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THE ONLINE COURSE EXPERIENCE: EVALUATION OF THE VIRTUAL HIGH SCHOOLS THIRD YEAR OF IMPLEMENTATION, 1999-2000
The Virtual High School (VHS) is a consortium of high schools that offer network-based courses taught by consortium teachers for students in participating schools. Each school contributes at least one teacher who teaches a VHS course online, typically in place of teaching a section of a regular course at the school. In the VHS model, the school also provides a site coordinator who handles administrative matters and supervises local students enrolled in VHS courses. The VHS teachers, with the help of experts, design netcourses to be offered over the Internet, using the LearningSpacesoftware. Each school in the consortium can enroll 20 students in these netcourses for each section of a teachers time (i.e., one netcourse) that it contributes to the pool. The quality of the course offerings is controlled, in part, by requiring each VHS teacher to successfully complete a graduate-level netcourse (called the Teachers Learning Conference) on the design and development of network-based courses. The netcourse for teachers is intended to provide participants with appropriate educational strategies and technology skills. The focus this year was on the comparison of the VHS and face-to-face experiences. The overall goal was to look in more detail at the apparent differences between online and regular courses. Specifically, the goals of the evaluation in 1999-2000 were to examine similarities and differences between VHS and face-to-face courses.
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