Wednesday, April 26, 2006

Virtual schools mean more opportunity

The Joplin Globe
CNHI News Service
— By Brian L. BakerGuest columnist

Unless we open new doors, the seven last words of our public schools will be "we never did it that way before." The 21st century is here, and except for some marker-boards, most of our students learn in a 1950s classroom model - which is not all bad. However, new ideas and technology must be allowed to stand along side the sacred cow of public education.The Missouri Virtual Public School is an innovative way to deliver a quality and challenging public education to students all around the state. It is designed to meet needs where the "traditional" classroom cannot. It is not a replacement, but a tool that allows education to reach the farthest corners of our state, into the deepest rural landscapes and urban cores. I have a deep respect for the superintendents of this state and in Southwest Missouri. I have met with many of them, and we agree on many issues regarding public education. However, their concerns about the MVP School have been addressed and discussed in a thorough manner in Jefferson City.First, your article is correct. All local dollars will be kept by the local public school. However, state aid will follow the student to the Virtual Public School run by the Department of Education. The student can enroll in the MVP school full time.Students can also choose to be provisionally enrolled in their local school district for the purpose of participating in extracurricular activities like band, speech, debate, theater, etc. If they choose to do this, then 15 percent of the state aid will remain with the local school district. The remaining 85 percent of that student's state aid will go to the MVP school.This is just one way we addressed the socialization issue raised by Webb City Superintendent Ron Lankford. Students would have a choice to participate in public-school activities.Second, the MVP school is not simply designed just for full-time students. Suppose you have a rural district with gifted students, but they cannot hire gifted teachers or an advanced-subject staff. Students can enroll in the MVP school part time. If a student needed a physics class, he or she could enroll in the MVP school for that class and then take the needed course from the school library. If he or she was enrolled in just one MVP class then the cost would only be one-sixth of the state aid provided for that student - six courses equals full-time equivalency.We address the social interaction of students by assigning each student a teacher who will work one-on-one with that student. Daily contact will be attained through phone, e-mail or audio-video. One-on-one weekly contact will be a rule established by the Department of Education. Plus, parents will be required to commit to a certain involvement level or students will not be able to participate.The state will have regions where students in the MVP school can link up and participate in group activities. Again, this will be a cooperative effort among the DESE-assigned teacher, the parents and the students.Plus, we must all recognize that with the availability of community activities, sports and other social events, today's students have a variety of opportunities to develop social skills. There will not be a mass exodus of students to the MVP school. Most states that provide this tool only see about 1 percent to 2 percent of students participate. Some of these students face health issues that leave them uncomfortable or disadvantaged in a "traditional" school. By offering the MVP school, we give the cancer patient or paraplegic access to a quality public education. Finally, this program does not entail students sitting around looking at a computer screen. Textbooks, hands-on lab work and actual paperwork are required by the curriculum that will be offered. There are a number of curriculum providers who have the ability to provide the equipment and technology to offer the services of the MVP school.What gives the program such promise is that it accents the current system by offering new technology to public education, providing another way to teach. The global world has entered our lives. We must begin true education reform that helps the classroom catch up to the rest of the world. Never let us embrace a we-never-did-it-that-way-before spirit.
Brian L. Baker is the author of the MVP school bill and chairman of the Missouri Committee on Student Achievement & Finance.
Copyright © 1999-2006 cnhi, inc.

No comments: