Saturday, December 24, 2011

2012 Student Ambassador Program Announcement


Who’s Going to Be the Face of AHS this Year?

Student Ambassador Program


Student Ambassadors are the face of our school during second semester at Animas High. In addition to their responsibilities at SLCs, POLs and Exhibitions, AHS Student Ambassadors are selected to represent our school at all outreach, service and public information events. Ambassadors are chosen by the AHS faculty and include students who embody Animas High’s commitment to academic, cultural and community excellence.


In 2012 AHS Student Ambassadors will participate in campus centered outreach efforts as well as community based presentations, service opportunities and youth events. Serving as an Animas High Student Ambassador is an honor bestowed to a limited number of students. Students must re-apply each year and faculty select appointment to the program based upon a student’s application and prior performance in semester one of the 2011-12 school year.


Applications for this year’s Student Ambassador program are available now in the AHS Main Office or online at: http://www.keepandshare.com/doc/3379371/2012-student-ambassador-app-docx-december-24-2011-8-59-am-277k?da=y

Colorado receives $17.9 million Race to the Top education gran


Posted: 12/23/2011 01:00:00 AM MST
Updated: 12/23/2011 08:46:57 AM MSTBy Yesenia Robles
The Denver Post
Students work on number diagrams during the first day of school for DPS at Amos Steck Elementary on Thursday, August 18, 2011. (AAron Ontiveroz, The Denver Post)
After three failed attempts, Colorado has finally landed a Race to the Top grant.

"We're extremely happy," said state Education Commissioner Robert Hammond. "Obviously there's been a lot of hard work and disappointment in the past. Even though this is a reduced amount, we believe it will be extremely helpful."

Colorado was one of seven states that won money for this round of Race to the Top. The fund was set aside for finalists that didn't receive money in the second round.

Nine states were eligible for a share of $200 million provided by Congress. Colorado received $17.9 million.

U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan said all the states funded in this round were finalists that had already earned the department's trust.

"We had a high level of confidence in these states," Duncan said. "We were simply looking for them to articulate their plans and ideas."

Because the grants are smaller than in the first two rounds — Colorado had originally applied for $175 million — the original phase's two applications had to be rewritten to limit the scope.

Putting together the application cost the state $60,000 this year, but the cost was covered with funds that education advocacy groups helped raise.

Colorado focused on four areas covering two projects: implementation of new state standards, including creating assessments and teaching resources for each new standard; and implementing educator evaluation systems.

"We've really been moving forward on this work anyway, so it will accelerate the momentum," said Jill Hawley, the state Education Department's chief of staff and strategy. "We've had such a demand for our services around educator effectiveness. We expect we will be able to reach more districts."

Duncan, who called Colorado a leader in education, said it was the state's persistence with reform that impressed him.

"Colorado didn't stop their reforms," Duncan said. "They are pushing forward with or without our investment. That's exactly the attitude we want."

Half of the money will be distributed directly to interested school districts in the coming months. The rest will help beef up centralized state support, through at least four full-time staff members and additional regional employees who will help school districts train teacher and principal evaluators.

Last week, the federal Department of Education announced winners in the third round of funding for early-childhood education programs. Colorado — one of 37 states to apply for a portion of the $500 million available — had hoped to bring home nearly $60 million but finished 12th, three spots away from the money.

Yesenia Robles: 303-954-1372 or yrobles@denverpost.com

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Annual PAC Survey!!! Thanks for your Participation


Hurry and get your survey in.....we know it's one more thing to do at this busy time of year. But just take 5-10 minutes to complete the Annual Parent Survey. 30% of our families have completed the survey, and we're hoping for 100% participation. Happy holidays from PAC.

Click on:
https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/animashighschoolparentsurvey2012 to complete your survey today

Colorado Gov. Hickenlooper to appeal education-funding lawsuit

Posted: 12/22/2011 01:00:00 AM MST
Updated: 12/22/2011 05:27:46 AM MST
By Karen Auge and Kurtis Lee
The Denver Post

Gov. John Hickenlooper said Wednesday that after a close review of a Denver district judge's decision in Lobato vs. Colorado, he will appeal the decision to the state's highest court.

"The judge's decision provided little practical guidance on how the state should fund a 'thorough and uniform' system of public education," Hickenlooper said in a statement. "Moreover, while the judge focused on the inadequacy of state funding, she did not reconcile this issue with other very relevant provisions of the Constitution, including the Taxpayer's Bill of Rights, the Gallagher Amendment and Amendment 23."

Kathy Gebhardt, one of the lead attorneys who brought the suit, said she was disappointed but not surprised at the governor's decision.

"We believe we have proved there is a sense of urgency to fixing this problem, that kids have been attending substandard schools," Gebhardt said.

Prolonging the suit merely hurts kids now in Colorado schools, she said.

"Justice delayed is education denied," she said.

The State Board of Education, meanwhile, postponed until next week its own decision on whether to pursue an appeal.

After the board convened by phone in an hour-long executive session, chairman Bob Schaffer said the board would not make a decision until Tuesday. He did not offer any reason for the delay.

The governor and the State Board of Education are defendants in the case, so both can weigh in with direction, said Mike Saccone, spokesman for the attorney general's office.

Saccone said the legislature has appropriated up to $3.5 million to defend the state against the suit.

The suit was filed in 2005. It originated with a group of parents in the San Luis Valley but expanded to include districts from across the state.

The judge's ruling this month blasted the state's level of school funding as "unconscionable" and not meeting the Colorado Constitution's requirement of a "thorough and uniform" public education system.

The ruling handed the problem off to lawmakers to fix, and the judge said implementing her ruling would be delayed until the end of the 2012 legislative session.

