Digital roundup: states legislatures scramble to boost, or in some cases block, online learning.
Horn, Michael B.
As online, or digital, learning grows across the nation, state
legislatures are feverishly passing bills in an attempt to shape,
propel, and, in some cases, stunt its growth. In 2012 alone, according
to Digital Learning Now!, a national campaign run by former Florida
governor Jeb Bush's Foundation for Excellence in Education, more
than 150 bills related to K-12 digital learning were signed into law.
State legislatures were hardly less busy in the spring of 2013. But for
all the action, nothing is happening in K-12 education that is remotely
comparable to the pending digital disruption of the higher education
system.
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Many predict that recent innovations--including low-cost online
universities, competency-based instruction, online partnerships between
for-profits and traditional universities, and MOOCs (massive open online
courses)--will quite literally transform higher education, as they
threaten the future of large numbers of traditional postsecondary
institutions. Although there are certainly political and policy
obstacles to creating online educational opportunities in higher
education, a great deal of innovation can take place outside of the
reach of regulation. In the K-12 education system, however, replacing
traditional schools with new schools powered by digital learning would
require wholesale policy changes. As a result, even as digital learning
grows rapidly in both sectors, the regulatory infrastructure that shapes
K-12 education is likely to exert far greater influence on the ultimate
effects of online learning.
The reasons for this disparity are many. In higher education,
students have far more choices than they do for secondary school.
College attendance is voluntary, and students can choose from among
hundreds of institutions of varying cost and quality, including formal
credentialed learning experiences and informal ones. Many people choose
not to attend postsecondary institutions at all, as they find them too
inconvenient or expensive. This creates opportunities for entrepreneurs
to launch disruptive innovations that will likely replace many
mainstream colleges.
But in the K-12 school sector, there is virtually no
nonconsumption, that is, nearly every student has access to a
government-funded school of some sort, and in fact state laws make
attendance compulsory to a particular age. As a result, creating new
digital-learning schools presents a direct challenge to the traditional
education-system monopoly. Policymaking around digital learning in K-12
education is accordingly becoming more contentious as online
opportunities expand. Because of these dynamics, the bulk of K-12 online
learning will likely develop within schools rather than in competition
with them, and squarely within the reach of regulation.
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These realities became increasingly clear as the 2013 legislative
sessions unfolded across the United States. Although many in the
burgeoning education-technology start-up world downplay the role of
policy, ultimately policy is decisive in a highly regulated system where
school districts hold near monopolies over publicly funded instruction.
Policy helps to determine the rules of the public education-technology
marketplace: what will and won't be funded, and what incentives
will and won't exist to create products and services that boost
student outcomes.
Although students and families often have little consumer power in
public K-12 education, and providers operate within a highly constrained
system, digital learning is making headway, even when policy is less
than fully supportive. In California, for example, schools from Silicon
Valley to the inner-city neighborhoods in Oakland and Los Angeles are
using blended-learning techniques to provide exciting new learning
environments (See "Can Khan Move the Bell Curve to the Right?"
features, Spring 2012, and "The Promise of Personalized
Learning," features, Fall 2013). Part of the driving force have
been the cost constraints imposed on schools by the recent financial
crisis. Such growth in digital learning, even without new state policy
initiatives, may yet transform K-12 schooling, but it could also
reinforce the inequities and weaknesses of the current system.
In the 2013 legislative sessions, the assortment of bills focused
on K-12 digital learning ranges from the creation of commissions to
study the modality to the funding of infrastructure to addressing
student data issues. The most significant legislation in the states,
however, clusters around three categories: 1) creating opportunities for
students to take courses from alternative providers; 2) placing caps or
moratoriums on full-time virtual charter schools; and 3) increasing
flexibility in state requirements to make way for innovations such as
competency-based learning.
Letting the Student Choose
The Florida Virtual School (FLVS) is one of the oldest, most
established, and most highly praised staples of the K-12
digital-learning scene (see "Florida's Online Option,"
features, Summer 2009). When the state of Florida moved FLVS from a
year-to-year line-item appropriation in the annual budget to a per-pupil
funding model in 2003, public funds began following students to the FLVS
course of their choice. Enrollments in FLVS soared. More than 148,000
students took FLVS courses in the 2011-12 school year. The funding does
not just follow students to the online course; it also creates an
accountability mechanism of sorts, as FLVS only receives payment when a
student passes a course.
