That might not have been the right thing to do. This is a small number of kids to be sure but if they cannot be in a classroom for medical reasons, MCPS still has to give them an education. |
Virtual worked for my kid so why am I paying for in person? Keep waiting Karen. It’s 2024. Get with it. It’s here to stay. |
It sure doesn't look like it is going to stay. |
Of course. They can do it the same way they did I it for decades before the failed virtual academy experiment. |
That’s not how society works. A failed programs that work for 0.1% of county school kids isn’t getting it done |
Who said it failed? And yes, it's how it works. A proper society doesn't leave people behind. Guess you voted for TrUmP? Figures. |
No one is being left behind. These families were able to get a great education for their kids for decades in MCPS. You’re telling me it’s only been 2 years since these kids have received an education? Stop ignoring that the virtual academy is a new program that was put in place in response to COVID. The data says it failed. Miserably. I know I know, the data was skewed by MCPS so they could get rid of this program. And I know that after I put my tinfoil hat on that I’d realize that all the best test takers refused to take the test too. |
Right. Clearly all those kids skipping virtual school decided they really wanted to go in to take tests. ![]() |
That data is two years old and not representative of last year or this year, when the lower school program change. It has zero impact on your kids but it does to the kids who choose to be in the program. Clearly others think well of it. Why not hear from the students and families before judging a program you know about. |
Are you proud of yourself for being a troll and bully who cannot understand that every child has different needs and some benefit from learning virtually. You spend hours a day trolling multiple social media platforms instead of putting that time into your kids. Maybe if you had they would have been more successful. |
MCPS realized it’s harder to brainwash kids online so they want to push them back into school buildings |
LOL! |
I do think that there should be a public/free virtual education option in Maryland. If money were no object having MCPS pay for and run a virtual program for kids with a documented need for virtual makes sense. If we are in a money crunch it makes more sense to push Maryland to approve a virtual public like other states have done. It also likely makes more sense for now for MCPS to pay for individuals students who for documented reasons need a virtual option to enroll in a Maryland accredited virtual program just as MCPS pays for private school on a case by case basis for special needs students. Medically fragile students or students who live with medically fragile adults should have an option beside ISS or risking illness. Students who have severe social anxiety may also need this option, and I am sure there are more examples. But having some students need virtual does not mean MCPS has the money to run a virtual academy just as MCPS does not run schools to meet the needs of all special education students. MCPS must provide an appropriate education but financially that might mean paying for virtual seats at an accredited privately run virtual school. Looking briefly online k12, an online program some states use for virtual public, costs a bit less then 5,00.00 per year for k-5. And it looks like MCPS spends toughly 17,000 per student. So on rough math alone it would be cheaper to pay per student as needed for an already established virtual program then to run the program. (I am no expert but just thinking there must be a compromise somehow that deals with MCPS not being able to afford to run a virtual school while GIVING students who need virtual access to a virtual option.) |
Don't worry, they brainwash them online too. ![]() |
We don't have a state option so it's a moot point. Those of us who researched it before we got into the MVA were presented with really bad options, like Calvert with is homeschooling, and no live teaching or support. It's easy to do those programs in elementary school but not when you kids hit middle school or high school if you are not a teacher or skilled in the subjects. The only program I found equal that looked good was Stanford and we missed the deadline to apply. And, it's $30K a year. You do realize that there is a good number of special ed/needs kids and medically fragile. So, it would cost the county far more to put them in appropriate specialized placements and there aren't enough of those programs to go around. It's very frustrating when people pass judgment or make recommendations without fully understanding or knowing what's going on. The issue with the funding is the MVA is a program, not a school. The homeschool gets full funding for the students and the MVA gets a different pot of money. What would make sense is to get the program accredited as a school and change the funding from the homeschool and provide it directly to the MVA and give the homeschools money if the children participate in activities (not all homeschools will allow participate, some do, and are great and inclusive and many are not). MCPS wastes so much money on so many pet projects. There are so many better things to cut than the MVA. And, if you are going to cut it, at least provide accurate information and break down the numbers with all the lower-performing schools as I cannot imagine that the MVA has the lowest numbers in the county, and if they do, its probably because of the huge range of kids. The MVA has no true impact on anyone outside the MVA so I don't get the hate and why so many advocate to shut it down. Perhaps the other option is to shut down another school and use that to partially fund the MVA. |