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LEADERSHIP PERSPECTIVES:

      THE RAPID GROWTH
              OF
     K-12 ONLINE LEARNING


            Lancaster (2012) & Malone (2012)

AWSP/WASA                                June, 2012
Present findings from TWO closely related research
   projects

Lancaster’s (2012) autoethnography describes, analyzes and
interprets one leader’s experience in leading an instructional focus on
student learning and a group of online teachers in one of Washington’s
oldest and most successful online programs.


Malone’s (2012) mixed-methods study examines perceptions,
interpretations and reactions of K-12 superintendents in Washington in
response to the rapid growth of online learning. The findings provide
intriguing insight into the current landscape of K-12 online learning.



SESSION OBJECTIVE
Rapid growth of online learning
 Legislation focus on metrics, not learning
 Lack of quality control standards
 Competition not collaboration
 3rd party vendor involvement
 Lack of research on effectiveness




CONTEXT
Washington State Superintendents
       and K-12 Online Learning:

    Leadership Perceptions, Challenges,
             & Opportunities



MALONE (2012)
Q1 What are the issues that impede or support the
                 implementation of online learning as perceived
                                by Washington superintendents?

            Q2 What do Washington superintendents identify as
                             the purposes for online learning?

     Q3 What recommendations do Washington superintendents
        suggest for successful implementation of online learning?

      Q4 How does district size, years of experience, and online
               status affect superintendent perceptions of the
                                   online learning environment?
RESEARCH QUESTIONS
                                                      Malone (2012)
Mixed Methods Study ~ Online Survey
     39 Closed & 5 Open-ended Survey Items

  Quantitative Analysis:
  Descriptive Statistics
  Pearson’s Correlation Coefficient

                            Qualitative Analysis:
                  Constant Comparative Method

METHODOLOGY
                                          Malone (2012)
Vis
Innovation ~ Recommendations




                                                   ion
Leadership ~ Purposes




                                 hi p




                                                       ar
Change ~ Issues




                                    s




                                                     y/
                                 der




                                                       Em
                             L ea




                                                            erg
                          ity




                                                               enc
                         l ex




                                                               eL
                        mp




                                                                ead
                      Co




                                                                   ers
                                                                     hip
                                 Disruptive Innovation

THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
                                                             Malone (2012)
# of Superintendents
Responding to Survey

                         201




RESPONDENTS
                       Malone (2012)
RESPONDENTS
              Malone (2012)
RESPONDENTS
              Malone (2012)
RESPONDENTS
              Malone (2012)
Q1 ISSUEs: Financial
   “ We provide online learning to 150-200 students. 50 are from our own district. The
     others from across the state. We could not offer either without the other. We need
     150-200 to break even ... and we still lose money compared to bricks and mortar
     schools.”
   “I am very skeptical of the motives of private companies and some school districts'
     purposes. While it is not likely generalizable, my perception is that in some instances
     there is more interest in making money than with teaching and learning.”
   “I am deeply troubled by districts using online learning to make money.”
   “The motives are overwhelmingly financial.”
   “It is clearly a method for school districts to add additional funds to the district. School
     districts in Washington State have used this process, knowingly, to pirate students from
     districts.”
   “With declining resources how can we possibly allocate funds that we don't have to
     researching these opportunities. They are important but we are just trying to survive
     right now!”




FINDINGS
                                                                                    Malone (2012)
Q1 ISSUEs: Quality
  “The harm to local districts comes when the parents get sick of baby-
     sitting and send the student back to the home district and we have to
     pick up the loss of academic gains.”
    “Students are unsuccessful in online schools and then public school has
     to clean the mess up.”
    “I have issue with the quality of some of the programs, since these
     students often end up back in our system with inadequate skills.”
    “We find that students that come back to us from an online program
     have significant deficits in their learning.”
    “I worry that online programs that may be legally sufficient are not
     necessarily quality programs that provide an alternative pathway for
     student success, but they do provide dollars to a district.”
    “I have never heard, in my experience, whether or not these programs
     make an impact on student learning.”