In his statement Wednesday, Hickenlooper said he consulted with Attorney General John Suthers in reaching his decision.

"We look forward to a swift decision in this case so the people of Colorado and their elected representatives can participate in the school funding conversation," Hickenlooper said.

Karen Auge: 303-954-1733 or kauge@denverpost.com

Colorado lawmakers mull unexpected revenues, debate restoring cuts to education

Posted: 12/20/2011 12:02:14 PM MST
Updated: 12/20/2011 01:27:21 PM MST
By John Ingold

The Denver Post
Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper talks about his first 100 days as governor, Wednesday April, 19, 2011, at the state capital. RJ Sangosti, The Denver Post (THE DENVER POST | RJ SANGOSTI)

Colorado lawmakers this morning heard revised budget forecasts that Gov. John Hickenlooper thinks will allow $89 million to be restored to the state's beleaguered education funding.

But the head of the legislature's money-minding Joint Budget Committee stopped short of endorsing the plan to boost education dollars based on budget predictions.

"We're still in a very tentative situation economically," said Rep. Cheri Gerou, R-Evergreen. "We need to stay vigilant and careful with our budget."

Hickenlooper's budget-makers told legislators this morning they expect revenues for the current fiscal year to come in $231 million above expectations. That, plus an expected boost to next fiscal year's revenues, have the governor proposing the restoration to K-12 education funding, plus additions to the higher education budget and to a program that helps needy seniors pay their rent and heating bills.

"Everything syncs up with places we didn't want to cut," said Henry Sobanet, the executive director of the Office of State Planning and Budgeting.

The nonpartisan economists of the Colorado Legislative Council, who work for lawmakers, estimated this year's budget boost as only $148 million, though they are more optimistic than the governor's office about next fiscal year's revenues. But Natalie Mullis, the Legislative Council's chief economist, said the differences aren't significant.

She cautioned, though, that the extra money — which comes in a general fund budget of about $7 billion — doesn't mean Colorado is flush.

"It sounds like a lot of money," she said, "but it's really not because it doesn't include the cost of inflation and rising caseloads."

Still, reaction to the budget news today was, understandably, positive. One lawmaker joked that Sobanet was like "Santa's helper."

The Colorado Education Association called Hickenlooper's budget proposal, "a welcomed gift for Colorado kids this holiday season."

"Our students and schools so desperately needed a good-news day, and this is good news," Beverly Ingle, the CEA's president, said in a statement.

State Senate President Brandon Shaffer, D-Longmont, used the news as occasion to campaign for the "Colorado Works" package of jobs bills Democrats plan to introduce next legislative session.

"It's encouraging to see Colorado's economy continue to improve, but we need to keep working to create jobs and strengthen the economy," Shaffer said in a statement.

Meanwhile, House Majority Leader Amy Stephens, R-Colorado Springs, criticized Hickenlooper for not instead using the extra money to restore a $100 million property-tax exemption for seniors.

"While I am disappointed that Gov. Hickenlooper continues to propose a property tax increase on Colorado's seniors most in need, Colorado's slow economic recovery gives us reason for optimism," Stephens said in a statement.

John Ingold: 303-954-1068 or jingold@denverpost.com.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Colorado loses again in "Race to the Top" grant competition

Posted: 12/16/2011 08:18:57 AM MST
Updated: 12/16/2011 05:25:26 PM MST
By Yesenia Robles and Kevin Simpson
The Denver Post
Students work on number diagrams during the first day of school for DPS at Amos Steck Elementary on Thursday, August 18, 2011. (AAron Ontiveroz, The Denver Post)

Colorado failed once again
to receive a grant in the latest "Race to the Top" competition, the U.S. Department of Education announced this morning.

In the previous two rounds, Colorado was a finalist, but did not receive any funds.

North Carolina, Massachusetts, Washington, Delaware, Ohio, Maryland, Minnesota, Rhode Island and California were chosen to receive anywhere from $45 million to 70 million for the competition's Early Learning Challenge.

Colorado was one of 37 states to apply for a portion of the $500 million available through the program, and asked for nearly $60 million.

Its raw score of 233.4 points out of a possible 300 (77.8 percent) ranked 12th, about 10 points out of the money and 36.2 points behind top-scoring North Carolina.

This round of funding focused on initiatives that address children's early education, including kindergarten readiness, and also developmental health.

"The state's Race to the Top application was developed through a collaborative process that brought together the state's smartest child advocates," said Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper in a prepared statement. "This extensive planning helped create a clear roadmap for pursuing the best educational outcomes for our state's kids. Colorado is a national leader when it comes to education reform and we remain committed to supporting our teachers and students in every way possible."

Federal officials praised the winners for innovative ways of combining elements like pre-reading skills with health screenings, exercise and nutrition, and noted how they took steps to engage parents to help their children succeed.

Reviewers of the applications gave extra weight to states that had already begun implementing their programs over those that simply described plans for the future.

In a nod to the states left out of the funding, U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius said progress in early learning won't be limited to the nine winners.

"By pushing everyone to raise their game, we intend to foster innovation in early childhood programs around the country and certainly share the best practices of these nine states with others who are eager to learn," she said. "The only way America can out-compete the rest of the world is if we out-educate the rest of the world."

Colorado's application focused on supporting professional development and incentives for employees at early-learning centers and day-care facilities, and also in assisting those centers to start aligning use of assessments allowing families to provide input.

Application leaders had stressed that the work would go on regardless of the outcome of the award, but would be spurred to move faster with the federal money.

The application also boasted Colorado current work creating early-learning standards for children from birth to age 8.

