States, Districts Move to Require Virtual Classes

Two years ago, Tennessee’s Putnam County school system adopted an online-learning graduation requirement for its high school students. But district officials realized that not all students had high-speed Internet access at home, or even computers, so they came up with a variety of options to allow students to fulfill the requirement.

The state of Tennessee already mandated that all students take a class on personal finance, so Putnam County put its version online, complete with the district’s own online teachers. Students can complete the course independently before they enter 9th grade; do it at school, in a computer lab with the support of an in-house coordinator, during their four high school years; or take the course in a computer lab that includes both an in-class teacher and an online instructor. Students can also fulfill the requirement with online Advanced Placement courses or online credit-recovery classes, says Kathleen Airhart, the director of the 11,000-student Putnam County schools, based in Cookeville, Tenn.

The goal is to make sure students get an online-learning experience in a low-risk, supportive environment, Airhart says. “The reality is, when a student leaves us, whether they’re going to a four-year college, a technical college, or going into the world of work, they’re going to have to do an online course,” she says. “This helps prepare the students.”

More districts and a handful of states are starting to agree with this notion. They’re requiring students to get some form of online learning on their résumés before leaving high school.

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Airhart Director of Year for Tennessee

A total of eight nominated school directors were reviewed by a panel of experts based on educational leadership,  community service and impact.  Airhart’s application included information on the county’s VITAL (Virtual Learning) initiative, energy savings and other actions that have been on the forefront of Tennessee educational improvement.

Airhart said that STEM initiatives, along with an expanded online learning program and strategic compensation are some of the things that Putnam County is doing that are possible state benchmarks.    Putnam County is the first school district in the state to have a virtual public school and Putnam’s plan for Strategic Compensation (a performance based pay initiative for teachers) has been identified as a possible state model.

Representing Tennessee at the American Association of School Superintendents National event, Airhart will compete for the honor of National Superintendent of the year in Houston, TX  in February.

Airhart has been Director for Putnam County Schools since 2007 and is highly active in shaping state level educational improvements.

“She has created a challenging vision” says Principal Jill Ramsey of Airhart, “and we’re blessed to have her in Putnam County.   She supports, leads and makes us feel like it’s all possible.   We’re all on the same page.  And we’re improving.”

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e4TN’s Annual Conference Casts Vision for Online Education

Nashville, TN (PRWEB) June 30, 2010 — The Effective Engaging E-learning Environment for Tennessee (e4TN), a grant funded e-learning initiative in Tennessee, held its 4th annual Envision 2010 Conference in Nashville, Tennessee last week.

The two-day conference welcomes educators from Tennessee school districts to come together to share new ideas and best practices in the State of Tennessee’s e-learning program. By partnering with the state’s online learning program and one another, school districts are able to create a sustainable e-learning model.

The theme of this year’s conference, “Everyone holds a piece of the puzzle”, focused on innovative ideas that can grow online learning programs. Envision 2010 offered educators a venue for professional development, program updates and mindshare. Demonstrations and guided classroom learning sessions focused on online teacher effectiveness, improving student completion rates, and common core standards. e4TN has also developed and is releasing Physics for the first time in Fall 2010 to meet the STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) requirements for science and mathematics.

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