FINDINGS
                                                                      Malone (2012)
Q1 ISSUEs: REGULATION
   “Living in the midst of school districts trying to push the limits of the
    new laws to bring in FTE, I am a bit jaded at this point.”
   “Online programs have to be regulated to weed out the money grabbers
    from the legitimate educators.”
   “The ever-changing funding for ALE makes investment risky.”
   “The idea that some schools profit from online courses with FTE, and
    that other school loose FTE is difficult.”
   “State agencies need to work together to remove road blocks to online
    learning.”
   “The state taking away 20% of the funding and opening their own online
    competition is definitely an issue!”




FINDINGS
                                                                        Malone (2012)
Q1 ISSUES
            Disagree   Agree




FINDINGS
                         Malone (2012)
Q2 Purposes: Flexibility
   Scheduling Flexibility (M=3.23)
   “The purpose of online learning is to provide flexible
    opportunities for students in a system that is traditionally
    not flexible.”
   “Online Learning allows us to provide students with an
    opportunity to fulfill graduation requirements when they
    need to accrue credits.”
   “It gives students options and opportunities in a variety of
    situations young students get themselves into.”



FINDINGS
                                                             Malone (2012)
Q2 Purposes: Individualization
   Meeting Individual Student Needs (M=3.13)
   “Not all students learn the same way. Online learning gives
    those students an opportunity for an education who may
    not be able to attend a brick and mortar school for specific
    reasons.”
   “Online learning seems best suited to meeting unique,
    individual needs rather than serving large numbers of
    students.”




FINDINGS
                                                          Malone (2012)
Q2 Purposes: Options

   Expanding Course Options (M=3.11)
   “Online learning is a tool used in creating a continuum of
    services to meet the mission of ensuring the learning of all
    our children, not a whipping post for legislators and short
    sighted educators who may be afraid of change.”
   “The purpose is to provide a wider variety of opportunities
    for students to take courses.”
   “It is beneficial to have a variety of choices for students to
    engage in high quality learning environments.”



FINDINGS
                                                            Malone (2012)
Q2 Purposes: Concerns

   “I do not believe the purposes of online learning align with
    the practice.”
   “I believe districts rip off the system and have lost site of
    the purpose.”
   “There is a considerable gap between the stated potential
    for online learning and its actual implementation, which is
    profit-driven.”




FINDINGS
                                                             Malone (2012)
Disagree   Agree
Q2 PURPOSES




FINDINGS
                         Malone (2012)
Q3 Recommendations: Blending
   “Face-to-face contact remains critical to maintaining an effective and
    sustained online learning program.”
   “Traditional and online learning together produce the best results.”
   “Strong face-to-face student-to-teacher relationships and interactions
    are essential as the mainstay of K-12 education.”
   “Teachers are still an important component of online learning. The
    human connection is critical.”
   “Online learning and blended classrooms are the future of education.
    We as educators must have the vision to allow these programs in our
    existing schools to support and enhance our more traditional academic
    programs.”




FINDINGS
                                                                      Malone (2012)
Q3 Recommendations: Individualization

   “Online learning provides an opportunity for students who
    do not fit in the traditional classroom setting.”
   “I am very satisfied to have online learning available to the
    few learners who need the option but not on a widespread
    basis.”
   “Online learning should continue to be very limited to meet
    unique needs of individual students but not a replacement
    for the strong and good work being done with face-to-face
    instruction in schools.”



FINDINGS
                                                          Malone (2012)
Q3 Recommendations: Regulations
   “OSPI needs to create reasonable reporting requirements and funding
    formulas.”
   “Regulate the funding of online learning very carefully from OSPI. Make
    an effort to limit abuse from revenue generating interests.”
   “Provide via statewide model so districts are not competing for
    students.”
   “Online programs, if offered to the public, should be offered and
    controlled 100% by OSPI.”
   “Develop stronger policies that discourage fly-by-night providers that
    create a churn in student enrollments for profit.”
   “Vetted courses should be made available at no cost to districts, funded
    by the state, so that access to educational services does not become even
    more inequitable.”