Currently, early-learning standards apply only to children ages 3 to 5.

"Colorado has seen so much progress already in the quality of early learning programs that help ensure every child starts school ready to learn," said Lt. Gov. Joe Garcia. "We will continue to build on the solid foundation already set for creating a stronger workforce, providing families with the tools and resources they need and to building community capacity to serve young children and their families."

The union, Colorado Education Association, who did support this round's application, also released a statement on Friday, emphasizing that the support continues.

"Today's announcement on Colorado's most recent Race to the Top application is obviously disappointing," said Beverly Ingle, Colorado Education Association President. "As the professionals working every day to teach and support Colorado's public school students, we know how critical early literacy and childhood development are to success in school. We strongly supported the Race to the Top application and are proud of the effort Colorado has made."

In the second round of the competition, Colorado officials were critical of judges who gave Colorado a wide margin of differing reviews. Just a month ago, the department rejected a formal Denver Post request for the names of the reviewers.

Colorado is also still awaiting an announcement of awards for another portion of race to the top funds that was made available only for the finalists of the second round. Colorado would be eligible for $17.9 million of that award, focused on K-12 education.

Because the grants are smaller than in the first two rounds, the original Race to the Top applications from the second round had to be updated to limit the scope, but the main projects could not be new ideas.

Colorado chose to focus on two projects: implementation of new state standards and of educator- evaluation systems.

Yesenia Robles: 303-954-1372 or yrobles@denverpost.com

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

CSI Names New Executive Director

Colorado Charter School Institute
1580 Logan St.
Denver, CO 80203

For more information, contact:
Mark Stevens
303-495-8699 (cell)

News Release

December 15, 2011

Executive Director Mark Hyatt Leaving CSI, Ethan Hemming Named Interim

CSI Board of Directors Chairman Wayne Eckerling announced today the departure of executive director Mark Hyatt, who has accepted a position as chief operating officer with the Character Education Partnership in Washington, D.C. The Character Education Partnership is a national, non-profit organization that provides schools the resources needed to integrate character education across their curriculum.

“In two years, Mark Hyatt has led the transformation of the Charter School Institute and set the stage for our future success,” said Eckerling. “He launched a strategic plan that will ensure the institute continues to enhance its reputation as a model authorizer and leader in school reform. We wish Mark all the best in his new endeavor, which allows him to work on an issue that has been a life-long passion.”

During his tenure, Eckerling noted, Hyatt:
Strengthened all facets of the Charter School Institute’s operations.
Nurtured more than 50 percent growth in student enrollment across all CSI schools. Enrollment now stands at 10,500 students in 22 schools.
Launched internal controls and new financial procedures to re-establish the organization’s fiscal health.
Reorganized staff and hired respected subject matter experts in such key positions as deputy executive director and chief financial officer.
Strengthened the institute’s authorizing functions including the application and renewal processes and the ongoing monitoring of student performance.
Improved relationships with all of the institute’s schools and also with the state organizations involved with K-12 education.

Eckerling also announced the appointment of Ethan Hemming as interim executive director. Since April, Hemming has served as deputy executive director at the institute. He joined CSI after 13 years with Denver Public Schools, including three years as deputy executive director of the Office of School Reform and Innovation, overseeing and supporting 28 charter schools and six innovation schools.


About the Charter School Institute

The Charter School Institute was created by the Colorado State Legislature in 2004 and serves as the state authorizer for 22 charter schools. Those schools enroll a combined 10,500 students. CSI is known as one of the premiere charter school authorizers in the state and seeks to meet the highest national standards for charter school authorization. More: http://www.csi.state.co.us/

Colorado charter school chief leaves for post in Washington, D.C.

Posted: 12/15/2011 11:05:18 AM MST
Updated: 12/15/2011 11:06:37 AM MST

By The Denver Post

Mark Hyatt, executive director of the Colorado Charter School Institute for the last two years, will leave to become chief operating officer of the Character Education Partnership in Washington, D.C.

Hyatt oversaw a 50 percent increase in enrollment among the Charter School Institute's 22 schools, which now have 10,500 students.

"He launched a strategic plan that will ensure the institute continues to enhance its reputation as a model authorizer and leader in school reform," said CSI board chairman Wayne Eckerling in a statement.

Ethan Hemming, who has been deputy executive director since April, will become interim executive director. He previously worked for 13 years in the Denver Public Schools, with part of that time spent overseeing 28 charter and six innovation schools.

In his new role, Hyatt joins a national, non-profit that provides curriculum resources to promote character education.



Tuesday, December 13, 2011

ANIMAS HIGH RECIEVES JOHN IRWIN SCHOOLS OF EXCELLENCE AWARD



Animas High School in Durango, CO. is pleased to announce the school’s selection as a 2011 John Irwin Schools of Excellence award winner. This prestigious award recognizes the highest-performing and most-improved public schools in the state as determined by CO. School Accountability Reports. The annual reports rate schools on academic performance and growth based on standardized test results. The Irwin School of Excellence award is granted to the top 8% of all elementary, middle and high schools in the state of Colorado.


Animas High School, a free public charter school of choice, is in year three of operation serving 181 students in grades 9 through 11. Animas will open enrollment for next year’s 9th grade, the Class of 2016, on Monday, January 2, 2012. For more information about Animas High School, please visit the school’s website at www.animashighschool.com or call 970-AHS-AHS4 to set up a tour, learn about upcoming enrollment events or receive more information about Animas High.

"Once again our students have demonstrated that they are capable of amazing outcomes. Whether it’s through project based learning, community exhibitions or their performance on annual state assessments, our school continues to raise the bar related to student achievement, growth and success."

