69传媒

Special Report
College & Workforce Readiness

At-Risk 69传媒 Face E-Learning Challenges

By Katie Ash 鈥 August 22, 2011 7 min read
Anaihs Espinoza, 18, is entering her senior year at Brady Exploration School, in Lakewood, Colo., which serves academically at-risk students from the Jefferson County School District using a hybrid of virtual and face-to-face learning environments. Ms. Espinoza, who has many friends who dropped out, wants to graduate and enter the medical field.
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Stepping into a virtual learning environment can help struggling students interact with curricula in a new way, begin learning with a clean slate, and provide more flexibility to accommodate work or family obligations, say educators and experts working online with students who are at risk of academic failure.

But none of those factors will make such students successful unless they have the support and resources they need to engage with the material and the motivation to work hard for their credits, experts stress.

鈥淭he way online learning is set up, it puts the control of the learning on the shoulders of students,鈥 said Jeanne Repetto, an associate professor in the department of special education at the University of Florida, in Gainesville. 鈥淭hey feel the confidence and control, which is why online learning can be good for this population.鈥

When students do not take responsibility for their own learning, however, and their virtual teachers cannot maintain steady communication with a support team, such as a school contact or parent, the students are much less likely to be successful, said Michelle Lourcey, the director of credit recovery for the , or NCVPS.

鈥淥ur teachers are constantly working with [students] and parents to keep them [on track,] but if there鈥檚 no motivation and no accountability at the school level,鈥 the students may not make it through, she said.

Typically, NCVPS assigns a distance-learning adviser, or someone at the student鈥檚 home school, to each student to prevent that problem.

鈥淲e have found that if we can get the student feeling success in the first unit, they鈥檒l stay with us,鈥 said Ms. Lourcey.

At-risk students in virtual education are generally grouped into credit-recovery programs that help students who have fallen behind obtain the credits they need to graduate.

NCVPS had 2,200 credit-recovery enrollments out of a total of 17,000 enrollments in the spring of 2011. During the summer, out of 10,000 total enrollments, 3,000 were for credit recovery.

Building strong teacher-student relationships is key to helping struggling students be successful, said Ms. Lourcey.

鈥淲ith at risk students, if they feel valued, that is very powerful,鈥 said Darlene Schaefer, an English teacher at NCVPS. 鈥淚f they know that there鈥檚 somebody out there that has their back and believes in them, they believe in success and accomplishment.鈥

Starting Over

For some of those students, being in an online classroom may be the first time they are able to form positive relationships with teachers, said Michelle Barnhill, another teacher at NCVPS.

And once those students trust the teacher, they begin to feel more confident in their learning, said Emily Parrish, a science and math teacher with NCVPS.

鈥淚f a student hasn鈥檛 had success before and begins to feel success, they鈥檙e going to want more of it,鈥 she said.

Having engaging, interactive content is another key to helping struggling students get back on track, said Ms. Lourcey, the credit-recovery director.

鈥淚f we鈥檙e teaching photosynthesis, we want [students] to be able to read about it, but also hear and visually see what it is and then be able to practice the concept immediately,鈥 she said. 鈥淚f [the students] master the content, they get to move on to the next concept. If they haven鈥檛 mastered it, they go through remediation, where the content is presented in a different way.鈥

28.3%
Proportion of the class of 2008 that dropped out

1.2 million
Number of dropouts based on that percentage

$9.6 billion
Boost to the national economy from cutting the dropout rate in half

$7.6 billion
Total of how much more dropouts would have earned each year had they graduated

Sources: EPE Research Center; Alliance for Excellent Education

Credit-recovery classes are kept small, too, said Ms. Lourcey, at a ratio of one teacher for every 20 students, to ensure teachers have the time and capacity to individualize the curriculum for each student.

Richard Landolt is the principal of , an alternative school that serves about 450 students in grades 6-12 in the 39,000-student Cherokee County school district in Canton, Ga.

CrossRoads began as a school for students who had been expelled from other schools in the district, and while it continues to serve that population, students can attend voluntarily as well. As a result, the school serves students who are on track for graduation, as well as those who may need to undergo credit recovery to graduate on time.

69传媒 at the school choose whether they would like to work through online courses provided by the online-course provider Apex or a traditional textbook-based curriculum.

