Title: Online K12: Status, Challenges, and Opportunities
1 Online K-12 Status, Challenges, and
Opportunities
Susan Patrick President and CEO North American
Council for Online Learning spatrick_at_nacol.org
Melody Thompson Assistant Professor and Director
of Doctoral Studies PSU Adult Education
Program mmt2_at_psu.edu
2North American Council for Online Learning
- NACOL is the premier K-12 nonprofit organization
in the field of online learning. - Provides leadership, advocacy, research, training
and networking with experts in K-12 online
learning. - Ensure every student has access to the best
education available regardless of geography,
income or background. - Virtual School Symposium (VSS)
3Distance Education in K-12 Public Schools
2002-2003 (NCES 2005)
- 328,000 enrollments in 2002-2003
- 36 of public school districts have students
enrolled in distance education courses - Of these districts, 72 plan to expand their
distance education courses - Distance education provides more course options
to public school students - 50 of districts offered Advanced Placement or
college-level courses - 80 cited the most important reason as offering
courses not otherwise available at the school
4Percentage Distribution of Enrollments in
Distance Education Courses 2002-03
5Reasons for Offering Distance Education Courses
6What Leaders Need to Know Four Key Ideas
- 1 Online Learning Expands Options
- The first impetus to the growth of K-12 distance
education was an interest in expanding
educational options and providing equal
opportunities for all learners. (p.7) - 2 Online Learning Is Rapidly Growing
- Recent Surveys show that K-12 online learning is
a rapidly growing phenomenon. (p.4) - Clark 40,000-50,000 enrollments in 2000-2001
- Eduventures 300,000 K-12 enrollments online
2002-3 - USED/NCES 328,000 enrollments in distance ed
2002-3 - Peak Group 500,000 enrollments in 2005
- Growing 30 annually
7Online Learning Works
- 3 Is Effective Equal or Better
- One conclusion seems clear On average, students
seem to perform equally well or better
academically in online learning. (p. 17) - 4 Improves Teaching
- Teachers who teach online reported positive
improvements in face-to-face, too. - Of those who reported teaching face-to-face
while teaching online or subsequently, three in
four reported a positive impact on their
face-to-face teaching. - (p. 25)
8Are Online Students Engaged?
Apex Apex Learning, Inc FLVS Florida
Virtual School VHSVirtual High School
9Are Online Students Learning?
Apex Apex Learning, Inc FLVS Florida
Virtual School VHSVirtual High School
10Online Learning National Education Technology
Plan
- Goals related to E-Learning (pages 8-9)
- Provide every student access to e-learning
- Enable every teacher to participate in e-learning
training - Encourage the use of e-learning options to meet
NCLB requirements (HQT, SES, choice) - Explore creative ways to fund e-learning
- Develop quality measures and accreditation
standards for e-learning that require those
required for course credit - www.NationalEdTechPlan.org
11Michigan April 2006
- First state to require online learning
- In new high school graduation requirements
every student must have an online learning
experience or course - Need for online learning is greatest with
students to access skills they will need to get
ahead and compete in an increasingly
technological workplace
121952
1368 High School Graduation Rate
- Prepare them for the world they are entering
- 68 graduate high school
- 26 make it to sophomore year
- 80 of jobs require postsecondary education
- U.S.
- 31 proficiency in reading at the 3rd grade
14- The Silent Epidemic
- Gates Foundation commissioned first study of
high school drop outs - 88 had passing grades
- 69 were not motivated to work hard
- 66 would have worked harder if more had been
demanded of them - 81 called for more real world learning
opportunities
15Participation
- Dual credit and exam-based courses in U.S.
Public High Schools 2002-2003 (NCES 2005-09) - Schools with highest minority enrollment were the
most likely to indicate that they did not offer
any dual credit or exam-based courses - Schools in rural areas were more likely than
schools in cities to offer courses for dual
credit through distance education (33 vs. 11) - According to the report, over six in 10 schools
offering dual-credit courses set eligibility
requirements for students to enroll in such
courses in 42 of such schools, one requirement
was teacher recommendation.
16Access to Dual Enrollment
- Dual Enrollment of High School Students at
Postsecondary Institutions 2002-2003 (NCES
2005-08) - 85 of postsecondary institutions had academic
eligibility requirements for high school students
to participate (GPA, standardized test, SAT/ACT,
class rank) - 20 of students parents paid tuition
- 5 of institutions with dual enrollment programs
or 2 of all institutions had dual enrollment
programs geared toward high school students at
risk of academic failure.
17Who Are Our Students?
- Largest generation (36 of total population).
- 31 are minorities more diverse than the adult
population. - Have come of age along with the Internet.
- Information has been universally available and
free to them community is a digital place of
common interest, not just a shared physical
space.
18 Rise of the Millennials
- Studies show that they are a capable,
conscientious, concerned and optimistic
generation, determined to succeed - 96 percent say that doing well in school is
important to their lives. - 94 percent say they plan to continue their
education after high school. - 90 percent of children between 5-17 use
computers. - 94 percent of teens use the Internet for
school-related research. - Teens spend more time online using the Internet
than watching television. - High school and college students spend nearly
400 billion a year. - And they increasingly are involved in making
spending decisions for their parents.
19Internet Use by Age
2012th Graders Perceptions About School
21What Are They Telling Us?
- We have technology in our blood.
