English, asked by udit21315, 2 months ago

debate against on digital school

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Answered by selfiestefie3
2

Answer:

While information regarding virtual charter schools is hard to come by, the small body of data that exists is unequivocal on at least one point: they deliver awful academic results. This is confirmed routinely by state data. Recent examples include Indiana, New Mexico, North Carolina, and Nevada. In each of these cases and many others, it seems clear that, while a few virtual charter schools are on par or even ahead of brick-and-mortar analogues, most do poorly.

Of the five virtual charters operating in Indiana last year, for example, four received a grade of ‘F.’  

When discussing this argument, many cite a 2015 study conducted by the Stanford University-affiliated Center for Research on Education Outcomes. The study came out with numerous compelling data points. As one participating researcher put it, attending a virtual charter “would equate to a student losing 72 days of learning in reading and 180 days of learning in math, based on a 180-day school year.”

The CREDO researchers used a somewhat controversial method to reach this conclusion. It involves identifying a virtual student and matching them to a demographically similar student at a brick-and-mortar school as a control, and then measuring the differences in their growth. As Matt Barnum writes for The 74, “Let’s say there are two students, Jamie and Mayra, who appear, on paper, to be similar: they have the same prior test scores, the same poverty level, the same gender, etc. But Jamie ends up attending an online charter because she gets sick and can’t come into a physical school everyday. While she’s at the virtual school, her achievement drops significantly relative to Mayra — not because of the quality of her school, but because she’s ill. The CREDO results would likely not be able to control for that and would pin the blame for low achievement on the online school.”

Indiana Senate Appropriations Chair Ryan Mishler provided Chalkbeat with a response: “If they’re not doing well, if they’re not graduating, how good is it for them?”

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Answered by goelkishita8
0

Answer:

Hi Udit, debate means to add your thought and raise your voice against the wrong so do it yourself

Explanation:

Hope this answer gives you a thought

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