Charter school advocates issue ‘call to action’ on virtual charters

A new report calls for states to subject virtual charter schools to greater scrutiny.
A new report calls for states to subject virtual charter schools to greater scrutiny.

States need to overhaul the way they fund and regulate online charter schools and rein in “large-scale underperformance,” a new report argues.

The argument isn’t coming from the usual anti-charter school suspects. The report was released this morning by the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, the National Association of Charter School Authorizers, and the pro-charter advocacy group 50CAN (aka the 50-State Campaign for Achievement Now).

The three groups say they support full-time virtual schooling, and that the model can be beneficial for some students. But the report says recent research has found negative effects so significant and widespread that “[t]he breadth of underperformance by full-time virtual charter schools convinces us that states need to change the policy framework within which these schools can operate.”

“If traditional public schools were producing such results, we would rightly be outraged,” the report adds. “We should not feel any different just because these are charter schools.”

Online learning companies and some allied advocacy groups have disputed some of the most widely cited studies of virtual charters’ effectiveness, pointing out that virtual charters often serve disadvantaged students who change schools frequently, making their performance hard to gauge.

The report addresses this argument, noting that in a study by Stanford University’s Center for Research on Education Outcomes, the “mobility” rates of virtual charter students and their comparison groups in traditional public schools are similar. Other  observers have concluded the negative findings are simply too strong to explain away.

Virtual charter schools have spread rapidly across the country, especially in the “big three” states of California, Pennsylvania and Ohio. The national charter school alliance says that, as of August 2014, they enrolled some 180,000 students in 23 states and Washington, DC.

Florida is now home to 11 active virtual charters. All but three are Florida Virtual Academies operated by K12, and at least one was recently threatened with closure.

The report makes several recommendations, saying states should:

  • Limit districts’ ability to authorize virtual charters that enroll students outside their geographic boundaries.
  • Set enrollment criteria for virtual charters “based on factors proven necessary for student success.” Full-time virtual charter schools, the report says, are not a good fit for everyone and require “self-motivated students and highly involved parents.”
  • Cap enrollment in virtual charters, and allow them to grow only if they reach their academic performance goals.
  • Set “virtual-specific goals” in addition to the academic targets and financial oversight that apply to brick-and-mortar charter schools, and include them in virtual charters’ performance contracts.
  • Require virtual charters to “propose and justify a price per student in their charter school applications” that would determine their funding levels.
  • Create performance-based funding systems for virtual charters.

The recommendations were greeted with a strongly worded response from the advocacy group PublicSchoolOptions.org, which said in an e-mailed statement that the proposals rely heavily on test-based measures of student performance and would “threaten” online learning options.

“As virtual school parents we know why we choose this option and why our students are succeeding,” the organization’s president, Tillie Elvrum, who enrolled her son at Colorado Connections Academy, said. “If parents didn’t choose these schools, they wouldn’t exist.”

How would the recommendations apply to Florida? Here are a few points worth keeping in mind:

  • The state has a wide range of virtual education programs, including Florida Virtual School, an online course access system, and multiple district-controlled virtual instruction programs, in addition to virtual charters. The report says states “may need to consider governing full-time virtual schools outside the state’s charter school law, simply as full-time virtual public schools.” For one thing, charter schools, virtual and otherwise, are often barred from setting additional enrollment criteria for students, as the report recommends.
  • Many of Florida’s district-controlled virtual education programs are run by the same companies that operate virtual charter schools, which means state law adds another layer of accountability. A company that wants to run a virtual charter school needs to be approved by the state as a virtual education provider. If an online learning company earns a string of low school grades for poor performance in district-controlled programs, it can lose state approval, and therefore, its ability to operate virtual charters. (Two years ago, we reported on how K12 faced a close call under this system.)
  • The report says states should only allow districts to sponsor virtual charters that enroll students outside their geographic borders if they can show they have the necessary know-how. In many cases, the report notes, statewide or regional authorizers, or “specialty” organizations like universities or charter school institutes, might be better suited for the task. Those entities aren’t allowed to sponsor charters in Florida. Efforts to create a statewide charter school authorizer have often faced opposition from groups who argue they are simply an attempt to promote charter expansion, but this is an example of how enabling non-district authorizers may help improve oversight.
  • Florida is one of a handful of states highlighted in the report that already have performance-based funding for virtual charter schools. Like other virtual education providers, online charters in the state only get funding for courses their students actually pass. If a ninth-grader enrolled in the typical six courses, but failed to pass a mandatory end-of-course test in algebra, a virtual charter school would lose a sixth of its funding associated with that student.

This report, and the debate it’s already starting to trigger, matter for several reasons.

For one thing, this one of several recent examples of charter school advocates calling out their own side and demanding improvements.

What’s more, it has implications beyond virtual charter schools. Under the new definition of public education, parents control how public money is spent educating their children. It’s important to respect their decisions about how to educate their children, but it’s also important to protect the public good, and to ensure schools are truly helping children learn. The debate over how to regulate virtual charter schools is fundamentally a debate about how to reconcile those values.


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BY Travis Pillow

Travis Pillow is Director of Thought Leadership at Step Up For Students and editor of NextSteps. He lives in Sanford, Fla. with his wife and two children. A former Tallahassee statehouse reporter, he most recently worked at the Center on Reinventing Public Education, a research organization at Arizona State University, where he studied community-led learning innovation and school systems' responses to the Covid-19 pandemic. He can be reached at tpillow (at) sufs.org.

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