- -- High School Student
22Opportunities for Online K-12 and Higher
Education Collaboration
- Conference Report and Recommendations
23What Are The Problems We Believe Online Education
Can Help Solve ?
- The leaky pipeline in our educational system
- Inadequate professional development options for
K-12 teachers - Shortage of K-12 teachers
-
24Intersection of Sloan-C Interests with Social
Needs
- The Sloan-C goal is to make education a part of
everyday life, accessible and affordable for
anyone, anywhere, at any time through support of
effective online higher education programs. - The Sloan Foundation has identified three areas
of online K-12 education that support this goal - Online dual-enrollment courses for high-school
students - Online professional development courses for
practicing teachers - Online certification programs for career changers
25Conference Overview
- Funded by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, planned
and implemented by Penn State, hosted by the
Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) on
March 17, 2006, in Washington, DC - Participants included 35 representatives from
higher education, the K-12 sector, alternative
education providers (e.g., museums, PBS, National
Geographic Foundation), and professional
organizations - Goal to discuss and develop recommendations on
collaborative efforts to strengthen online K-20
education.
26Format of the Conference
- The day-long conference was divided into two
parts - Morning sessions devoted to informational
presentations and identification of core issues - Afternoon sessions focusing on identification of
successful models of K-12higher education
collaboration and opportunities for extending
Sloan Consortium partnerships into the K-12 arena
27Baseline Data
- Presenters Liz Pape (VHS, Inc.) Susan Patrick
(NACOL) Tony Picciano (Sloan-C and Hunter
College) - All three presenters emphasized that there is
considerable online activity in both higher
education and K-12, there is little HEK-12
coordination in relation to curricular
integration and quality standards. - (Data was presented in the first half of this
presentation.)
28Online Dual/Concurrent Enrollment
- Presenters Cheryl Blanco (WICHE) Rafael
Granados (UC) Gary Wixom (Utah Board of Regents) - Primary goals are curricular enrichment,
preparation for post-secondary success, and
shortened time to degree - Differential availability schools with highest
minority populations least likely rural schools
most likely - Several state models are emerging Utah funds
dual enrollment with state appropriations
provides incentives for students who complete
Associates degree by summer following HS
graduation
29Online Teacher Professional Development (OTPD)
- Presenters Rick Eiserman (Georgia Professional
Standards Board) Ann Flynn (National School
Boards Association) Susan Lowes (Teachers
College) Liz Pape (VHS, Inc.) - The topic had a dual focus online development
opportunities for practicing classroom teachers
and OTPD for those who teach online. - OTPD offers the benefits identified by the SDC as
characterizing high-quality PD. - Online teachers need to know how to build
community, facilitate project-based learning, and
promote dialogue learning how to do this online
as students prepares them to be better online
teachers. - A key challenge is to convince local decision
makers of the value of OTPD.
30Teacher Certification for Career Changers
- Presenters Robert Henry (MD State Department of
Education) and Sharnell Jackson (Chicago Public
Schools) - Teacher attrition and retirements, tightening
standards, and a growing student population are
stressing an already inadequate
teacher-preparation system. - Traditional preparation programs cant supply the
2 million new teachers needed to meet the
nations need for highly qualified teachers, as
defined by the NCLB legislation. - Alternative routes to teacher certification are
increasingly being adopted to meet the need for
more and more qualified teachers.
31Teacher Certification (cont)
- As of 2004, 43 states had implemented some type
of alternative process for certifying teachers
currently, 20 or more of new teachers enter the
profession through alternative routes, such a
Troops to Teachers, Teach for America, and New
York Teaching Fellows. - Traditionally delivered alternative certification
programs cannot train nearly enough prospective
teachers to meet the demand, nor do they meet the
needs of adults filling multiple roles. - Online delivery of certification programs
benefits the prospective teacher, school systems,
and the higher education institutions that offer
such programs. However, as with OTPD acceptance
is still an issue.
32Brainstorming and Discussion
- The first electronic brainstorming session,
focused on necessary conditions for
collaboration, barriers to collaboration, and
specific action steps, resulted in a number of
common themes - The impact of collaboration (or lack of
collaboration) on student access to educational
opportunities - The lack of incentives for collaboration
- The challenge of educating decision-makers on the
value of online education - The barrier of funding models that penalize one
partner in a collaboration
33Brainstorming and Discussion (cont)
- The need for research in the three focus areas,
in terms of both learning outcomes and
cost-effectiveness - The need to broaden the collaborative vision to
better integrate alternative providers such as
museums and PBS - The need for integrated quality standards
- The need for coordinated national advocacy by
national organizations and educational
institutions
34Recommended Next Steps in K-20 Collaboration
- Schedule a conference or summit as a follow-up
to this event. - Form an ongoing working group to shape a
collaborative agenda and carry it forward. - Develop a shared research agenda.
- Develop model collaborative programs.
- Develop national online K-12 standards, based on
earlier Sloan-C work and that of other agencies.
35Recommended Next Steps (cont.)
- Further explore the role of non-academic
providers, such as PBS/CPB, museums, National
Geographic Foundation, etc. - Develop materials to educate school leaders and
policy makers. - Develop a K-12 track at the Sloan-C ALN
conference. - Expand effective practices database to include
the three focus areas dual enrollment, OTPD, and
alternative certification.
36The drive of established institutions is to
assimilate and distort the new into conformity
with themselves. John Dewey
37 Thank You! May we have your views and
recommendations?