-Michael Ackerman, Head of School, Animas High School

"Congratulations on AHS earning the prestigious Irwin Award. You’ve set a new standard of excellence for your wonderful school!"

-Mark Hyatt, Executive Director, Colorado Charter School Institute


AHS Weekly Update-Week of December 12th, 2011


POLs THIS WEEK
Winter Break
ANIMAS HIGH RECIEVES JOHN IRWIN SCHOOLS OF EXCELLENCE AWARD

Please take a moment to review the final updates of 2011:


POLs THIS WEEK


AHS Students will be participating in POLs (Presentations of Learning) this week on Wednesday and Thursday. Unique to AHS, POLs offer our students a chance to present their accomplishments and challenges to a panel of teachers, students, and community members. Students will offer evidence, share anecdotes and present their reflections on their work from semester one. Students are evaluated based upon our POL rubric, their Digital Portfolios, and their stand and deliver presentations speaking to their understandings and competence.


Students have been scheduled to participate in POLs either on Wednesday, Dec. 14th or Thursday, Dec. 15thhere at campus, and should deliver their presentations in formal, professional dress. Students must attend school the full day of their presentation. The day they are not presenting, they should not come to school. If a student does not pass their presentation, they must return Friday to redo it. Students who pass their POLs on either Wednesday or Thursday do not have to attend AHS on Friday. Students cannot be promoted to second semester without successfully completing a POL. Questions? Ask your student. If you/they are still unsure of things, please contact your student's advisor.

In addition, we are requiring students to give their POL to parents as homework the night before their actual presentation. This gives parents an opportunity to see their student’s POLs, and will help students be that much more prepared.

Winter Break


Animas High School will be closed for Winter Break beginning Friday, December 16th at 3:30 PM. Campus will re-open on January 2nd, 2012 at 7 AM. Have a safe and happy holiday vacation and we’ll see you in the new year!


ANIMAS HIGH RECIEVES JOHN IRWIN SCHOOLS OF EXCELLENCE AWARD


Animas High School in Durango, CO. is pleased to announce the school’s selection as a 2011 John Irwin Schools of Excellence award winner. This prestigious award recognizes the highest-performing and most-improved public schools in the state as determined by CO. School Accountability Reports. The annual reports rate schools on academic performance and growth based on standardized test results. The Irwin School of Excellence award is granted to the top 8% of all elementary, middle and high schools in the state of Colorado.

Animas High School, a free public charter school of choice, is in year three of operation serving 181 students in grades 9 through 11. Animas will open enrollment for next year’s 9th grade, the Class of 2016, on Monday, January 2, 2012. For more information about Animas High School, please visit the school’s website at www.animashighschool.com or call 970-AHS-AHS4 to set up a tour, learn about upcoming enrollment events or receive more information about Animas High.

"Once again our students have demonstrated that they are capable of amazing outcomes. Whether it’s through project based learning, community exhibitions or their performance on annual state assessments, our school continues to raise the bar related to student achievement, growth and success."

-Michael Ackerman, Head of School, Animas High School

"Congratulations on AHS earning the prestigious Irwin Award. You’ve set a new standard of excellence for your wonderful school!"

-Mark Hyatt, Executive Director, Colorado Charter School Institute




Animas High School Values:
  • Rigorous academics, where all students are prepared for college success
  • Culture of excellence, where students are held to high expectations
  • Strong faculty-student relationships, where students are well known
  • Engaging learning, where students see the relevance of their education

Profits and Questions at Online Charter Schools

Profits and Questions at Online Charter Schools

Lance Murphey for The New York Times

Denita Alhammadi, center, works with her children, Romeo, left, and Yasmine, on their coursework for Tennessee Virtual Academy. More Photos »

By almost every educational measure, the Agora Cyber Charter School is failing.

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Nearly 60 percent of its students are behind grade level in math. Nearly 50 percent trail in reading. A third do not graduate on time. And hundreds of children, from kindergartners to seniors, withdraw within months after they enroll.

By Wall Street standards, though, Agora is a remarkable success that has helped enrich K12 Inc., the publicly traded company that manages the school. And the entire enterprise is paid for by taxpayers.

Agora is one of the largest in a portfolio of similar public schools across the country run by K12. Eight other for-profit companies also run online public elementary and high schools, enrolling a large chunk of the more than 200,000 full-time cyberpupils in the United States.

The pupils work from their homes, in some cases hundreds of miles from their teachers. There is no cafeteria, no gym and no playground. Teachers communicate with students by phone or in simulated classrooms on the Web. But while the notion of an online school evokes cutting-edge methods, much of the work is completed the old-fashioned way, with a pencil and paper while seated at a desk.

Kids mean money. Agora is expecting income of $72 million this school year, accounting for more than 10 percent of the total anticipated revenues of K12, the biggest player in the online-school business. The second-largest, Connections Education, with revenues estimated at $190 million, was bought this year by the education and publishing giant Pearson for $400 million.

The business taps into a formidable coalition of private groups and officials promoting nontraditional forms of public education. The growth of for-profit online schools, one of the more overtly commercial segments of the school choice movement, is rooted in the theory that corporate efficiencies combined with the Internet can revolutionize public education, offering high quality at reduced cost.

The New York Times has spent several months examining this idea, focusing on K12 Inc. A look at the company’s operations, based on interviews and a review of school finances and performance records, raises serious questions about whether K12 schools — and full-time online schools in general — benefit children or taxpayers, particularly as state education budgets are being slashed.

Instead, a portrait emerges of a company that tries to squeeze profits from public school dollars by raising enrollment, increasing teacher workload and lowering standards.

