David Lapp, director of policy research for Research for Action in Philadelphia, recently wrote about the money wasted on Cybercharters in Pennsylvania. Apparently, the industry has a strong hold on the Pennsylvania legislature. There is no other reason that it continues to thrive.
During the worst of the pandemic, schools closed for reasons of safety and caution. Cybercharters boomed to fill the gap. But with physical schools open, the truth must be told about Cybercharters: they are a poor substitute for real schools.
Lapp writes:
When the COVID-19 pandemic forced schools into remote learning instruction many Pennsylvania policymakers expressed deep concerns. Many lamented the impact on mental health when students stopped receiving in-person learning and the important social skills that develops. Many were upset by the evidence of significant learning loss that accompanied the switch to virtual instruction.
The Pennsylvania General Assembly even enacted a new law allowing students to voluntarily repeat a grade to make up for lost educational opportunities.
This year policymakers should consider bringing that same energy to a similarly harmful and even more wasteful form of remote learning. One that’s been growing for more than two decades and reached a boiling point during the pandemic. I’m talking about the soaring enrollment growth and accompanying financial cost of Pennsylvania’s cyber-charter school expansion.
There’s solid research both nationally and in Pennsylvania that cyber-charter schools have an “overwhelmingly negative” impact on student learning. The learning loss students experience from virtual instruction in cyber-charter schools appears similar to the learning loss students experienced from virtual instruction during the pandemic.
For each year a student is enrolled in cyber-charter school they are also more likely to experience chronic absenteeism and less like to enroll in post-secondary education.
There’s also clear evidence that spending on cyber-charter school expansion comes at the expense of students receiving in-person learning in school districts and brick & mortar charter schools, where more effective instruction is provided. In fact school districts—which pay for cyber-charter tuition from their own school budgets—have indicated that charter tuition is now their top budget pressure.
It’s easy to understand why. Pennsylvania already had the highest cyber-charter school enrollment in the country and then enrollment grew by 22,618 additional students during the pandemic. Districts are now spending over $1 billion dollars a year on cyber-charter tuition, reflecting an increase of $335 million from before the pandemic. These surging expenses impacted the vast majority of school districts in the state.
Cyber-charter tuition likely represents the most inefficient spending in Pennsylvania school finance. For one, the cyber-charter system is redundant. Both before and since the pandemic, most school districts continue to offer their own virtual schools. Secondly, the tuition rates mandated under current PA law require districts to pay cyber-charters more than it actually costs to operate virtual schools. And finally, when students leave for cyber-charter schools, districts must of course still operate their own brick & mortar schools for remaining students, only now with fewer resources….
In Research for Action’s recent report, The Negative Fiscal Impact of Cyber Charter Enrollment Due to COVID-19, we estimated that the tuition increase in just one year of the pandemic, from the 2019-20 and 2020-21 school years, led to between $290 to $308 million of additional stranded costs borne by school districts. Nearly the entire amount of increases in school district total expenditures statewide in 2020-21 were accounted for by increases in school district tuition payments to charter schools, most of which were for cyber-charters specifically.
Meanwhile, this tuition spike has left cyber-charters in Pennsylvania flush with surplus resources. More than half of the additional funding cyber-charters received from districts in 2020-21 was not even used for student expenses. Rather, cyber- charters funneled over $170 million into their general fund balances that, unlike school districts, have no statutory limits.
Taxpayers in Pennsylvania have been fleeced ever since the corrupt Corbett administration wrote lots of pork for cyber charter schools into law. Gov. Wolf tried to change the reimbursement formula, but he was unable to overcome
the number of legislators that are on the charter lobby payroll. The conclusive research is that cyber charters have been a failure, but the steep payments continue on. This corrupt process is contributing to the ‘dumbing down’ of the Commonwealth. Lots of non-college bound students would benefit far more from receiving technical training in a field that would prepare them to have a productive career instead of continuing the madness of paying for the failure of cyber charter schools.
Meanwhile Pennsylvania does know how to invest & build a spectacular Public School.
The New Pittsburg Area Ehrman Crest Elementary/Middle School.
Pandemic Relief Money Can Be Used To Fuel Innovation.
Transparent walls to the outdoors.
Cafeteria designed as an open area to eat, study, socialize & collaborate.
Library also serving as a Maker-Tech-Coding Center.
Enhanced line of sight security design.
Climate and Crisis Shelters.
https://www.cranberryeagle.com/2022/07/26/ehrman-crest-elementary-middle-school-to-open-next-month/
https://www.axios.com/2022/08/15/k-12-school-design-pandemic-architecture-learning
Of all the schemes to make widgets out of our children, cybercharters infuriate me the most. The fraud and waste is so obvious. Just the profits and salaries are enough to tell you this is a scam. I like to occasionally watch old tv shows on the types of channels that no one watches and have cheap ads. The K-12 ads they run for these are crimes.
the profits and salaries of a notably TOP HEAVY management system: across the nation states worry about finding teachers while the number of coaches, facilitators, consultants, developers, supervisors, managers and administrators, etc., GROWS in size
ALL K-12 cybercharters are very, extremely, outrageoulsy academically inferior, but that’s not the reasons for their existence.
They went into business to make lots of money and get rich. They never went into education to provide a quality education for some of OUR children.
Moving education from the public sphere into the private sector offers ALEC’s libertarian fascists the opportunity to program children to grow up and be drones that never question anything and accept the lie that they must be happy in their work no matter how much they are paid, how they are treated, and how much debt they end up with as they struggle to stay alive with shelter and food. Forget about medical. In ALEC’s world, medical care is for the rich and the rest of us are expendable as long as we are their poverty paid wage slaves. Profit and power are the gods in ALEC’s world.
Schools often let these folks in the back door by having students use them for credit recovery, which is good for the kid and boosts the school graduation rates.
I get free, over-the-air TV from Scranton, PA stations. (But it comes with a hidden price: the static in my brain caused by the many cyber charter ads plus being subjected to that wackadoodle, Dr. Oz.)
There was one on this past week and I was, like, I should try to send it to Diane somehow.
How do you sell cyber school to people who endured months of boring Zoom crapola? It’s a stretch, that’s for sure.