Betsy DeVos loves virtual charters, but they have dreadful records. Even her like-minded Choice zealots Are backing away from this money-making machines.
In South Carolina, the state agency in charge of charter schools refused to allow some Virtual charters to change authorizers, which would enable them to restart the time clock on failure.
“Following months of political tensions and a contentious public hearing, the South Carolina agency that oversees 39 of the state’s charter schools has signed off on the requests of five charters seeking permission to transfer to a new sponsor. Another four, though, including three online schools, are in “breach” status because of persistently poor performance and will not be allowed to leave.
“We don’t feel that’s taking care of our fiduciary duties,” Don McLaurin, chair of the statewide South Carolina Public Charter School Board, said of the underperforming schools’ request to leave. “That’s just not how you improve education.”
“The three virtual schools — the Cyber Academy of South Carolina, the S.C. Virtual Charter School, and Odyssey Online Learning — all contract with the for-profit, publicly traded K12 Inc. for services ranging from day-to-day operations and instruction to curriculum. The fourth, Midlands STEM Institute, is a technology-focused “bricks-and-mortar” public charter school located near the city of Columbia.
“Separately, the state’s Office of the Inspector General is examining data the schools submit to the board that raise questions about enrollment and attendance at the four schools whose transfer requests were denied. Early in the hearing at which the transfer requests were heard, board members were told the auditors have found nothing so far that should factor into their decision.
“Other states and charter school authorizers that have attempted to shutter poorly performing online schools with for-profit operators have found themselves waging wars of attrition, with the companies spending lavishly on lobbying and donating to sympathetic elected officials.
“South Carolina, where 10,000 of the state’s 26,000 charter school students attend virtual schools, is shaping up to be no exception. According to public disclosures analyzed by The 74 in a previous story, the for-profit schools and their representatives have spent nearly $1 million in the state since 2010. In 2015 the Center for Research on Education Outcomes at Stanford University, better known as CREDO, found that online schools have an “overwhelming negative impact” on student growth.”
K12 Inc. is great for profits, not very goood for students or taxpayers.

Communities should understand that all charters are businesses that will try to survive by any means necessary. Once a charter sets up in an area, it becomes part of a charter lobby that will bribe officials to keep the money flowing regardless of charter performance. Once the charter is established in an area, a community may find it difficult for them to make a change. Charters are a gigantic “pay to play” scheme that hijack so-called representatives in order to stay in business or expand into other communities, even if the communities don’t want or need them. This crooked system undermines local self governance. In Pennsylvania, the charter lobby owns so many members of the legislature that the governor had to cede to their demands in order to get a budget for the commonwealth. The charter lobby is similar to a gang or the Mafia. Once you are in; it is difficult to get out. And they call unions thugs!
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Yes, exactly, rt.
But this is also true of so many types of businesses, at the local, state, and national level. Sigh. ☹️
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Wow- Can they please tweet this to Gov. Brown and his buddy Michael Kirst, CA Board of Education who worked for K-12, Inc. and promotes their horrible Fuel Ed online learning.
How could Jerry Brown ever buy into this and hand out our public funds to this horror of a corporation.
I am meeting with the Peninsula Ed Foundation here to explain why this is so awful.
The Ed Foundation is in charge of our district’s summer school.
Our Palos Verdes Peninsula Unified started with Fuel Ed classes in 2016.
They touted ‘free online classes’.
The about 200 kids signed up.
This past summer the Peninsula Ed Foundation offered the same class but charged $620 for it.
Something’s wrong with this math.
First free, then costs $620?
Is this common core math?
Thanks South Carolina.
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I just saw the ’60 Minutes’ interview with Jerry Brown that was on TV last night. At 79 he seemed so sharp and vibrant. Under his leadership the state has moved to the 6th largest economy in the world surpassing France. He just made a climate change deal with China without US support. All I kept thinking was how can this intelligent guy fall for having such a reckless charter policy? I guess every leader has his Achilles Heel, and charters are his. They were certainly Obama’s.
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