Friday, November 6, 2009

Virtual schools chart new course  | ajc.com


Virtual schools chart new course ajc.com:

"Representatives of five would-be virtual charter schools will file into the administrative towers of the Georgia Department of Education today to pitch their brand of public education, which lets students study at home computers in their pajamas."

Some contenders will come with national representatives from education management companies touting their records of student achievement in other states. Some will rely on the moms and dads who sit on the boards of petitioning schools to make their case.

If they’re successful, they stand to be funded just as any other Georgia public school. Some state officials, however, aren’t ready to prop open the door of school choice and let more cyber campuses in without first doing more homework on the subject.

Tuesday, the state Board of Education stifled the plans of the state’s only existing virtual charter school, which asked for the opportunity to compete for full funding from the Georgia Charter Schools Commission. The state school board tabled the request so it could study the issue.

The five newcomers, however, did not have to seek permission to petition the commission. They have bypassed traditional routes to charter authorization in Georgia, which is first seeking approval from a local school district and then, if denied, appealing to the state Board of Education. With a second charter authorizer in the state up and running, new pathways are being created for charter school hopefuls.