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Sunday, October 7, 2012

Investigation under way on K12 virtual school used in Northeast Florida districts | Jacksonville.com Mobile Edition

Investigation under way on K12 virtual school used in Northeast Florida districts | Jacksonville.com Mobile Edition:


Investigation under way on K12 virtual school used in Northeast Florida districts


Student-teacher ratios at K12, the nation’s largest online educator, are nearly twice as high as Florida’s state-run virtual school, according to internal company documents obtained by the Florida Center for Investigative Reporting and StateImpact Florida.
A high school teacher working for K12 may have as many as 275 students, compared to Florida Virtual School, which has a maximum class size of 150.
“The concept of one teacher managing 275 or 300 students — it just doesn’t make sense,” said Luis Huerta, a Columbia University education professor who studies online education. “It’s hard to believe one person could do that. You have teacher-pupil ratios that are ten times what it would be in a traditional school.”
According to company documents, K12 provides better student-teacher ratios to schools that pay more per student, though even the best ratios are higher than the state-run competitor’s.
The publicly traded K12 operates in 43 Florida school districts, including in Duval, Clay and St. Johns counties, with students ranging in education level from kindergarten