Current and former staff members of K12 Inc. schools say problems begin with intense recruitment efforts that fail to filter out students who are not suited for the program, which requires strong parental commitment and self-motivated students. Online schools typically are characterized by high rates of withdrawal.

Teachers have had to take on more and more students, relaxing rigor and achievement along the way, according to interviews. While teachers do not have the burden of a full day of classes, they field questions from families, monitor students’ progress and review and grade schoolwork. Complaints about low pay and high class loads — with some high school teachers managing more than 250 students — have prompted a unionization battle at Agora, which has offices in Wayne, Pa.

A look at a forthcoming study by researchers at Western Michigan University and theNational Education Policy Center shows that only a third of K12’s schools achieved adequate yearly progress, the measurement mandated by federal No Child Left Behindlegislation.

Some teachers at K12 schools said they felt pressured to pass students who did little work. Teachers have also questioned why some students who did no class work were allowed to remain on school rosters, potentially allowing the company to continue receiving public money for them. State auditors found that the K12-run Colorado Virtual Academy counted about 120 students for state reimbursement whose enrollment could not be verified or who did not meet Colorado residency requirements. Some had never logged in.

“What we’re talking about here is the financialization of public education,” said Alex Molnar, a research professor at the University of Colorado Boulder School of Education who is affiliated with the education policy center. “These folks are fundamentally trying to do to public education what the banks did with home mortgages.”

The online companies can tailor their programs by reducing curriculum and teachers. During a presentation at the Virginia legislature this year, a representative of Connections explained that its services were available at three price points per student:

Option A: $7,500, a student-teacher ratio of 35-40 to 1, and an average teacher salary of $45,000.

Option B: $6,500, a student-teacher ratio of 50 to 1, with less experienced teachers paid $40,000.

Option C: $4,800 and a student-teacher ratio of 60 to 1, as well as a narrower curriculum.

Despite lower operating costs, the online companies collect nearly as much taxpayer money in some states as brick-and-mortar charter schools. In Pennsylvania, about 30,000 students are enrolled in online schools at an average cost of about $10,000 per student. The state auditor general, Jack Wagner, said that is double or more what it costs the companies to educate those children online.

“It’s extremely unfair for the taxpayer to be paying for additional expenses, such as advertising,” Mr. Wagner said. Much of the public money also goes toward lobbying state officials, an activity that Ronald J. Packard, chief executive of K12, has called a “core competency” of the company.

In all, for-profit educational management companies run 79 online schools around the country, according to the study by researchers at Western Michigan University.

Many educators believe there is a place for full-time virtual learning for children whose pace is extremely accelerated or those with behavioral or other issues, like teenage mothers who need to stay home with their babies. But for most children, particularly in the elementary grades, the school experience should not be replaced with online learning, they say.

“The early development of children requires lots of interaction with other children for purposes of socialization, developing collaboration and teamwork, and self-definition,” said Irving Hamer Jr., deputy superintendent of Memphis city schools.

In an interview at K12’s headquarters in Herndon, Va., Mr. Packard said, “We’re here to help children, and that is our overriding purpose and we want to do it as well and efficiently as possible.”

He acknowledged what he called a “degradation” in K12’s test scores, but he argued that they are an inaccurate measure because many students are already behind when they arrive. “The type of child now coming to an online school, 75 percent of those kids coming in are behind more than one grade level,” Mr. Packard said.

He said K12 continues to invest in its curriculum and has developed interventions, like a remedial math program, to help struggling students.

“Kids have been shackled to their brick-and-mortar school down the block for too long,” Mr. Packard has said repeatedly, adding that for the first time, every child, regardless of where he or she lives, has a choice.

Some educators are questioning its value. “It’s choice,” said Thomas L. Seidenberger, superintendent of the East Penn School District in Pennsylvania, which is outperforming Agora and other online schools its students attend. “What about a bad choice?’”

The Cost

The original pitchman for K12 was William J. Bennett, the former education secretary who helped found the company in 2000. At the time, Mr. Bennett said he viewed online schools as a haven for shy children, those worried about being exposed to drugs and even those with “terrible acne.”

The company planned to sell an education package directly to parents who wanted to home-school their children. But within months, K12 had decided to tap into public education dollars.

As the company’s product has become more popular, the cost has soared.

Mr. Bennett, who left the company in 2005, originally said a home-schooling package would cost about $1,000 per student per year. Parents who wanted teacher support would pay more.

Today, K12 receives an average of $5,500 to $6,000 per student from state and local governments. The schools also receive money for federal programs.

Because online schools do not collect every type of financing that goes to traditional public schools, Mr. Packard contends that his company’s schools, on a national average, cost taxpayers 40 percent less per student.

But online schools have negligible building costs and cheaper labor costs, partly because they pay teachers low wages, records and interviews show. Parents, called “learning coaches,” do much of the teaching, prompting critics to argue that states are essentially subsidizing home schooling.

“Any high school student taking economics could immediately recognize the fundamental flaws in their pricing structure,” said John E. Freund III, a Pennsylvania lawyer who represents a number of districts who are losing students to the online schools and the public financing that goes with them.

Because many states prohibit for-profit public education, the management companies for virtual schools run schools under contract with public districts or nonprofit charter schools, which also receive public money. But companies like K12 are almost fully in charge — devising curriculum, hiring teachers and principals and evaluating student performance.

Another way K12 maximizes its income is to establish schools in poor districts, which receive larger subsidies in some states. The company administers one of K12’s newest schools from Union County, Tenn., a mountainous Appalachian enclave where nearly a quarter of the residents live in poverty.