FINDINGS
                                                                        Malone (2012)
Q3 Recommendations: Examination
   “Good grief, how many more hours should a young person spend in a virtual versus
      actual experience?”
     “Online programs exacerbate the problems of regular schools, rather than solve
      them.”
     “In general, online learning is not a meaningful learning experience.”
     “We cannot afford to bury our heads in the sand on this issue. Technology will
      continue to infuse itself into education; we can embrace it or get choked by it.”
     “The decision to offer online programming should be based on student need, not the
      administrative prejudices or limitations of the adults in the system.”
     “We are all convinced that the breakthrough strategy for improving the quality of
      instruction that students receive, and for improving the quality of professional learning
      for teachers, is the meaningful collaboration of teachers who share students and
      content. This is not a feature of online instruction, and in fact online programs are a
      step backward toward isolation of practice and norms of autonomy vs. the norms of
      collaboration we have been working to establish.”




FINDINGS
                                                                                    Malone (2012)
Q4 Demographic Affect
      Factors


            Experience
            District Size
            Online Status




FINDINGS
                             Malone (2012)
Q4 Demographic: Experience

   Agree




  Disagree




FINDINGS
                                 Malone (2012)
Q4 Demographic: District Size

   Agree




   Disagree




FINDINGS
                                  Malone (2012)
Q4 Demographic: Online Status

   Agree




   Disagree




FINDINGS
                                  Malone (2012)
Leading Online:

     An Autoethnography Focused on
     Leading an Instructional Focus on
   Student Learning in an Online School



LANCASTER (2012)
Q1 What characteristics of an online learning environment
                    trigger teachers to focus on management issues
                                          rather than learning issues?


     Q2 What conditions might be in place to help teachers manage
  their online workload effectively so they can shift discussions from
              management and metrics to student-centered learning?


   Q3 What leadership behaviors need to be undertaken to inspire a
  culture of support to engage teachers in analyzing the teaching and
                           learning process in the online classroom?


RESEARCH QUESTIONS
                                                         Lancaster (2012)
Autoethnography
 Better understand the story behind the data


          Analytic Autoethnography
  Emphasis not about self; rather it is about
searching for understanding of culture and/or
   society through self (Anderson, 2006)


METHODOLOGY
                                     Lancaster (2012)
Socio-technical theory

  Changes in technology bring about
  changes in values, cognitive structures, life
  styles habits and communication which
  profoundly alter a society and its chances
  of survival (Trist, 1981)



THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
                                         Lancaster (2012)
Infrastructure
             Learning management system (LMS)
             Technology support

         Governance
             Compliance
             Policy
             Promotion

         Teaching and learning
             Course planning and design
             Formative and summative assessment

         Management
             Management for compliance
             Communication
             Issue resolution


THEMES
                                   Lancaster (2012)
Q1 What characteristics trigger teachers to
focus on management issues?

  Infrastructure: LMS
  Teaching and Learning: Course planning and
   design (management)
  Governance: Political systems driven by
   financial need and accountability, metrics about
   money
     Promotion: Important due to policy
     Management: Required by policy and technology



FINDINGS
                                               Lancaster (2012)
Q2 What conditions help teachers manage their
online workload effectively and shift from
management to student-centered learning?

  Infrastructure: Technology manages, teachers teach
  Governance: Performance based measures for
   compliance, clear measures for student success
  Clarity of course layout and design: Guidelines about
   modifying and restructuring
  Management: Clear tracking tools, integration of LMS
   with SIS


FINDINGS
                                               Lancaster (2012)
Q3 What leadership behaviors need to be
 undertaken to inspire a culture of support to engage
 teachers in analyzing the teaching and learning
 process in the online classroom?