In 2011, Utah went a step beyond Florida and passed SB 65, which
freed state education dollars to follow any high-school student to pay
for an online course offered by any school district or charter school.
If a student living in the Salt Lake City school district wants to take
a particular online course that a full-time virtual school outside the
district is offering, he or she now can, and the school district is not
allowed to stand in the way. Utah's funding mechanism pays online
providers 50 percent of the per-pupil funding up front and 50 percent
upon course completion. Currently, funding is not tied to any
independent assessment of student performance. The amount the state pays
per online course depends on the course subject. If a student takes an
academic course, such as one in math, science, or language arts, the
maximum payment permitted is $350. If a student takes a course in
financial literacy, health, fitness for life, computer literacy, or
driver's education, the maximum amount that can be paid is $200.
Louisiana's legislature has enacted similar legislation as
part of an overall reform effort that included vouchers for students to
attend private schools. After the state supreme court struck down the
proposed funding mechanism, the Louisiana State Board tapped $2 million
from an oil and gas trust fund to pay for the course-choice initiative.
The law will accomplish many of the same things as Utah's program.
Dollars will flow to the provider that offers the course the student
selects. The legislation authorizes up to one-sixth of 90 percent of the
state's basic per-pupil funds to follow a student to a
state-approved online course. Students can take more than six online
courses with public funding so long as the total cost is less than 90
percent of the state's basic per-pupil funds. As in Utah, the
online provider receives 50 percent of the funding up front and 50
percent upon student completion within the course's published
length. The course instructor, not an independent assessment, will
decide whether the student has done well enough to complete the course.
Unlike Utah, however, the state of Louisiana must first approve a
provider--whether governmental, nonprofit, or for-profit--before it can
offer courses to students. In addition, the new funding plan includes an
cap on course enrollments of 500 per provider.
More states are following suit this year. Florida passed a bill
allowing dollars to go not just to FLVS but also to other online
providers, be they districts or even MOOCs. Texas passed a bill that
expands on its Texas Virtual School Network (TxVSN) structure and
created a choice program that, like those in the aforementioned states,
gives students the right to take courses from online providers outside
the district. The law is limited, however, as it only allows students to
take up to three online courses in a given year, and the payment
mechanism in Texas appears to be more ambiguous than those in other
states. Michigan passed a similar measure that expands the online
choices available to students. Governor Rick Snyder's budget bill
allows students to take up to two online courses offered by another
district each semester without having to receive the consent of the
student's resident district except under a few limited
circumstances. The state will maintain a catalog of available online
courses, and the resident district will pay 80 percent of the cost of
the online course upon enrollment and 20 percent upon completion as
determined by the outside district.
Course choice programs create considerably more options for
students, but questions about their potential impact remain. First,
it's not clear how many students will avail themselves of the new
options. In Utah, the only state with a program that has been in
operation for any length of time, the number of courses taken outside
the district appears to be modest thus far. Still, some argue that the
number of students who take advantage of their new choices is less
important than the competitive environment the program creates. Because
funding can follow the student out of a school district at the course
level, districts have a new incentive to bolster their own
digital-learning offerings and keep the funds in the district.
Consequently, one way to gauge success may be monitoring how districts
respond to these measures. Indeed, several districts in Utah have
created blended-learning schools, in which some instruction is online.
Also, the shift from funding mere enrollment to funding course
completion may be an important milestone on the road toward a
competency-based learning system. Still, today, most initiatives do not
go so far as to tie funding to independent assessments of student
performance, thus replicating some of the counterproductive incentives
in the existing system to serve students but not necessarily serve them
well.
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Capping Full-Time Virtual Schools
Political battles over virtual charter schools provide even more
compelling evidence of the strength of the opposition to online learning
within K-12 education. In higher education, it has proven politically
impossible to prevent even for-profit, fully online universities from
competing directly for students with brick-and-mortar institutions.
Although these institutions have come under pressure from the U.S.