The Tennessee Virtual Academy is technically part of the local school district, which receives more per pupil from the state than most other districts in Tennessee. But of the school’s 1,800 pupils, few are actually from Union County.

Out of the state money, the Union County schools will get an administrative fee of about $400,000. K12 stands to collect almost $10 million to staff and manage the school. Dozens of other Tennessee counties, however, lost state financing when some of their students elected to go to the virtual school.

The online schools have enabled entrepreneurs like Michael R. Milken, whose company Knowledge Universe started K12 a decade ago and who remains an investor, to use education as a source of government-financed business, much as military contractors have capitalized on Pentagon spending.

Mr. Packard reports to investors every year with higher enrollment numbers and sales. On Nov. 15, he announced that the company’s online schools had enrolled more than 94,000 students. “I think online schools are becoming more mainstream,” said Mr. Packard, who was paid $5 million this year.

A sizable portion of the public money collected by K12 is rolled back into generating more business, a common practice by for-profit companies that nevertheless raises questions when the money is intended to educate schoolchildren. K12 spent $26.5 million on advertising in 2010, according to an analysis prepared for The New York Times by Kantar Media.

“Some of the cyber charter schools have fairly aggressive recruitment campaigns,” said Jim Buckheit, executive director of the Pennsylvania Association of School Administrators. “They have vans, billboards, TV and radio ads. They set up recruitment meetings in area hotels and invite parents to come.”

K12 has run thousands of the sessions, where part of the pitch is supplying computers and subsidized Internet connections for qualifying families. Dr. Seidenberger said he was surprised to see ads for online schools in the outfield at Coca-Cola Park, the stadium of the Lehigh Valley IronPigs minor league baseball team.

The Churn

Parents who become interested in K12’s schools can follow up by calling 866 numbers, which connect them to a call center in Herndon.

School employees who have visited the center have described a high-pressured sales environment aimed at one thing: enrollment.

Some workers, called “enrollment pals,” are paid bonuses based on the number of students they sign up, according to former employees knowledgeable of the operations. Mr. Packard’s annual bonus is also partly tied to enrollment.

Because the online schools are public, students cannot legally be denied enrollment. But former K12 employees said the aggressive and impersonal enrollment process lures students who are not a good fit.

“When you have the television and the Xbox and no parental figure at home, sometimes it’s hard to do your schoolwork,” said one Agora teacher, who asked not to be identified because of concerns over job safety.

The constant cycle of enrollment and withdrawal, called the churn rate, appears to be a problem at many schools. Records Agora filed with Pennsylvania reveal that 2,688 students withdrew during the 2009-10 school year. At the same time, K12 continued to sign up new students. Enrollment at the end of the year — 4,890 — was 170 students more than at the beginning, obscuring the high number of withdrawals.

Gary Miron, a professor of education at Western Michigan University who researches for-profit school management companies, called the turnover troubling. “The kids enroll. You get the money, the kids disappear,” he said.

A review of K12 management contracts reveals that the company may still benefit from students who end up leaving. Under its contracts with some charter schools, K12 charges “upfront” fees for books and other supplies.

According to an Agora price list for the 2009-10 school year, K12’s upfront billings for elementary and middle school students were $60 a course for online services, $75 a course for materials and $75 per student for computers. With students frequently enrolled in six courses, the fees could surpass $800.

Under some of K12’s contracts, only a portion of the fees would be returned if students withdrew quickly. Mr. Packard has said the company does not make money if students leave because of the cost of the materials and shipping.

The state audit of the Colorado Virtual Academy, which found that the state paid for students who were not attending the school, ordered the reimbursement of more than $800,000.

With retention a problem, some teachers said they were under pressure to pass students with marginal performance and attendance.

Students need simply to log in to be marked present for the day, according to Agorateachers and administrators.

For most students, attendance is recommended but not mandatory at what are called synchronous sessions — when they can interact online with the teacher. A new grading policy states that students who do not turn in work will be given a “50” rather than a zero. Several teachers said assignments were frequently open for unlimited retakes.

Agora records from last year show that failing students were told they could make up their work. “All students with a course average of 40 to 59 percent were called and told all assignments past due could be made up without penalty,” according to minutes from a school board meeting. Similar calls were going out to students with averages of 0 to 39 percent.

Theresa Henderson, an Agora teacher until June 2010 and the mother of four of its students, said she was among faculty members who requested a stronger policy to dismiss students who were not doing their work.

Several current and former staff members said that a lax policy had allowed students to remain on the rolls even when they failed to log in for days. Officials of the Elizabeth Forward School District in western Pennsylvania complained that Agora had billed the district for students who were not attending.

One of them was a girl who had missed 55 days but was still on the school’s roster, according to Margaret Boucher, assistant business manager at Elizabeth Forward.

The school has cracked down on disengaged students, according to a statement by its director, Sharon Williams, who said a policy adopted last December mandates attendance at online classes for those students who do not log in, repeatedly fail to complete lessons or are failing three courses. She said the school follows state law by removing students who are absent for 10 consecutive days.

Poor attendance and disengaged students have been such a problem that Agora dismissed 600 students last year for nonattendance, 149 of them just before state tests were administered, according to school board minutes.

The Students and Parents

With K12 estimating the market for its schools as high as $15 billion, the company’s manifest destiny is to expand across the United States. Its newest conquest is Tennessee, where the company got legislative approval last May and began holding information sessions in July.

By fall, 1,800 students had enrolled in the Tennessee Virtual Academy.

About 75 of them came from the struggling Memphis city school system, including the children of Denita Alhammadi.

In a neighborhood teetering on the edge of middle class, Ms. Alhammadi has converted her living room into a classroom. Two desks are for her children, Romeo, 13, and Yasmine, 8. Another is for Ms. Alhammadi, a former Army supply officer who is also studying online, through Kaplan University.

