy, if they gave up two months of pay.”

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Virtual Schools Adopt Moodle-Based LMS

At the Open High School of Utah (OHSU), an statewide online charter high school, budget constraints during the first year of operation in 2009-2010, coupled with the needs for flexibility in course design and portability and access of its open education resource (OER) courses, led to a re-evaluation of its LMS needs.

“We were concerned about the cost and the limited potential of what we were using. We were searching for a dynamic LMS that had the features we needed now,” said Sarah Weston, curriculum director for OHSU. “After we were presented with all the different options, it was the features and pricing that ultimately drove our decision. Plus, anticipating the direction that open-source is heading made our decision almost seem like a no brainer.”

For the rest of the article, go to Virtual Schools Adopt Moodle-Based LMS

Hartford Writer Wins Fellowship

Alison McLennan is a native of Quincy, Mass., and now based in Odgen, Utah. A graduate of the University of Utah, Alison has worked extensively with non-profit organizations in numerous roles, including curriculum development, grant writing, and crisis intervention. Currently a teacher at the Utah Virtual Academy, Alison has been a recipient of a Utah Arts Council award for her writing. She is at work on a cross-genre novel, Falling For Johnny, set in her childhood home of Massachusetts.

For the rest of the article, go to Hartford Writer Wins Fellowship

South Carolina and Utah Implement Affordable and Sustainable e-Learning Solutions to Serve State High School Students

Utah is another example of how states can creatively harness e-Learning to deliver purposeful and engaging online instruction. The Open High School of Utah, a statewide, full-service online charter high school that is committed to the use of open educational resources (OERs), decided midway through its first year in operation (2009-2010) to re-evaluate the provider of its e-Learning platform due to budget constraints and the need for flexibility in designing courses that supported unprecedented levels of individualized instruction within a highly responsive curriculum.

“We were concerned about the cost and the limited potential of what we were using. Considering that we publicly release our OER-based courses, housing them in an LMS where access and portability were difficult didn’t accomplish anything. We were searching for a dynamic LMS that had the features we needed now” says Sarah Weston, Curriculum Director for the Open High School of Utah. “After we were presented with all the different options, it was the features and pricing that ultimately drove our decision. Plus, anticipating the direction that open-source is heading made our decision almost seem like a no brainer.”

For the rest of the article, go to South Carolina and Utah Implement Affordable and Sustainable e-Learning Solutions to Serve State High School Students

The Nonprofit Approach to Online Education

Earlier this year, the school’s president, Robert Mendenhall, won the McGraw Prize for post-secondary education from textbook giant McGraw-Hill for his efforts expanding the school and providing access to education for an underserved population. WGU also received an award for quality online education from the Sloan Consortium, a preeminent online education organization. “They’ve gotten to a point in their relatively short history that the quality is so high,” says Burks Oakley II, who oversaw the Sloan-C awards committee. “And they want to get better.”

For the rest of the article, go to The Nonprofit Approach to Online Education