Department of Education for inducing students to take loans that they
will not be able to repay, the for-profit university bird is still
flying. But in K-12 education, access to full-time virtual schools,
which provide comprehensive education services to their students,
remains uneven and, in many states, highly controversial. Districts are
usually free to start up full-time virtual schools for their own
students, but operating full-time virtual schools for out-of district
students or statewide is a different story. In the school year ending in
2013, 31 states allowed full-time, multidistrict online schools. The
previous year they served roughly 275,000 students. But continued growth
may be stymied by legislative action in the same ways that states have
placed limits on the numbers of charter schools that can be authorized
and the numbers of students who can attend them.
In Tennessee this year, a new law places a ceiling of 1,500
students on initial enrollment in any full-time, multidistrict virtual
school. It also dictates that students outside the district in which the
virtual school is operating may not comprise more than 25 percent of the
school's enrollment. If a public virtual school meets expectations
under the Tennessee Value-Added Assessment System, then the school may
grow, but no matter how well a virtual school does, its total enrollment
may not exceed 5,000 students.
Political drama has followed in Illinois as well, where a full-time
virtual charter school's plan to operate across 18 school districts
prompted legislators to draw up a moratorium on new virtual charters and
to charge a charter commission with studying the matter.
The campaign against virtual schools is also under way in other
states. A bill introduced in Maine prohibits any new virtual charter
schools. In Pennsylvania, spurred by stories about underperforming
virtual schools, legislators have proposed stark funding limits for
existing full-time virtual schools as well as a moratorium on the
establishment of any new one before 2016. Opposition to digital-learning
opportunities can break out even where no virtual schools exist. The New
Jersey Education Association filed a lawsuit against two
blended-learning charter schools that opened this past year in Newark.
Absurdly enough, the lawsuit alleged that, in essence, the schools
should not be allowed to operate because they were virtual schools, even
though they were not. The union lost the suit, but the fight is not
over.
If one wants to generalize from New Jersey, a case can be made that
online learning via virtual charter schools is essential to the broader
digital-learning movement, because they absorb the opposition's
main line of attack. In the absence of full-time virtual schools,
teachers unions and other opponents use their resources to attack
blended-learning charters, even though the latter do not differ in legal
structure, brick-and-mortar presence, or enrollment practices from other
charter schools. Although digital learning in K-12 education may not
grow significantly outside of existing school structures as it has in
higher education, pushing for policies that safeguard the development of
new models of online schooling may be critical for digital learning to
have any transformational impact, even inside existing schools.
The opposition has cited concerns about the quality of virtual
schools as the chief justification for stalling their growth. An
increasing number of full-time virtual schools are simultaneously
growing enrollments and failing to make Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP)
in states across the country. Some of the most critical studies ignore
the fact that virtual schools now serve many high-school students who
had previously dropped out of or had significant problems in more
traditional schools (see "Questioning the Quality of Virtual
Schools," check the facts, Spring 2013). Barbara Dreyer is CEO of
Connections Education, the second largest full-time virtual-school
provider in the nation. In an article in The AdvancED Source, Dreyer
discusses the students who enroll in Connections Academy and notes that
"33 percent indicated they have not been successful
academically," and "about 30 percent of the new students
[Connections Academy serves] enroll after the start of the school
year."
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A 2012 report by iNACOL, the International Association for K-12
Online Learning Association, titled "Measuring Quality from Inputs
to Outcomes: Creating Student Learning Performance Metrics and Quality
Assurance for Online Schools," argues that none of the existing
metrics for judging schools captures adequately the true performance of
full-time virtual schools. It suggests that a better accountability
system would look at five indicators: student proficiency, individual
student growth, graduation rate, college and career readiness, and
closing the achievement gap. Because no states today track these
measures adequately, capturing the true performance of full-time virtual
schools has been difficult. As a result, efforts to expand the schools
or cap their growth make judgments based on limited information at best.
Advocates argue that access to a full-time virtual-school option is
critical for those who need it; others say we need more time for study
before extending such access to be sure it is a high-quality option.
Without a valid accountability system in place, it is hard to know.
Unseating Seat Time
For digital learning to succeed, students need to be given credit
mainly for the amount of knowledge they have acquired, rather than for
the amount of time they have spent taking a particular course. But seat
time in a classroom has been the measure of elementary and secondary
education for more than a century, and most state aid formulas are
based, in some measure, on the number of days a student is in school.
The policy change that is potentially most transformative would alter
the rules for compensating school providers to reward knowledge and
skills acquired instead of time served.