    Clear consistent message, clear definition of program,
     roles, responsibilities that is consistent among all
     stakeholders
    Structure professional conversations around learning
     metrics
    Provide pressure relief when needed
    Remove barriers from teachers’ role such as funding,
     infrastructure and formatting



FINDINGS
                                                    Lancaster (2012)
Socio-technical




FINDINGS
                    Lancaster (2012)
Governance            Regulations
                          Financial

    Management            Quality Concerns
                          Flexibility

    Teaching & Learning   Blending
                          Individualization

    Infrastructure

      -Lancaster (2012)     -Malone (2012)


Common Themes
Lancaster (2012)
    •Guided by a clear vision and compelling purpose
    •Facilitate processes for teachers to come together to
    discuss student learning
    •Provide human contact and daily checks with students
    •Learning not technology should be the driver

    Malone (2012)
    •Regional Adaptive Dialogic Work
    •Statewide Superintendent Forums
    •Accountability Legislation
    •Blended Online Learning
    •Common Core Standard Alignment



Recommendations
Go COUGS!

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WASA AWSP Spokane 2012

  • 1. LEADERSHIP PERSPECTIVES: THE RAPID GROWTH OF K-12 ONLINE LEARNING Lancaster (2012) & Malone (2012) AWSP/WASA June, 2012
  • 2.
  • 3. Present findings from TWO closely related research projects Lancaster’s (2012) autoethnography describes, analyzes and interprets one leader’s experience in leading an instructional focus on student learning and a group of online teachers in one of Washington’s oldest and most successful online programs. Malone’s (2012) mixed-methods study examines perceptions, interpretations and reactions of K-12 superintendents in Washington in response to the rapid growth of online learning. The findings provide intriguing insight into the current landscape of K-12 online learning. SESSION OBJECTIVE
  • 4. Rapid growth of online learning Legislation focus on metrics, not learning Lack of quality control standards Competition not collaboration 3rd party vendor involvement Lack of research on effectiveness CONTEXT
  • 5. Washington State Superintendents and K-12 Online Learning: Leadership Perceptions, Challenges, & Opportunities MALONE (2012)
  • 6. Q1 What are the issues that impede or support the implementation of online learning as perceived by Washington superintendents? Q2 What do Washington superintendents identify as the purposes for online learning? Q3 What recommendations do Washington superintendents suggest for successful implementation of online learning? Q4 How does district size, years of experience, and online status affect superintendent perceptions of the online learning environment? RESEARCH QUESTIONS Malone (2012)
  • 7. Mixed Methods Study ~ Online Survey 39 Closed & 5 Open-ended Survey Items Quantitative Analysis: Descriptive Statistics Pearson’s Correlation Coefficient Qualitative Analysis: Constant Comparative Method METHODOLOGY Malone (2012)
  • 8. Vis Innovation ~ Recommendations ion Leadership ~ Purposes hi p ar Change ~ Issues s y/ der Em L ea erg ity enc l ex eL mp ead Co ers hip Disruptive Innovation THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK Malone (2012)
  • 9. # of Superintendents Responding to Survey 201 RESPONDENTS Malone (2012)
  • 10. RESPONDENTS Malone (2012)
  • 11. RESPONDENTS Malone (2012)
  • 12. RESPONDENTS Malone (2012)
  • 13. Q1 ISSUEs: Financial  “ We provide online learning to 150-200 students. 50 are from our own district. The others from across the state. We could not offer either without the other. We need 150-200 to break even ... and we still lose money compared to bricks and mortar schools.”  “I am very skeptical of the motives of private companies and some school districts' purposes. While it is not likely generalizable, my perception is that in some instances there is more interest in making money than with teaching and learning.”  “I am deeply troubled by districts using online learning to make money.”  “The motives are overwhelmingly financial.”  “It is clearly a method for school districts to add additional funds to the district. School districts in Washington State have used this process, knowingly, to pirate students from districts.”  “With declining resources how can we possibly allocate funds that we don't have to researching these opportunities. They are important but we are just trying to survive right now!” FINDINGS Malone (2012)