Within weeks of attending a K12 information session, Ms. Alhammadi had become parent and teacher, wrapped into one. She spends as much as six hours a day as the official “learning coach” for her children.

Like many parents who move their children to online schools, she had worried about violence. But no single reason leads families to make the switch. The students are a broadly diverse group, ranging from entertainers and athletes in training to children with cancer, seizure disorders, peanut allergies or behavioral problems. Some have been expelled from regular schools. In many cases their parents are simply dissatisfied.

Kathryn Ubiarco, whose son and daughter are also enrolled in Tennessee, said that her daughter’s school in Memphis had not been teaching her to read. “There’s no way to come up with the B that she got in reading last year,” Ms. Ubiarco said. “The child can’t read.” She believes the virtual school curriculum is more rigorous.

A lesson from a middle school world history class focuses on the history of the calendar and the recording of time. Intended to take one hour, the lesson opens online with an illustrated introduction. A video explains how time zones vary around the globe. After reading from a textbook, students define terms in a written journal. Then, the parent helps chart a timeline of the student’s own life.

The student can click on other online resources — flashcards, three timelines, two games and links to more than 20 other Web sites.

Students say the games are fun. They may encounter problems, though, when navigating the links. Of more than 20 links in the history lesson, five were not working on a recent day. Several linked to commercial sites including the History Channel and Yahoo Kids.

Students must score an 80 on an online assessment to move to the next lesson.

Some teachers have complained that it can be difficult to determine whether students are actually doing the work, or getting help from their parents or others. “Virtual schools offer much greater opportunity for students to obtain credit for work they did not do themselves,” said a report in October from the National Education Policy Center, which receives financing from the National Education Association.

Ms. Alhammadi, who runs her tiny school like boot camp, has hidden Romeo’s computer login so she has control. Otherwise, he would skip the lessons and move straight to the online test — a habit cited by critics of K12’s curriculum.

As two frisky cats run back and forth, Romeo raises his hand — a formality required by his mother — and asks to leave the room. He returns with headphones and plugs them into his computer. As he lip syncs Rihanna’s hit “Umbrella” it becomes clear that Romeo is not listening to any lesson. “I concentrate better with my music,” he says.

On his computer screen, a series of multiple choice questions ask him to select the correct answer to algebraic equations using negative numbers. Romeo scores a 67 percent.

When Romeo moves to science, he misses a question on the definition of matter.

“Romeo, Romeo,” his mother says. “If you had been studying appropriately, you would have found out that there are lots of properties of matter. And you got to take all those elements to build matter. Because elements are gas, solids, liquid.”

Romeo is scheduled for a virtual session with his assigned teacher and class at 1 p.m. But when he signs into the class, no one else is there. “Wow, the room is completely empty,” he says. He types, “Anyone here?” There is no response.

The Teachers

The monthly meeting of the Agora Cyber Charter School board of trustees is live on Blackboard, the same platform students and teachers use for class. During the November meeting, an elementary teacher, Jessica Long, placed a checkmark by her name, indicating she wanted to speak. Then she challenged school figures showing its student-to-teacher ratio is 49 to 1.

“I know on the elementary level we have anywhere from 70 to 100,” Ms. Long said. “I don’t know anyone who has 50 students.”

Some teachers said they were initially attracted to K12 by the flexibility of working from home, in some cases allowing them to take care of their own children while teaching.

Gwen Schwartz, an Indiana University graduate who teaches for the Tennessee Virtual Academy, works from her home in a remote area of eastern Tennessee while her children are next door with their grandparents. In addition to saving on child care, Ms. Schwartz can save on commuting costs and clothing.

But many teachers said the job had become less desirable as the company increased enrollment, particularly because pay at many K12 schools starts in the low 30s — low even for online schools. Some class sizes have become unwieldy, they said, requiring 60-hour weeks and compromising instruction.

At Agora, enrollment has reached 8,836, up from 6,323 in May, according to figures released by the school. As of late November, the total number of staff members — 408 — was lower than last year. Some high school teachers said they were managing as many as 270 students, even though they had been told they would have 150. Agora officials said last week that they hired 25 teachers in the past couple of weeks.

Some Agora teachers have been asked to take on extra students at the rate of $1 per student, per day, according to a newsletter from the Pennsylvania State Education Association.

In interviews, former teachers at Ohio Virtual Academy and Colorado Virtual Academy also complained of bigger class loads, with elementary teachers who once handled 40 to 50 pupils now supervising 75. A teacher with an elementary class that size and a 40-hour workweek could devote little more than 30 minutes a week to each student.

Mary Ravanelli, a former teacher at Ohio Virtual Academy, said she oversaw more than 70 students at a time, answering calls from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., updating parents on students’ progress and attending various school outings. “We’d actually meet our students several times a year,” she said.

With teacher salaries and benefits the biggest cost to K12, increasing student-to-teacher ratios is an easy way for the company to increase profits. Ms. Henderson, the former Agora teacher and mother of four students, said the ultimate losers are the children.

“What has happened now in honors literature courses, the teachers are not able to keep up with 300 students, so they’ll just cut curriculum. The kids are losing out,” she said. “This past week my son was exempted from ‘The Great Gatsby’ because of the workload of the teacher.”

Politics

“Choice” is a mantra of the charter school movement, which promotes competition as a way of compelling traditional public schools to improve. The for-profit companies that operate some charter and online schools take the idea a step further by arguing that private business models are more efficient than public school systems.

Together, the groups have formed a lobbying juggernaut in state capitals.