In an effort to move toward an education system that is focused
more squarely on student outcomes than on inputs, advocates for digital
learning have identified policies and regulations that lock in rules
around seat time as some of the most pernicious. Competency-based
learning--in which a student only progresses once he or she has
demonstrated mastery of a concept or skill--is critical for digital
learning to optimize the experience for each child. For true
competency-based learning to emerge, policy changes are necessary. This
is true not only for K-12 education, incidentally, but also for the
majority of colleges and universities. Institutions that choose to
implement competency-based learning may need to seek waivers from
current regulations in order for students to obtain access to public
funds, such as student loans and Pell grants. Policy change is less
important for the few emerging forms of higher education that are so
affordable that their students do not rely on public funds.
A scant few years ago, the mention of competency-based learning in
a state legislature would draw blank stares. Increasingly, however,
states are seeking ways to move beyond the seat-time system, with its
accompanying pacing guides and tests given at fixed times, toward
competency-based measures of learning. Some legislatures are working to
give greater flexibility and autonomy to schools and districts in hopes
of spurring innovation, whereas others are directly creating
competency-based pathways for students.
Legislation that gives students a choice of provider for each
course begins to unshackle learning from seat time by affording students
the flexibility to progress at their own pace through their online
courses. Utah is taking further steps toward competency-based learning
for all schools: in the 2013 legislative session it passed a law that
requires the state board of education to make recommendations about the
funding needed to develop and implement competency-based education and
progress-based assessments prior to the 2014 legislative general
session. The bill lists the issues the board must think through in
determining an appropriate performance-based funding formula and
permitting a school district or charter to establish curriculum
standards and assessments that would result in course credit if the
student demonstrates competency in the subject. This legislation could
move its current online course-choice program from rewarding mere course
completion to rewarding true student performance.
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In Idaho, legislation recently enacted expands on an existing pilot
program. The law allows any district or charter school to submit an
application to move to a mastery-based progression system of learning.
Just how many institutions will apply and win state approval remains to
be seen.
Competency-based learning is on the agenda in other states as well.
A Vermont bill that Governor Peter Shumlin signed into law, called the
"Flexible Pathways Initiative," requires each K-12 student to
have a personalized learning plan, but it also includes a variety of
pathways in which "credits awarded shall be based on performance
and not solely on Carnegie units [a measure of hours spent in
class]." In Texas, a new law offers similar opportunities, as it
allows students to accelerate through grades or courses if they pass a
board-approved test that must be administered by districts at least
three times a year. Although not actually competency-based learning, the
measure breaks down the artificial distinction between secondary and
higher education and might open up more opportunities for
competency-based funding of courses in the longer rum.
Other states are offering more flexibility for school districts to
spur innovation. In Florida, a new law allows school districts to
establish innovation schools of technology, or blended-learning schools.
The Alabama Accountability Act permits "programmatic flexibility or
budgetary flexibility, or both, from state laws, including State Board
of Education rules, regulations, and policies in exchange for academic
and associated goals for students that focus on college and career
readiness." To receive this flexibility, districts must submit an
innovation plan for approval.
Conclusion
As all this suggests, state policy is crucial to the spread of
digital-learning opportunities at the elementary and secondary level. A
review of recent legislative action reveals policies that are constantly
in flux and differ quite markedly from one state to another. Some have
hoped for model digital-learning legislation that could handle all the
various issues related to digital learning and push it to be of high
quality and student-centric. Others have hoped to isolate digital
learning from other policy issues, and yet digital learning touches on
several areas of state code. Even adopting model language for funding
online courses from one state and transporting it to another creates
challenges for legacy state codes. One-size-fits-all legislation that
creates a coherent framework in which digital learning can grow is, as a
result, likely a pipe dream.
The only guarantee seems to be that even as K-12 digital
learning--or certainly the hype around it--continues to expand, efforts
to regulate and channel the new instructional models will be both
frantic and uneven. Some will fight to stunt their growth, and others
will seek to give them more freedom. Still others will seek to provide
more access, so long as it is focused on student outcomes. If the
digital transformation of higher education continues apace, it will have
a major impact on secondary schooling as well. However things end up,
state policies seem certain to play a major role.
Michael Horn is executive editor at Education Next and executive
director of the education program at the Clayton Christensen Institute.