Can you name any low rigor or gifted-only virtual schools?Anonymous wrote:While I have no experience with VAVA, I was the learning coach for two children through TXVA, and I also used the homeschool option in Utah (no virtual school, just us). If VAVA has synchronous classes, avoid it; if not, it should be great.
There is more input from the learning coach into how, when and how much to teach. However, if VAVA is anything like TXVA, you also have to track minutes per subject (with a daily and weekly minimum), and there were synchronous classes (akin to DL) that the students had to attend. Because it was a public school, they implemented the K12 curriculum in their own way for some subjects, while they chose to use other curriculum for some subjects.
My takeaway is this: Synchronous classes through a virtual school are better than DL, due to the teachers planning to teach that way instead of scrambling. For someone who feels capable of choosing, implementing and perhaps even designing their own curriculum, synchronous classes are only useful if you have too many balls in the air that year. Because you’re tied to the school’s video schedule, you lose all of the flexibility to do things on your own timetable. If the classes are asynchronous or they don’t have classes, it’s great.
Also, rigor varies. The basic K12 curriculum is very basic, and associated virtual schools range from low rigor to gifted only.
Anonymous wrote:We did VAVA/K12 for 6th and 7th grade, partly because of the pandemic but also because FCPS just wasn't working for us. The quality of the education is good. My kids (who had been in FCPS AAP) were very behind in English in terms of grammar, punctuation, and composition, and VAVA addressed all of this and taught them to write well. The math instruction also is excellent.
It is a bit of a slog. It's a lot of work, which is fine, but there really isn't as much flexibility as we needed. But the biggest things for us were the daily assessments and the temporary zeroes that showed up if work was not completed on time (even if for an excused reason, like missing school for an illness or a tournament); this caused a lot of stress, even though both kids knew the zeroes weren't permanent until a later date.
It also was isolating, even though one of mine is in a sport where online school is common.
We switched to a co-op for 8th grade last year, which was not as structured as we needed, and a hybrid school for high school.
Anonymous wrote:We are using VAVA-k12 for our 8th grade FFX county middle school student this year. We were also in VAVA-k12 in 5th and 6th grade. We tried FFX county schools for 7th grade but just too much focus on everything else apart from academics.
VAVA-k12 is great. You do get some books for math, history and English - plus materials for science etc. No stashes of papers and the online learning system makes it easy to stay organized. The number of mandatory online classes are about 5 or 6 hours on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday mornings (for 8th grade - will depend on academic level and classes chosen.) Typical school day would be 9am to 3 or 4pm (with the mandatory online classes on some days within that time.)
As a parent you can be as involved as you want. All the material is available for your review, and you can supplement as needed. You can use the VAVA electives (that are optional) or you can create your own and log those hours (within their guidelines.)
As a learning coach you are required to supervise and log hours every day. How much supervision that is required for a middle schooler varies by the child - but I would say 30-60 minutes a day. More time may be needed before big tests or when material gets difficult. Depends on the child though.
There is a requirement to be able to do state mandated testing a few times of the year. Also, if you leave Virginia for more than 5 days school days in a row you need to notify VAVA and get approval.
It is not true homeschooling. The required curriculum is set by the school (except for what you supplement.) I think their curriculum is great and my child is learning much better in VAVA-k12 than in a regular classroom.
VAVA k-12 is adhering to the updated VA school guidelines if that makes a difference to you.