  • 14. Q1 ISSUEs: Quality  “The harm to local districts comes when the parents get sick of baby- sitting and send the student back to the home district and we have to pick up the loss of academic gains.”  “Students are unsuccessful in online schools and then public school has to clean the mess up.”  “I have issue with the quality of some of the programs, since these students often end up back in our system with inadequate skills.”  “We find that students that come back to us from an online program have significant deficits in their learning.”  “I worry that online programs that may be legally sufficient are not necessarily quality programs that provide an alternative pathway for student success, but they do provide dollars to a district.”  “I have never heard, in my experience, whether or not these programs make an impact on student learning.” FINDINGS Malone (2012)
  • 15. Q1 ISSUEs: REGULATION  “Living in the midst of school districts trying to push the limits of the new laws to bring in FTE, I am a bit jaded at this point.”  “Online programs have to be regulated to weed out the money grabbers from the legitimate educators.”  “The ever-changing funding for ALE makes investment risky.”  “The idea that some schools profit from online courses with FTE, and that other school loose FTE is difficult.”  “State agencies need to work together to remove road blocks to online learning.”  “The state taking away 20% of the funding and opening their own online competition is definitely an issue!” FINDINGS Malone (2012)
  • 16. Q1 ISSUES Disagree Agree FINDINGS Malone (2012)
  • 17. Q2 Purposes: Flexibility  Scheduling Flexibility (M=3.23)  “The purpose of online learning is to provide flexible opportunities for students in a system that is traditionally not flexible.”  “Online Learning allows us to provide students with an opportunity to fulfill graduation requirements when they need to accrue credits.”  “It gives students options and opportunities in a variety of situations young students get themselves into.” FINDINGS Malone (2012)
  • 18. Q2 Purposes: Individualization  Meeting Individual Student Needs (M=3.13)  “Not all students learn the same way. Online learning gives those students an opportunity for an education who may not be able to attend a brick and mortar school for specific reasons.”  “Online learning seems best suited to meeting unique, individual needs rather than serving large numbers of students.” FINDINGS Malone (2012)
  • 19. Q2 Purposes: Options  Expanding Course Options (M=3.11)  “Online learning is a tool used in creating a continuum of services to meet the mission of ensuring the learning of all our children, not a whipping post for legislators and short sighted educators who may be afraid of change.”  “The purpose is to provide a wider variety of opportunities for students to take courses.”  “It is beneficial to have a variety of choices for students to engage in high quality learning environments.” FINDINGS Malone (2012)
  • 20. Q2 Purposes: Concerns  “I do not believe the purposes of online learning align with the practice.”  “I believe districts rip off the system and have lost site of the purpose.”  “There is a considerable gap between the stated potential for online learning and its actual implementation, which is profit-driven.” FINDINGS Malone (2012)
  • 21. Disagree Agree Q2 PURPOSES FINDINGS Malone (2012)
  • 22. Q3 Recommendations: Blending  “Face-to-face contact remains critical to maintaining an effective and sustained online learning program.”  “Traditional and online learning together produce the best results.”  “Strong face-to-face student-to-teacher relationships and interactions are essential as the mainstay of K-12 education.”  “Teachers are still an important component of online learning. The human connection is critical.”  “Online learning and blended classrooms are the future of education. We as educators must have the vision to allow these programs in our existing schools to support and enhance our more traditional academic programs.” FINDINGS Malone (2012)
  • 23. Q3 Recommendations: Individualization  “Online learning provides an opportunity for students who do not fit in the traditional classroom setting.”  “I am very satisfied to have online learning available to the few learners who need the option but not on a widespread basis.”  “Online learning should continue to be very limited to meet unique needs of individual students but not a replacement for the strong and good work being done with face-to-face instruction in schools.” FINDINGS Malone (2012)
  • 24. Q3 Recommendations: Regulations  “OSPI needs to create reasonable reporting requirements and funding formulas.”  “Regulate the funding of online learning very carefully from OSPI. Make an effort to limit abuse from revenue generating interests.”  “Provide via statewide model so districts are not competing for students.”  “Online programs, if offered to the public, should be offered and controlled 100% by OSPI.”  “Develop stronger policies that discourage fly-by-night providers that create a churn in student enrollments for profit.”  “Vetted courses should be made available at no cost to districts, funded by the state, so that access to educational services does not become even more inequitable.” FINDINGS Malone (2012)
