Sign On to National School Choice Week 2012!

National School Choice Week, a grass roots effort, will be held this year from January 22-28. Activities and events sponsored throughout the nation will focus on effective education options for all children and support of school choice options in all states. This is an opportunity to educate local school boards and state legislatures about the need for education reforms that empower parents to choose the best educational environments for their children, whether those environments are public schools, public charter schools, magnet schools, virtual schools, private schools, homeschooling and more.

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TEQlease Capital Provides Lease Financing for Hawaii Charter School

AIPAHU, HI, Dec 12, 2011 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) — TEQlease Capital, a nationwide provider of equipment lease financing solutions, announced today that the company has provided Hawaii Technology Academy (HTA), an innovative online technology K-12 charter school, based in Waipahu, Hawaii, with lease financing for desktop computers and laptops for the entire student body.

“In today’s world the Hawaii Technology Academy believes it is crucial for our school to meet the needs of each and every student by working in close partnership with each teacher and each parent to ensure all students have the flexibility they need to learn and succeed at their own pace,” said Jeff Piontek, head of school for HTA. “With the lease financing provided by TEQlease Capital, we are pleased that we can now provide every student in our school with the technology they need as well as equip our faculty to ensure the students are getting an excellent education.”

For the rest of the article, go to TEQlease Capital Provides Lease Financing for Hawaii Charter School

Kaplan K12 Learning Services and K12 Partner to Maximize College Preparation

K12 Inc. (NYSE: LRN), a technology-based education company, is the largest provider of proprietary curriculum and online education programs for students in kindergarten through high school in the U.S. K12 provides its curriculum and academic services to public and private online schools, traditional classrooms, blended school programs, and directly to families. K12 has provided over 2 million courses – core subjects, AP(R), world languages, credit recovery, and electives – to more than 200,000 students worldwide. Over 90 percent of parents surveyed are satisfied with the K12 program and agree that their children have benefited academically with K12. Students graduating from K12 (R) virtual schools have been accepted to hundreds of higher education institutions including many of the nation’s top-ranked colleges and universities. K12 is accredited through AdvancED, the world’s largest education community. More information about K12’s solutions for schools and districts can be found at www.k12.com/educators.

For the rest of the article, go to Kaplan K12 Learning Services and K12 Partner to Maximize College Preparation

Time for Virtual Schooling to Grow-Up

Virtual schooling is a good idea. Over the past decade or so, online education has proven itself a valuable component of the learning system, from elementary to post-secondary. I personally use a lot of online learning in my own teaching, so I am a tried and true advocate for online learning.

But, it needs to grow up. And fast. As online learning approaches the knee of the exponential curve, we can’t ignore it as just a small tangential sandbox. With 200,000 full-time virtual students nationwide and growing, it is core to the system now and we need to treat it that way.

In a new brief my partners Gene Glass and Kevin Welner, of the National Education Policy Center, articulate many of the current problems in the P-12 online learning space. There are serious, documented quality concerns and in some cases a near total lack of traditional accountability and oversight. The Washington Post this morning provided a good summary. The abuses are appalling and could cause a national backlash against the use of online learning in the P-12 learning system.

For the rest of the article, go to Time for Virtual Schooling to Grow-Up

More public schools drop out of summer sessions

With fewer public schools offering traditional summer programs this year, some students might find themselves scrambling to get into classes.

Thirty-seven campuses, plus the Department of Education’s e-school, will have traditional summer school this year, down from 45 in 2010.

Other campuses are expected to offer free programs exclusively for their students.

Officials say students who need to make up credits during the summer will still have plenty of opportunities to do so but will have to work closely with their schools to find the right program.

And they point out schools are increasingly offering credit recovery programs during the regular year.

For the rest of the article, go to More public schools drop out of summer sessions

DOE releases 2011 summer school sites

The state Department of Education has released the list of summer school sites for 2011.

Thirty-seven public schools plus the online E-School are offering regular summer school classes to all interested students.

For the rest of the article, go to DOE releases 2011 summer school sites

Keeping students together is no easy task

Elento, a strong supporter of including special-needs youth in general-education classrooms, said shortly after enrolling her son at Heeia, she pulled him out.

Now, at 9, Jason attends a public charter school, Hawaii Technology Academy, where, like other students at the campus, he goes to classes three days a week and works his way through online lessons the rest of the time. Elento said the setup is a good fit for her son.

Advocates say stories like Elento’s illustrate how moving more special-education kids into general-education classrooms will not be easy — or cheap — for many schools, and it could require big changes for some.

Schools that already have model programs for inclusion say the shift took lots of planning, the cooperation of teachers and plenty of patience especially during the transition, as classes adjusted to the change.

IDEA does not require that states meet inclusion minimums, but does require that special-education students be placed in the “least restrictive environment” appropriate for their learning needs. For some youth, especially those who pose a harm to themselves or others, the least restrictive environment is a classroom separate from other kids.

What is touchy is determining how often youth with fewer needs should be pulled from classrooms. Some say tailored instruction for special-needs youth outside of general-education environments can be beneficial, taking away distractions and letting special-education students learn without becoming frustrated if they are far behind.

Others argue that special-education youth should be eased into general-education classrooms, depending on their strengths and weaknesses. Still others say “full inclusion” offers more rigorous teaching and that with the right teachers and training, it can work.

For the rest of the article go to, Keeping students together is no easy task

Best Online High Schools gets new design

Best Online High Schools has now been updated with a new design and new features. This new version will continue to provide you with the best information available on the Internet about online high schools.

Come take a look!

uBoost Selected To Host Panel at iNacol’s Virtual School Symposium Addressing Student Engagement and Online Credit Recovery Course Completion

uBoost , the nation’s largest student recognition and rewards platform, is pleased to announce that it will be hosting a panel at the Virtual School Symposium Conference taking place on November 15-16 at the Renaissance Glendale Hotel and Spa.

Panel members, including Jeff Piontek, Head of School at Hawaii Technology Academy, will examine the role recognition and motivation play in driving student engagement and course completion in online credit recovery programs. In addition, live audience polls will be compared to the results of an online student survey. More than 2300 online students completed a survey about their favorite forms of recognition and who they most value receiving recognition from.

For the rest of the article, go to uBoost Selected To Host Panel at iNacol’s Virtual School Symposium Addressing Student Engagement and Online Credit Recovery Course Completion

Quality-of-life issues follow economic concerns in Kapolei

Mike and Jeanine Wong have what many couples envy: a nice house on a quiet street in a prosperous neighborhood.

But Mike Wong is working two jobs to stay above water in a bad economy. Unsatisfied with the quality and overcrowding at traditional public schools, Jeanine Wong is teaching their three children – 13, 10 and 9 – at home in partnership with the Hawaii Technology Academy, a public charter school. They worry about education and crime and what their community might look like when their children grow up.

“Everybody is struggling,” said Wong, a stevedore who also works part-time doing loss mitigation for a real estate office. “You know times are tough when stevedores have to get part-time jobs.”

For the rest of the article, go to Quality-of-life issues follow economic concerns in Kapolei