Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, if enough parents enroll in Virtual Virginia, FCPS loses funding and teachers who refuse to do in person lose their jobs?
It looks like Virtual Virginia’s asynchronous model is pretty inexpensive. Maybe more parents should consider it.
It's only MS and HS, so they may need some type of virtual for ES.
Anonymous wrote:So, if enough parents enroll in Virtual Virginia, FCPS loses funding and teachers who refuse to do in person lose their jobs?
It looks like Virtual Virginia’s asynchronous model is pretty inexpensive. Maybe more parents should consider it.
Is it really that bad in FCPS? Kids can’t handle a curriculum with textbooks? What are they going to do in high school? College? If it is really this bad, FCPS is doing kids a real disservice.
First, VAVA operates off the curriculum of a private online school, K12, which is extremely rigorous. ... K12 for elementary schoolers involves an incredible about of parental involvement. When you enroll, they tell you that your child will need 5-6 hours per day of your support. Your child has a designated "learning coach" (usually a parent) who is the person to work through all the lessons with him/her. Since we have multiple children in the program, it often takes me much longer.
Anonymous wrote:Is it really that bad in FCPS? Kids can’t handle a curriculum with textbooks? What are they going to do in high school? College? If it is really this bad, FCPS is doing kids a real disservice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a current VAVA parent. I think it is a good idea in many ways, but I do not think this would work across the board.
First, VAVA operates off the curriculum of a private online school, K12, which is extremely rigorous. I think most kids who have been effectively out of school for 18 months would be drowning in it, and I think most parents who have the bandwidth to offer as much support as K12 requires have probably already unenrolled from their public school system.
K12 for elementary schoolers involves an incredible about of parental involvement. When you enroll, they tell you that your child will need 5-6 hours per day of your support. Your child has a designated "learning coach" (usually a parent) who is the person to work through all the lessons with him/her. Since we have multiple children in the program, it often takes me much longer.
The program can provide a great education, but it is not for the faint of heart and it is definitely NOT appropriate for a child who is already behind. Children have to apply for the program and they only get in if it is determined that they are a good fit.
THANK YOU for this detailed explanation. I don't think all these people who are touting VAVA as an option have any understanding at all of what it entails. They think it's like the current virtual school, only better, and it's a completely different way of doing things and its own curriculum. Greatly appreciate this information. VAVA is an alternative to/a type of homeschooling, not an alternative to regular public school.
+2 with thanks. While challenging, it sound like VAVA might be a good solution for parents who want more control over their kids' daily schedule, as opposed to being tethered to the public school schedule, which can be difficult when you are working from home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a current VAVA parent. I think it is a good idea in many ways, but I do not think this would work across the board.
First, VAVA operates off the curriculum of a private online school, K12, which is extremely rigorous. I think most kids who have been effectively out of school for 18 months would be drowning in it, and I think most parents who have the bandwidth to offer as much support as K12 requires have probably already unenrolled from their public school system.
K12 for elementary schoolers involves an incredible about of parental involvement. When you enroll, they tell you that your child will need 5-6 hours per day of your support. Your child has a designated "learning coach" (usually a parent) who is the person to work through all the lessons with him/her. Since we have multiple children in the program, it often takes me much longer.
The program can provide a great education, but it is not for the faint of heart and it is definitely NOT appropriate for a child who is already behind. Children have to apply for the program and they only get in if it is determined that they are a good fit.
THANK YOU for this detailed explanation. I don't think all these people who are touting VAVA as an option have any understanding at all of what it entails. They think it's like the current virtual school, only better, and it's a completely different way of doing things and its own curriculum. Greatly appreciate this information. VAVA is an alternative to/a type of homeschooling, not an alternative to regular public school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:12:23 again.
I forgot to mention, because VAVA is technically a public school, you still have to prep your kid on your own for the SOLs and go through all the benchmarking/compliance stuff that the host counties require.
PP, if you have to do that, what is the benefit of Virtual Virginia versus just homeschooling?
Anonymous wrote:I'm a current VAVA parent. I think it is a good idea in many ways, but I do not think this would work across the board.
First, VAVA operates off the curriculum of a private online school, K12, which is extremely rigorous. I think most kids who have been effectively out of school for 18 months would be drowning in it, and I think most parents who have the bandwidth to offer as much support as K12 requires have probably already unenrolled from their public school system.
K12 for elementary schoolers involves an incredible about of parental involvement. When you enroll, they tell you that your child will need 5-6 hours per day of your support. Your child has a designated "learning coach" (usually a parent) who is the person to work through all the lessons with him/her. Since we have multiple children in the program, it often takes me much longer.
The program can provide a great education, but it is not for the faint of heart and it is definitely NOT appropriate for a child who is already behind. Children have to apply for the program and they only get in if it is determined that they are a good fit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:12:23 again.
I forgot to mention, because VAVA is technically a public school, you still have to prep your kid on your own for the SOLs and go through all the benchmarking/compliance stuff that the host counties require.
PP, if you have to do that, what is the benefit of Virtual Virginia versus just homeschooling?
For me, I wanted to homeschool but I was completely lost as to how to begin doing that. I like that the program tells me exactly what I need to accomplish every day. I'm not into the whole loosey-goosey "you can learn fractions by baking" variety of homeschooling. If it is someone else's cup of tea, that's fine, but it's not mine.
VAVA provides a rigorous curriculum that otherwise costs about $5,000/child, if you were to purchase it directly through K12. I feel confident that the kids are learning the stuff they need to learn.
Thanks for your thoughtful response. Early in the pandemic, I read the K12 learning coach instructions/agreement and was impressed by how they totally map out what you need to be doing to support your child. With everything asynchronous, is there opportunity to build connections with online teachers or classmates?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:12:23 again.
I forgot to mention, because VAVA is technically a public school, you still have to prep your kid on your own for the SOLs and go through all the benchmarking/compliance stuff that the host counties require.
PP, if you have to do that, what is the benefit of Virtual Virginia versus just homeschooling?
For me, I wanted to homeschool but I was completely lost as to how to begin doing that. I like that the program tells me exactly what I need to accomplish every day. I'm not into the whole loosey-goosey "you can learn fractions by baking" variety of homeschooling. If it is someone else's cup of tea, that's fine, but it's not mine.
VAVA provides a rigorous curriculum that otherwise costs about $5,000/child, if you were to purchase it directly through K12. I feel confident that the kids are learning the stuff they need to learn.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:12:23 again.
I forgot to mention, because VAVA is technically a public school, you still have to prep your kid on your own for the SOLs and go through all the benchmarking/compliance stuff that the host counties require.
PP, if you have to do that, what is the benefit of Virtual Virginia versus just homeschooling?
Anonymous wrote:12:23 again.
I forgot to mention, because VAVA is technically a public school, you still have to prep your kid on your own for the SOLs and go through all the benchmarking/compliance stuff that the host counties require.