Bigfork offers high school diploma online

There are no boundaries in the virtual world of learning and Bigfork High School is taking advantage of that through Bigfork Digital High School.

The school first offered online classes four years ago through Virtual High School, an international online consortium of instructors teaching specialized courses such as American Popular Music and Nuclear Physics.

Virtual High School expanded electives that would not be feasible to offer at the school. Participation has been popular: Students have taken 140 classes.

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Virtual education boom hits the states

Using the Internet allows poorer or more rural districts to have access to more specialized teachers without having to pay big incentives. And in some cases, it makes it possible for teachers to reach more students either in larger classrooms or at home, minimizing costs to school districts. An audit of Wisconsin’s virtual charter schools last year found the per-pupil costs of some of the schools were lower than those of traditional public schools, although they were higher in others because of high start-up costs.

Last year, Vermont and Montana launched their first state-run virtual schools, while Michigan and Massachusetts created full-time online programs. This year, Nebraska Gov. Dave Heineman told lawmakers he wants to use $8.5 million in lottery funds to create an online high school to bring new courses to the state’s students. “In rural Nebraska, it can be difficult to hire foreign language, math and science teachers,” he said in a January speech. “A virtual high school would allow rural schools and rural communities to survive.”

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Great Falls Schools Embracing Online Learning

For the first year, students at C.M.R High School have two options when it comes to online learning.

Classes from Montana Government to Spanish are now being offered through the school district and through the Montana Digital Academy.

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Troy on receiving end of distance learning grant

The grant also includes development and training for staff on use of the equipment as well as integration of technology into current curriculum. The program is supported and maintained for three years to ensure sustainability throughout the length of the grant.

Troy students have utilized online resources already through the Montana Digital Academy and Flathead Valley Community College-Lincoln County Campus.

“Our high school principal indicated to the board last night that we have 17 students taking online courses for credit with a variety of things from French to digital photography to pharmacy tech,” Selle said. “The great thing is students can get a head start on their college education and get some required courses taken care of early on.”

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School Choice Offers Opportunity for the Teaching Profession

As technology changes and evolves, the world of education and teaching will undoubtedly change. Teachers across the country must stay ahead of the curve.

Although some teachers and the unions see school choice as foreboding for the public school outlook, school choice encompasses empowerment for the parent to choose an environment that employs teachers in all arenas. A new era has been ushered in for education. Once limited to rigid traditional school terms and schedules, teachers are employed in traditional public schools, charters, private schools, religious schools, and online schools just to name a few. Educators will in turn have choices themselves when deciding when, where and how to teach kids.

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Best Online High Schools gets new design

Best Online High Schools has now been updated with a new design and new features. This new version will continue to provide you with the best information available on the Internet about online high schools.

Come take a look!

Online classes work for well-organized students, but others struggle

Elizabeth Swoboda competes in alpine skiing with the Bridger Ski Foundation, so to free up her afternoons for training, she’s taking five morning classes at Bozeman High School and two online classes from the state’s new Montana Digital Academy.

“I like it because it’s really convenient. It’s easy if you’re on top of it,” said Swoboda, a 14-year-old freshman, who is taking German and digital photography online.

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Gazette opinion: Montana Digital Academy connects students to future of learning

In its first semester, the Montana Digital Academy has demonstrated the value of statewide access to high-quality online learning for high school students.

Across Montana, 1,430 students from 137 high schools have enrolled in one or more of 45 high school classes or five college courses, according to a report from the academy. Altogether, the 1,430 students have 1,951 course enrollments this fall.

A list of the 11 most popular classes shows the need for access to distance learning:

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Growth of online instruction continues, though unevenly

State-led online education programs now exist in 39 states, the report says, with Vermont and Montana having opened new programs that allow students to take at least some of their classes online in the last year. Alaska, too, has just begun the process of opening a statewide network for online instruction.

These state-led online programs had a combined 450,000 course enrollments during the 2009-10 school year, an increase of nearly 40 percent over the previous year. Yet just two states—Florida and North Carolina—combined to account for 96 percent of this growth, according to the report.

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Montana Digital Academy’s enrollment is “higher than anticipated”

The Montana Digital Academy has begun its first school year and so far, over 1,500 students statewide are taking advantage of it.

The Digital Academy is an online school in which K through 12 students can take online classes. The classes are meant to provide learning opportunities to students who may not have access in their hometowns.

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