In a story we published Tuesday, state Rep. Scott Hochberg (D-Houston) told the Texas Independent he’s concerned about a lack of quality control in the state’s full-time online K-12 schools, and more generally in the Texas Virtual School Network, a statewide clearinghouse for online courses for K-12 students.
Started in early 2009 as a way to extend specialized courses to rural students, and to help special needs students and youths in juvenile detention earn high school credit, the virtual school network has seen a sharp enrollment increase over the last few years, though it dropped off sharply this fall.
Hochberg, who owns a software development company, said he hasn’t been impressed by the online courses he’s seen so far, and worried that sales pitches from for-profit course developers, not strategic plans developed by the state, are what’s driving the course network’s growth. Particularly troubling, he said, was that district officials must rely on sales pitches, rather than a look at the full online course, before deciding whether to offer it to their students.
But in an interview Tuesday afternoon, Kate Loughrey, the Texas Education Agency’s director of distance learning, said the state is constantly fine-tuning course offerings to meet districts’ needs. All the courses in the network are quality-controlled, she said, and TEA is developing new highlight reels of some courses to help districts see what they’re getting.
Today, Loughrey said, 17 school districts offer online high school courses in the state’s virtual network. Seven colleges also participate in the network, offering dual high school and college credit. About half the high school courses offered in the network are developed in-house by school districts in Texas, Loughrey said, while the other half are purchased from third-party software developers, like K12 Inc.
For the rest of the article, go to Texas official defends online course network’s quality, oversight and transparency.

