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A Student Defends ECOT During The School's Battle With the State

photo of Gabriel Young commercial
YOUTUBE

  

The state and its largest online charter school are locked in a dispute over how to prove it’s providing an education to its more than 15,000 students. That fight is not just playing out in court but through TV, radio and web ads. 

ECOT has been trying to make its case in the court of public opinion by hitting the airwaves with commercials that feature struggling students such as Gabriel Young.

“I’ve been in and out of foster care. I was adopted for seven years and then put back.”

ECOT has spent about $395,000 in taxpayer money to put these ads on the air.

Young describes the support he’s received through the online charter school and accuses the Ohio Department of Education of trying to shut ECOT down.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e3yH2dViLyU

“Why would they do that; where would I go?” he asks in the commercial.

The  state education department is trying to conduct an audit to find out how much instruction each ECOT student received the past school year. The law requires 920 hours, which averages out to five hours a day.

If the audit determines it provided less than that, the state could pull back some of the more than $100 million that went to ECOT last year. But ECOT accuses the state of using standards that are too high and beyond what the law requires.

Keeping count of nontraditional students
Young is 18-years-old and has been emancipated from the state of Ohio. He lives in his own place and works a full-time job. Young says ECOT’s systems works perfectly for him.

“I can maneuver, I can go to work, I can worry about my bills and I can still get the proper education that I need and that’s what ECOT provides,” he said.

Part of the fight between the state education department and ECOT is over student log-in information. The state says that data can help paint a picture of how much learning is going on. But Young says being a student of ECOT isn’t limited to being online.

“You have to type up an assignment, the computer doesn’t record that. You have to study, you have to read an assignment that the teacher gave you, you have art projects that you have to do and you have to turn them in. We do just as much work as normal kids do,” Young said.

Lawmakers who support the education department, such as Republican Sen. Peggy Lehner of Kettering, say the ODE is simply being thorough in making sure ECOT isn’t wasting taxpayer dollars.

In the past, ECOT relied on a teacher certification sheet to record the hours a student learned, but the state wanted the log-in information to go with that certification.

The lawsuit is scheduled for trial next year.

Andy Chow is a general assignment state government reporter who focuses on environmental, energy, agriculture, and education-related issues. He started his journalism career as an associate producer with ABC 6/FOX 28 in Columbus before becoming a producer with WBNS 10TV.