  • 25. Q3 Recommendations: Examination  “Good grief, how many more hours should a young person spend in a virtual versus actual experience?”  “Online programs exacerbate the problems of regular schools, rather than solve them.”  “In general, online learning is not a meaningful learning experience.”  “We cannot afford to bury our heads in the sand on this issue. Technology will continue to infuse itself into education; we can embrace it or get choked by it.”  “The decision to offer online programming should be based on student need, not the administrative prejudices or limitations of the adults in the system.”  “We are all convinced that the breakthrough strategy for improving the quality of instruction that students receive, and for improving the quality of professional learning for teachers, is the meaningful collaboration of teachers who share students and content. This is not a feature of online instruction, and in fact online programs are a step backward toward isolation of practice and norms of autonomy vs. the norms of collaboration we have been working to establish.” FINDINGS Malone (2012)
  • 26. Q4 Demographic Affect Factors Experience District Size Online Status FINDINGS Malone (2012)
  • 27. Q4 Demographic: Experience Agree Disagree FINDINGS Malone (2012)
  • 28. Q4 Demographic: District Size Agree Disagree FINDINGS Malone (2012)
  • 29. Q4 Demographic: Online Status Agree Disagree FINDINGS Malone (2012)
  • 30. Leading Online: An Autoethnography Focused on Leading an Instructional Focus on Student Learning in an Online School LANCASTER (2012)
  • 31. Q1 What characteristics of an online learning environment trigger teachers to focus on management issues rather than learning issues? Q2 What conditions might be in place to help teachers manage their online workload effectively so they can shift discussions from management and metrics to student-centered learning? Q3 What leadership behaviors need to be undertaken to inspire a culture of support to engage teachers in analyzing the teaching and learning process in the online classroom? RESEARCH QUESTIONS Lancaster (2012)
  • 32. Autoethnography Better understand the story behind the data Analytic Autoethnography Emphasis not about self; rather it is about searching for understanding of culture and/or society through self (Anderson, 2006) METHODOLOGY Lancaster (2012)
  • 33. Socio-technical theory Changes in technology bring about changes in values, cognitive structures, life styles habits and communication which profoundly alter a society and its chances of survival (Trist, 1981) THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK Lancaster (2012)
  • 34. Infrastructure  Learning management system (LMS)  Technology support Governance  Compliance  Policy  Promotion Teaching and learning  Course planning and design  Formative and summative assessment Management  Management for compliance  Communication  Issue resolution THEMES Lancaster (2012)
  • 35. Q1 What characteristics trigger teachers to focus on management issues? Infrastructure: LMS Teaching and Learning: Course planning and design (management) Governance: Political systems driven by financial need and accountability, metrics about money  Promotion: Important due to policy  Management: Required by policy and technology FINDINGS Lancaster (2012)
  • 36. Q2 What conditions help teachers manage their online workload effectively and shift from management to student-centered learning? Infrastructure: Technology manages, teachers teach Governance: Performance based measures for compliance, clear measures for student success Clarity of course layout and design: Guidelines about modifying and restructuring Management: Clear tracking tools, integration of LMS with SIS FINDINGS Lancaster (2012)
  • 37. Q3 What leadership behaviors need to be undertaken to inspire a culture of support to engage teachers in analyzing the teaching and learning process in the online classroom?  Clear consistent message, clear definition of program, roles, responsibilities that is consistent among all stakeholders  Structure professional conversations around learning metrics  Provide pressure relief when needed  Remove barriers from teachers’ role such as funding, infrastructure and formatting FINDINGS Lancaster (2012)
  • 38. Socio-technical FINDINGS Lancaster (2012)
  • 39. Governance Regulations Financial Management Quality Concerns Flexibility Teaching & Learning Blending Individualization Infrastructure -Lancaster (2012) -Malone (2012) Common Themes
  • 40. Lancaster (2012) •Guided by a clear vision and compelling purpose •Facilitate processes for teachers to come together to discuss student learning •Provide human contact and daily checks with students •Learning not technology should be the driver Malone (2012) •Regional Adaptive Dialogic Work •Statewide Superintendent Forums •Accountability Legislation •Blended Online Learning •Common Core Standard Alignment Recommendations

