Online learning in high demand Chapel Hill schools face 200 percent increase in students taking online classes

CHAPEL HILL
The physical classroom is not the only overcrowded part of Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools. High school students are rapidly enrolling in online courses provided by North Carolina Virtual Public School. There are 1,100 students enrolled in online courses in the district, and that number is growing.

“Since 2007, the school system has experienced a 200 percent increase in the number of students taking online courses,” said Stephanie Knott, the school system’s public information officer. Most students are taking the courses to accelerate their studies, but they are not opting to graduate early.

The virtual school offers advanced placement courses, which are considered to be at the college level. Middle school students can also enroll in the courses, though few do. Currently, the school district pays $355 per student for the virtual courses. Students are unrestricted when choosing which online courses they want to take. But with budget limitations and the online program’s growth, the district will have to find a new way to pay for the growing amount of students taking online courses.

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The Future is Here – Online Secondary Schools Take Root

The Department of Defense Education Activity offers a virtual high school for students who are geographically isolated. Online courses are also helpful for students who are moving from one location to another as it allows them to make up courses and transition into new school systems.

“It’s a wonderful opportunity to close gaps and enhance students’ educational experience in a 21st century environment,” says Marilee Fitzgerald, the Activity’s acting director. “I think it opens up possibilities for learning that we have yet to understand, yet to explore.”

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WNC schools hooked up with fiber

Linking up to the state network creates access to The North Carolina Virtual Public High School, which already offers 72 courses including Advanced Placement and world language classes.

The widespread reach of fiber across North Carolina to even the most rural schools holds the promise of creating a level playing field for students, according to Bob Byrd WNC EdNet project manager.

“That’s our big push now, to narrow that digital divide,” said Byrd.

Moreover, fiberoptic technology makes professional training more readily available for teachers. Once colleges are hooked up to the statewide K-12 network, student-teachers at Western Carolina University or other colleges may observe teachers in actual classrooms without interrupting lessons.

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Eighth grade ends with promising look ahead

Editor’s note: The StarNews is following Brunswick County eighth-graders Austen Chestnut, Shiesha Hankins and James Jackson IV as they make the transition from middle to high school.

Austen Chestnut’s eyes and mouth widened. He had expected someone other than himself to get this.

But at the awards ceremony that marked the end of eighth grade at Cedar Grove Middle School, it was his name the principal called out as this year’s outstanding student, for his involvement in the school and the community.

“This student has consistently demonstrated strong morals and good leadership among their peers,” Principal Rhonda Benton said before announcing Austen had won. “The student is always willing to help any student or faculty member in any way possible … and is a young person of exceptional character and has a very bright future as a member of our community.”

Austen’s name will be etched forever in a plaque at the school. It’s particularly special because this was the first eighth-grade class at Cedar Grove Middle, which opened this past school year.

Students came over from different middle schools and had to adjust and learn to get along with each other while navigating the choppy waters of hormones and peer pressure. Now, they’re getting ready for an even trickier transition as they enter high school.

Austen and longtime friends Shiesha Hankins and James Jackson IV seem well-equipped to handle it.

They’ve had a lot of support from family and teachers and a solid record in eighth grade. Austen is the year’s top student, James is the year’s top poet, and both Shiesha and James got accolades for perfect attendance.

They also have each other, as all three will attend West Brunswick High next school year.

But the maturity some students display in eighth grade may be undermined in ninth grade, said North Brunswick High Principal Bob Grimes, who also has also been a middle school principal. They’d gotten used to being the oldest students in middle school, but now have to grapple with being the youngest in high school, a whole new territory with more freedom but also more responsibilities.

“I think they regress when they come here,” Grimes said.

Besides having to figure out their own schedules and go to classes and lunch by themselves, they look at seniors – just three years older but a lot more mature and stronger – and feel anxious about fitting in and being liked, Grimes said.

“Juniors and seniors can be a good and bad influence,” said West Brunswick High Principal George Kelley.

Lack of confidence helps lead freshmen to behave badly, to do “attention-getting things,” Grimes said. By the second semester, however, they become more confident as they’ve found new friends and clubs to be part of.

To help students start getting used to their new world, both North Brunswick and West Brunswick high schools have rising freshmen come in for a visit right before school starts. They’re shown their lockers, classrooms, cafeteria and schedules, and they meet teachers and administrators.

“When the day is done, they have a pretty good idea of what they need to do and where they need to go when they get here,” Grimes said.

This introductory visit is one of the elements Grimes has kept of North Brunswick High’s former Freshman Academy, which gave ninth-graders special attention and largely separated them from the other grades. The school also still groups freshmen in their own building for their core classes.

But other Freshman Academy elements, such as having some teachers work only with freshmen and having those students on a separate schedule scheme, didn’t work out and were dropped. Grimes said there weren’t enough teachers for that, and scheduling had become a nightmare.

While the state encourages school districts to create freshman academies and a more supportive environment for their incoming freshmen, it’s the local districts that decide how to handle the transition into high school, said Vanessa Jeter, spokeswoman for N.C. Public Schools.

It’s also important to offer alternative programs so students “are able to narrow the scope of courses to something they’re interested in and begin to see options for the future,” said Cindy Bennett, the state schools’ director of curriculum and instruction. She cited as examples vocational courses and early college high schools, in which students can get a two-year college degree along with a high school diploma.

Ninth-grade is the year that usually precedes the ages when students are most likely to drop out – 16 or 17 – often because they couldn’t get enough credits to move on with their peers, Bennett said. To help students recover credits and take classes that may not be available to them in school, the state offers a multitude of online courses through the N.C. Virtual Public School, she said.

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