In Pennsylvania, where K12 Inc. collects about 10 percent of its revenues, the company has spent $681,000 on lobbying since 2007. The company also has friends in high places.Charles Zogby, the state’s budget secretary, had been senior vice president of education and policy for K12. In a statement, Mr. Zogby said he still owned a small number of K12 shares, but did not make decisions specifically affecting online schools.

An analysis by the National Institute on Money in State Politics concluded that K12 and its employees had also contributed nearly $500,000 to state political candidates across the country from 2004 to 2010.

One of the industry’s most persuasive promotional tools has been the young children who show up en masse at hearings to support online-school legislation. They are mobilized by groups tied to online schools. Records show that at least some receive industry funding.

When Karen Beyer, then a Pennsylvania state representative, sponsored a bill in 2007 to cut financing to online schools, about 700 people turned out for one hearing. Mr. Freund, the Pennsylvania education lawyer, said the room was “packed with kids.”

“They had on different colored T-shirts representing their cyber schools,” he added.

One of the organizers of such turnouts has been the Pennsylvania Families for Public Cyber Schools. Records show that the group, which gets money both from K12 and Connections Education, has spent about $250,000 on lobbying in the past five years.

Similar family organizations have cropped up across the country.

Former State Representative Stephen Dyer became suspicious when members of the benignly named organization My School, My Choice paraded through his northeastern Ohio district carrying signs attacking him: “Why Won’t Rep. Stephen Dyer let parents choose the best education for their kids?”

The protest was prompted by questions Mr. Dyer had raised over the state’s financing formula for charter and online schools. The group describes itself as a coalition of parents, teachers and employees of the schools. But Mr. Dyer said that his wife questioned the people carrying the signs and found out they were paid temp agency workers.

A telephone call to a toll-free number on the Web site for My School, My Choice was returned by Mark Weaver, a Columbus lawyer and political consultant with Republican ties dating back to the Reagan administration.

Mr. Weaver said the group’s crowning achievement was a 2009 rally against legislation in Ohio that would limit school choice. “We put 4,500 people on the statehouse lawn,” he said. But he declined to answer questions about the group’s leadership and financing.

Documents incorporating the organization provide clues. The forms name one of the group’s founders as Tim Dirrim, a Huntington National Bank employee who serves as board president of the Ohio Virtual Academy, which is managed by K-12 and receives more than $60 million a year from the state. Mr. Dirrim said he knew little about My School, My Choice and was not aware of the campaign against Mr. Dyer.

Much of the Ohio Virtual Academy’s money goes through an account at Huntington National, according to the Ohio auditor’s office. Mr. Dirrim said the banking arrangement was made before he joined the board and that he did not make decisions relating to the bank’s account with the school.

The Results

Mr. Packard has repeatedly delivered upbeat assessments to Wall Street about the progress of K12 Inc. students, even as many schools were performing poorly on state tests.

In a conference in March sponsored by the investment firm Morgan Stanley, Mr. Packard said that “our kids are doing as well or better than the average child in a brick-and-mortar school.”

During an investment analysts call in October, Mr. Packard boasted about results at Agora, calling them “significantly higher than a typical school on state administered tests for growth.” Weeks earlier, data had been released showing that 42 percent of Agora students tested on grade level or better in math, compared with 75 percent of students statewide. And 52 percent of Agora students had hit the mark in reading, compared with 72 percent statewide. The school was losing ground, not gaining it.

Mr. Packard said in a recent interview that he was not aware of the data at the time he made the comments. A spokesman said Mr. Packard was relying on older data.

A Stanford University group, the Center for Research on Education Outcomes, tracked students in eight virtual schools in Pennsylvania, including Agora, comparing them with similar students in regular schools. The study found that “in every subgroup, with significant effects, cyber charter performance is lower.”

Devora Davis, the center’s research manager, said the group’s analysis of Pennsylvania online schools showed that students were slipping. “If they were paired with a traditional public schools student, the public school student kept their place in line, and the cyberstudent moved back five spots,” she said.

An analysis by the Carroll County Public School District in Virginia shows that the 400 students in the virtual program there performed worse than the regular students in 19 of 26 categories on the state assessment test.

The Carroll County superintendent, James Greg Smith, said he was particularly concerned about scores in middle school math, history and social sciences. In seventh-grade math, for example, only 35 percent of the online students passed a state assessment; 68 percent of the traditional students did.

It will be a while before test results are available for students at the new virtual school in Tennessee. Back in Memphis, Ms. Alhammadi is worried that her daughter, Yasmine, is moving too quickly. A computerized analysis shows that, at the rate she is going, Yasmine will be finished with all but one of her classes by March.

Red flags go up if a student is “zapping through like a rocket, lesson by lesson,” according to Tom DiGiovanni, K12’s senior director of product planning. “The teachers are instructed to drop in (by phone) and do a little quiz to kind of test students” to make sure they understand the concepts.

Five miles from Ms. Alhammadi’s home, Ms. Ubiarco has also turned her living room into a classroom. Her daughter Sabrina, 10, is in the fifth grade and her son, K.C., 6, is in kindergarten at the Tennessee Virtual Academy.

Ms. Ubiarco is giving Sabrina a math lesson — about the distributive property — on a white board in the family’s living room.

While his mother focuses on his sister, K.C. is doing his own thing — lying on the carpet crashing cars into Spider-Man and Batman action figures.

For the most part, Mrs. Ubiarco said the switch to online had gone smoothly, although she was initially stumped when she first got the K12 curriculum.

“I called the teacher the other day to find out what a simple predicate is,” she said. “She said it’s the verb. I said why don’t they just say that?”