Florida is pursuing policy and funding changes meant to open up the world of online K-12 education to greater competition, prompting tough times for the state-sponsored Florida Virtual School. But what do those policy changes mean for K12 Inc., the country鈥檚 largest for-profit manager of online public schools, which has a major footprint in the state?
The answer is a mixed bag, with plenty of current and potential growth, but also continued questions about academic performance and quality, according to a review of recent news reports.
While the state-run Florida Virtual School recently announced that it has shed one-third of its workforce amid sharply declining enrollments, the number of online public charter schools that Herndon, Va.-based K12 Inc. manages in the state is expanding, with new schools opening this fall in Broward, Duval, Palm Beach, and Pasco counties.
鈥淭he tension in Florida is that there are so many different online options,鈥 said John Bailey, the executive director of Digital Learning Now, a national advocacy group based in Tallahassee, Fla. 鈥淭he legislature is trying to harmonize funding for all those options and trying to make sure there is equal opportunity for all providers.鈥
Jeff Kwitowski, the senior vice president for corporate communications for K12 Inc., downplayed the 鈥渦s-versus-them鈥 dynamic.
See related story, 鈥Florida Virtual School Faces Hard Times.鈥
鈥淔rom our perspective, we provide [content and services] to all types of institutions,鈥 said Mr. Kwitowksi, noting that K12 Inc. also has contracts related to virtual instruction programs with more than 40 traditional school districts across the state.
K12 Inc. is also growing in other parts of the country: This fall, the company will manage new full-time online schools in Colorado, Kansas, Michigan, Ohio, South Carolina, and Texas, bringing to more than 50 the total number of online and 鈥渂lended鈥 schools in its portfolio.
In Ohio, the new Insight School of Ohio, approved by the state department of education in July, will join seven other K12 Inc. Insight schools around the country in focusing on 鈥渁cademically at-risk students,鈥 according to a release from the school鈥檚 nonprofit governing board.
鈥淭he Insight model is structured a little differently,鈥 Mr. Kwitoski said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 designed to provide more support for students in need of alternatives鈥 to regular public schools.
Quality Questioned
A similar school has twice this year failed to gain approval in Pennsylvania, however.
The proposals submitted by the proposed Insight PA Cyber Charter School and seven other applicants, none of which was approved, 鈥渨ere deficient and lacked evidence that students would be offered quality educational programs,鈥 according to Timothy Eller, a spokesman for the Pennsylvania department of education.
K12 Inc. has also faced problems in Tennessee.
The Chattanooga Times Free Press reported this month that state officials had rejected K12 Inc.'s latest enterprise because they were still dealing with 鈥渓ow first-year student performance"at the company鈥檚 virtual school in Union County.
Mr. Kwitowski wrote in an email that local officials had responded to the Tennessee education department鈥檚 concerns and that the new virtual school 鈥渟till plans to open this year.鈥
In addition to managing more full-time online schools, Mr. Kwitowski said, the company is eager to continue expanding its offerings for traditional districts, charters, and other organizations looking to provide students with the opportunity to enroll in individual online courses.
It鈥檚 all part of an ongoing shake-up in the K-12 online education market, said Mr. Bailey of Digital Learning Now.
鈥淵ears ago, the way you did online learning was your state sponsored a virtual school,鈥 Mr. Bailey said. But now, with the increase in different types of providers, states are beginning to move toward different models, he said, resulting in friction because the existing funding formulas were not created with the emerging new landscape in mind.