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. There were 296 school districts in Washington State during the 2010-11 school years. There were 13 districts that shared a superintendent with other districts and in one case a superintendent served three districts that same year. In all, there were six superintendents who worked for multiple districts. That condensed the total number of superintendents and possible respondents in this study to 289 superintendents. 296 7 Districts 289 2 (Vader & Benge) 287 In the end, 287 superintendents were invited to participate in the survey, with 71% replying (N=201). This exceeded the desired response rate for this study; and meets the general rule for acceptable survey response rates (Fink, 2009).
  2. Excellent Representation from every county in the state, This sample is also reflective of both social economic diversity as well as geographic diversity By Experience by size by ethnicity and by social economic status
  3. I pulled out 6 to give you flavor of the
  4. This chart represents the mean scores from each of the 16 survey items asked regarding online learning issues. Blue > 3 Strong agreement Green 2.5 – 3 Leaning toward agreement Yellow 2 – 2.5 Leaning toward disagreement Red < 2 Strong Disagreement Interesting to note…when asked if Online Learning provides a fiscal advantage Superintendents strongly disagreed…however comments indicate that many fell that it does for others.
  5. Even when asked questions on purpose…we still see a continual desire to discuss the issues. This survey provide a forum to air their concerns and issues.
  6. This chart represents the mean scores from each of the 11 survey items asked regarding online learning purpose. Blue > 3 Strong agreement Green 2.5 – 3 Leaning toward agreement Yellow 2 – 2.5 Leaning toward disagreement Red < 2 Strong Disagreement
  7. Lancaster (2012) this morning supports these findings.
  8. Superintendents provided recommendations on regulations
  9. 3 School Factors
  10. Examining the means by subscale Correlations in each of the subscales to the superintendent’s Number of Years of Experience were negligible with the exception of the Learner-Centered subscale. There was a small positive correlation to the superintendent’s Number of Years of Experience and perceptions that the virtual school offers Learner-Centered Instruction (r=0.107) Superintendents’ perceptions of the Alternate Learning Environment and Instructional Options were not affected by the Number of Years of Experience. The mean level of agreement for the Alternate Learning Environment and Instructional Options was unchanged respectively, from 0 to 12+ years of experience. Overall, superintendents were in agreement that the virtual school provides an Alternative Learning Environment, viable Instructional Options and 21 st Century Skills.
  11. Examining the means by subscale There was a significant small positive correlation between School District Size and Alternate Learning Environment (r=0.157). Superintendents of schools with over 10,000 students had a higher mean level of agreement on the Alternate Learning Environment subscale ( M =3.18) than Superintendents of schools with less than 1,000 students ( M =2.87). As school district size increased, superintendents agreed more strongly that the virtual school offers an Alternate Learning Environment. The data suggested that District Size did not influence superintendents’ perceptions of Fiscal Advantage.
  12. Examining the means by subscale concerning Online Status This chart echoes the significances of the Pearson’s Correlation. It shows that Yes indeed those considering or currently offering felt more strongly than those that aren’t on almost all subscales. There was a small positive correlation between the district’s Online Status and four of the subscales; two of which were significant. Correlations were significant for the Alternate Learning Environment (r=0.280) and the 21st Century Skills subscales (r=0.171) The Superintendent of districts currently offering online classes agreed more strongly than those not offering online classes that the virtual school provides an avenue for students to experience an Alternate Learning Environment ( M= 3.02 and 2.61, respectively) and engage in 21 st Century Skills ( M =2.96 and 2.63, respectively). Finally, the data suggested that districts’ Online Status did not influence Superintendents’ perceptions of Fiscal Advantage.
  13. “ Regulate my neighbor”
  14. “ Regulate my neighbor”