The students at the school then work individually at their own pace, with facilitation from a teacher.

How a student performs in the first semester is critical to keeping the student engaged, Mr. Landolt said.

鈥淚f we can get [students] to [recover] one or two credits within the first 15 weeks, they begin to see they鈥檙e making progress and getting good grades,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t still comes down to motivation.鈥

鈥楩ocus on Education鈥

Nick Wilson, the communications director of the Columbus, Ohio-based , or ECOT, a public online school serving 10,000 K-12 students in Ohio, said the continuous stream of data possible from online learning can also play a significant role in helping struggling students find success.

鈥淲e have a whole team of teachers that are responsible for assessing continuously,鈥 Mr. Wilson said. In addition, the learning-management system used by ECOT tracks all of the students鈥 interactions in the courses, 鈥渟o we can see how that鈥檚 correlated to their success,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 do that in a traditional environment.鈥

, in the 84,600-student Jefferson County school system, just west of Denver, serves at-risk students from the district in a hybrid of virtual and face-to-face learning environments.

According to the school鈥檚 principal, Troy Braley, 65 percent of the student population qualifies for free or reduced-price lunch, 16 percent are homeless, and 75 percent do not read at grade level.

What started as a hands-on, exploratory instructional model has since turned into a hybrid learning environment in order to cut down on the high number of disciplinary problems the school experienced when it opened in 2005, Mr. Braley explained.

鈥淚 had the worst discipline in the state,鈥 he said. "[The switch to online classes] was not easy for the staff or the community,but the discipline issues stopped, and we could finally focus on education.鈥

Four years later, the school boasts a host of services for struggling students and their families, such as a clinic for free immunizations and checkups for parents and their children, access to bus passes and bicycles, drug-treatment services, and English classes for students and their families.

The school is open from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. to accommodate the schedules of the students, many of whom have part-time jobs or families to take care of, and classes switch instructional methods every 20 minutes to keep students engaged in the material.

鈥淭he traditional school just can鈥檛 meet their needs,鈥 Mr. Braley said. Each student is assigned a graduation coach, who looks out for students who otherwise might fall through the cracks.

鈥淚f a kid鈥檚 not doing their homework, [the graduation coach] will call up the parents and say, 鈥業鈥檒l come over, and we鈥檒l do it together,鈥 鈥 Mr. Braley said.

Re-engaging 69传媒

To help combat the dropout problem in the 2,750-student Westwood Community School District outside Detroit, administrators opened , a solely virtual school that serves students in that district. In two years, the school has expanded from 180 students to over 700.

鈥淎ll of our students are at risk, but a number of them have actually dropped out or are on the verge of dropping out,鈥 said Hilliard Hampton, the managing director for the school. Westwood Cyber High is based on a model from the United Kingdom called 鈥渘ot school,鈥 said Mr. Hilliard, which has a focus on virtual learning and project-based classes. 69传媒 in the school are referred to as 鈥渞esearchers,鈥 while teachers are called 鈥渕entors.鈥

69传媒 also receive home computers, Internet access, printers, and cameras to complete their virtual courses鈥攅quipment they get to keep if they graduate successfully.

鈥淥ne of the key factors ... for us to understand is that when[students] come into the program, education is not high on their priority list,鈥 Mr. Hilliard said. 鈥淭he first may be to help provide food for their family, or they may have a child themselves.

鈥淥ur first challenge is to re-engage the student and raise the level of priority of education,鈥 he said.

To do so, the curriculum students undertake is largely based around their own interests.

鈥淲e take things that interest them, such as skateboarding or even playing basketball, and apply it to projects,鈥 Mr. Hilliard said. 鈥淔or example, the amount of arc that鈥檚 required for a student to land a skateboard jump.鈥

By making what students are doing relevant to their own lives, he hopes the students will re-engage with the curriculum and their education.

鈥淭hese are students who have for some reason or another not been successful in current or prior educational settings,鈥 said Sue C. Carnell, the superintendent of the school district. 鈥淵ou have to reinvent their confidence that they can do it.鈥

A version of this article appeared in the August 24, 2011 edition of Education Week as At-Risk 69传媒鈥 Virtual Challenges

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