NH friendlier, but still ‘severely constrains charter school growth’

New Hampshire has 10 charter schools, including the Academy for Science and Design in Merrimack. The school features an advanced curriculum focused on math, science and engineering for students in grades 7-12. The school is adding sixth grade next year and is expanding enrollment by 50 percent.

Also available to local students is the Exeter-based Virtual Learning Academy Charter School, which offers tuition-free online high school courses to New Hampshire students. Students can enroll on a part-time basis, taking courses beyond their own high school work, or full-time.

As of the 2009-10 school year, there were 816 students enrolled in charter schools in the state. State officials have been encouraging school districts, especially those in urban areas such as Nashua, to consider applying for part of the federal funding to create a charter school. Charter schools can be approved by the state Board of Education or through local authorization.

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Nashua school board stands pat, considers priorities

“Trying to give students opportunities that are outside the normal get-in-the-classroom, have-a-teacher-in-front-of-you kind of experience,” Hallowell said.

He said one possibility may be taking advantage of the online courses offered by the Virtual Learning Academy, a public online charter school. The academy is available tuition-free to all New Hampshire students.

The academy has an enrollment of about 3,000 students, almost all of whom are high school students from across the state taking courses in addition to being enrolled at their local school.

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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.

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NH governor holding summit on school dropouts

Students will speak their minds on more than one panel Monday. Panelist also will discuss how to engage youth, meeting the educational needs of students in jail or the youth detention center, homeless youth, alternatives such as adult education, community resources and virtual learning. Speakers won’t forget the role of teachers by reminding them how they matter. They also will discuss the early warning signs of when youth are losing interest in education.

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Grad rate earns NH praise in new report

Deputy State Education Commissioner Paul K. Leather said New Hampshire has enacted numerous measures in the last several years to improve its dropout rate, including creating personalized learning plans for students, increasing funding for special needs students and incorporating virtual learning outside school hours to help students recover lost class credits.

“It’s been a multi-faceted effort to turn this around in the last five years or so,” he said.

Leather said the state has also focused increased resources to providing more students with internships and cooperative education outside the school.

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Exeter area Around the Schools

SST students compete in national convention

EXETER — Eight members of the Seacoast School of Technology FFA chapter recently traveled to Indianapolis and represented New Hampshire in a variety of competitions and activities at the 83rd National FFA Convention.

Team members included Andrea Batchelder, Exeter, Jessica Bick, Exeter, Elizabeth Murphy, Exeter, Sarah Walstad, Exeter, Alyana Perkins, Winnacunnet, Brianna Brand, Winnacunnet, Chelsea Ahearn, Winnacunnet, Tyler Smith, Raymond and Karen Sarosiek, Virtual Learning Academy. Animal & Plant Science teacher and FFA Advisor Anne DeMarco coached the team.

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Impressive flexibility from Concord High

Some teachers were willing to conduct their courses by e-mail. For a couple of courses, we took advantage of the state’s online charter school, the Virtual Learning Academy. Overall, it was a wonderful example of educators, parents and a student coming together with the common goal of providing an excellent educational experience, regardless of where that learning takes place.

My hat is off to the people of Concord High for their flexibility and the respect they demonstrated both for their profession and my daughter.

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New classes to greet students

Students at Monadnock Regional High School in Swanzey Center will have access to a new class that will prepare them for a two-year, post-secondary program in health sciences, according to interim Principal Thomas Stewart.

The class is called “Human Body,” and is designed for students interested in fire science or emergency medical technician work, Stewart said.

Monadnock students will also have access to an array of classes taught around the world through the Virtual High School program. A teacher at the school is now certified as an instructor in the program, which provides online classes in subjects such as physics, political science and Mandarin.

Having a certified instructor gives the school more seats to offer students.

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Greenfield school officials work to open virtual school in fall; await state OK

GREENFIELD – Even though there has been no final decision on Greenfield opening a virtual school this fall, school officials are still optimistic that they will get the OK from the state, so they have been hard at work to ensure that the school will be able to open.

On July 21, the state Board of Elementary and Secondary Education passed the commissioner’s proposed virtual school regulations that many felt would make it impossible to start the Greenfield school in September.

But, the board also voted to allow the commissioner to rule on the waiver request submitted by Greenfield, asking that some of the provisions in the new rules be waived so it could open its school this fall.

School Committee Chairman John Lunt said on Monday that he is optimistic that they will get the green light to open the virtual school and expects a decision soon.

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Virtual diploma

CHESTERFIELD, N.H. — Chole McKeon, 17, of Chesterfield, has always had trouble with school work. Words and numbers would end up in the wrong place. She would write one word but mean to write another.

McKeon suffers from Attention Deficit Disorder as well as other spatial and learning disabilities, which made school extremely difficult, she said.

“It was very stressful,” McKeon said. “I would dread being in school the whole day and at the end. I would feel like I failed.”

This continued until her junior year of high school where she and her parents decided to take a new approach, online classes through the Virtual Learning Academy Charter School, New Hampshire’s first statewide online high school.

In June, McKeon and 11 other students were the first-ever graduating class of the program.

High school students who reside in New Hampshire are eligible to apply and once accepted may enroll for part-time or full-time studies, tuition free.

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