Schools vary in AP exams

NORTHERN HILLS — The South Dakota Department of Education recently announced that South Dakota students are making significant gains on Advanced Placement (AP) exams taken in high school for college course credit, with 2,841 South Dakota students taking at least one AP exam during the 2010-2011 school year, an increase of more than 27 percent in five years’ time.

“Locally, we’ve shifted from a focus on AP to a focus on the Rising Scholar program,” said Lead-Deadwood secondary principal Nick Gottlob. “With 10 enrolled in AP classes and 31 enrolled in the Rising Scholar program, I have 41 kids pursuing classes above the twelfth grade level. Out of a high school enrollment of 260, I’m very happy about that.”

Gottlob said the larger discussion in his district is whether or not to continue offering AP-level classes onsite with onsite instructors, while the same and greatly varied coursework is available online through the South Dakota Virtual School at no cost to the district or to the student, with the student earning a $100 bonus for completing online coursework.

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South Dakota Virtual School

The South Dakota Virtual School is an online clearinghouse of tuition-free distance courses offered by approved providers. All course offerings and providers are approved by the South Dakota Department of Education. The goal of the Virtual School is to provide choice, flexibility and quality for all students across the state. South Dakota Virtual is not a diploma granting institution.

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Daugaard appoints Secretary of Education

Schopp has been in education for more than 30 years as a teacher and administrator. She’s been at the Department of Education for 11 years, where she’s been involved with creating the South Dakota Virtual School and developing teaching standards for the state.

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Strive High loses favor as online options grow

Colman-Egan was paying $3,600 for one slot at Strive but rarely used it. Instead, that district will look to the South Dakota Virtual School, a clearinghouse of distance learning providers available through the South Dakota Department of Education. Superintendent Darold Rounds said, “It just didn’t make a lot of sense” to keep paying tuition when Virtual School classes cost only about $250.

Interim Education Secretary Melody Schopp said the state added credit-recovery classes to the Virtual School two years ago, when the state changed its compulsory attendance age from 16 to 18. The ability for students who fall behind to catch up was a huge concern, she said. Virtual School students are assessed at the start of each class so they don’t repeat content they already know.

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Officials: Technology can boost rural schools

One initiative, known as the E-Rate, is a national discount for Internet access for libraries and schools. In addition to a national broadband plan that includes $7.2 billion for rural areas, the federal government is discussing the expansion of the E-Rate, a development that Oster said is “wonderful news” because without it, much of the technology in public schools would not be possible.

That technology includes the South Dakota Virtual School, which allows the 120,000 K-12 students in the state to take online classes to which they would otherwise lack access.

“We believe that the virtual school then provides equal educational opportunities for students across our state irregardless of where they live or what their ZIP code is,” Oster said, noting that some state school districts encompass more area than the state of Rhode Island.

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