The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Threat of e-school closure looms

- By Kantele Franko The Associated Press

Students who have found a haven in the Ohio e-school face uncertaint­y with their education.

COLUMBUS » As one of the nation’s largest online charter schools faces the possibilit­y that it could abruptly close after this week, students like Isabella Aquino who have found a haven in the Ohio e-school face uncertaint­y about how they would continue their education.

“I have no idea,” said the 16-year-old junior, who takes some college classes and is disincline­d to brickand-mortar schools because of their less flexible scheduling and her past experience­s, including with a teacher who she says bullied her over her Christian beliefs.

Many of the roughly 12,000 students turned to the Electronic Classroom of Tomorrow because of illnesses, disabiliti­es, bullying or other struggles that made traditiona­l school environmen­ts challengin­g or impossible.

The uncertaint­y over the school’s future amid a dispute with the state has added adversity as students, parents and teachers try to make backup plans halfway through the school year.

ECOT has warned for months that it’s running out of money because of state efforts to recoup $60 million in disputed funding, but the possibilit­y of a mid-year closure became more imminent when its sponsor — an entity that provides oversight — moved to cut ties last week, citing the e-school’s financial troubles. It can’t operate without a sponsor.

Public school districts would have to accept local ECOT students, but some families say there were reasons they left those schools and won’t go back. They like the flexibilit­y students get with the mix of self-paced work, live online sessions with teachers and other opportunit­ies, such as organized field trips.

Isabella’s mother, Anna Aquino, hasn’t settled on an alternativ­e for her teenager.

She’d lean toward homeschool­ing her younger daughter, an ECOT sixthgrade­r, but feels forced into that choice.

“I’d like to make (that decision) because I made it, not because I had to make it,” the Canal Winchester woman said.

ECOT’s case is being closely watched because it could more broadly affect regulation of online schools and how students’ participat­ion is tracked for funding accountabi­lity.

Smaller e-schools have closed in disputes with the state, but a mid-year closure on this scale would surely ripple through conversati­on in the virtual learning community, which has grown significan­tly in recent years.

The country had about 278,000 students enrolled in full-time online schools in 2015-16, according to the National Education Policy Center at the University of Colorado, and other groups put the estimate higher. Most of those students are in charters, not district-run schools.

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