Georgia High School Students Lose Two Online Education Options
This article was published by the Georgia Public Policy Foundation.
Georgia high school students who would like to pursue full-time online education options may have seen their hopes diminished this week. Two companies that were approved to open online high schools in August will cancel because they believe the financial model offered by the state does not work. This is a punch to the gut for advocates of online education in Georgia.
Last month the Georgia Charter School Commission approved Kaplan Academy of Georgia and Provost Academy Georgia with the understanding that coursework costs would need to fit into available state funding, estimated at about $3,500 per pupil. Provost planned to enroll 800 high school students and Kaplan planned 460 students. Read more »
-
Recent
- “Data Is An Onion … You Have to Begin to Peel Back the Onion”
- Big Brother Knows Best Mentality Works Against School Choice
- Georgia’s Intense Focus on Children Sold for Sexual Services
- This Should be Obvious: Fix Families First to Fix Kids
- Broken Families … Parents Without Skills … Kids in Juvenile Justice
- Digital Learning, Re-Entry Lead List of Criminal Justice Priorities
- Second Adult Criminal Justice Reform Bill Becomes Law
- Pew Poll: Solid Real World Support for Juvenile Justice Reform
- Georgia Public Schools Employ More Staff Than Teachers
- Georgia House Passes Juvenile Justice Bill 173-0
- New Criminal Justice Reform Council Proposed Through 2023
- Juvenile Justice Bill Would Revise Designated Felony Act
-
Links
-
Archives
- May 2013 (6)
- April 2013 (1)
- March 2013 (2)
- February 2013 (4)
- January 2013 (8)
- December 2012 (3)
- November 2012 (3)
- October 2012 (2)
- September 2012 (2)
- August 2012 (3)
- July 2012 (3)
- June 2012 (5)
-
Categories
-
RSS
Entries RSS
Comments RSS