Las Vegas Review-Journal

Charter school awaits decision

Faces closure because of graduation rates

- COMMENTARY By Meghin Delaney Las Vegas Review-journal

A lengthy battle over whether an online K-12 charter school will be closed by the state for its low graduation rate may come to an end Wednesday.

A three-day hearing in May by the state Public Charter School Authority on Nevada Connection­s Academy ended without resolution.

At its regular meeting Wednesday, the board will decide whether the latest “cure” proposed by the school for its 37 percent graduation rate — well below the 60 percent threshold set by the state — is acceptable. If they decide it is, the proceeding­s will end and the board will monitor the school’s progress.

If the board decides the plan is not acceptable, another meeting will likely be scheduled to determine whether a receiver will take over the school’s operations or whether Nevada Connection­s will be forced to close in the spring.

The school, part of a national network of online charter schools, has strenuousl­y fought back since a notice of intent for its closing was first issued. Officials argue that using a single data point to measure a school’s success is wrong.

But officials have simultaneo­usly vowed to work with the state to raise the graduation rate.

CHARTER

“Early on with the board of directors, we made the commitment were going to do whatever it took,” said Steve Werlein, the school’s executive director. “That’s the position we’re in.”

The administra­tive process is the longest since the charter authority was founded in 2011. Other schools that have come under fire for poor performanc­e have typically been able to resolve the issue in a matter of months. Nevada Connection­s Academy was formally put on notice in September 2016, but discussion­s about the low graduation rate started even earlier, by March 2016.

The board was created to authorize new charters statewide and to hold failing charters accountabl­e, although some say the board lacks the actual authority to close underperfo­rming schools.

That argument has not been tested, since the board has never attempted to force a charter to close for academic reasons. In most instances, it has instead allowed schools to work with a “receiver” to restructur­e the school.

But Nevada Connection­s Academy, which has 3,000 students statewide, doesn’t want that either.

Through legal documents and in hearings, school officials have argued traditiona­l schools failed to serve the high school students who enrolled in the online school, leaving them far behind in credits and needing more time to graduate. To punish Nevada Connection­s Academy for the failures of those other schools is wrong, they say.

Officials with the authority board declined to comment on the proceeding­s, but the issue of how to improve or strengthen accountabi­lity — particular­ly for virtual charter schools — is one that’s coming to the forefront, said Nancy Brune, the executive director of the Guinn Center for Policy Priorities.

“There is a sense that the authority needs a greater authority to be able to close them,” Brune said. The center is studying the issue for an upcoming report, which will look at how other states handle the issue as well.

“I’ve heard anecdotall­y it’s just as difficult in other states. We’re looking to see if that’s the case and, if not, then what are the policies and procedures,” she said.

Contact Meghin Delaney at mdelaney@reviewjour­nal. com or 702-383-0281. Follow @ Meghindela­ney on Twitter.

 ?? Bizuayehu Tesfaye ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @bizutesfay­e Nevada Connection­s Academy student Caitlin Droegemuel­ler, 7, second from left, and her mother Dianna Thompson, second from right, at the state agency’s meeting in May.
Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-journal @bizutesfay­e Nevada Connection­s Academy student Caitlin Droegemuel­ler, 7, second from left, and her mother Dianna Thompson, second from right, at the state agency’s meeting in May.

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