Stride, Inc. Explained

Stride, Inc.
Type:Publicly held
Traded As:
Russell 2000 Component
S&P 600 component
Foundation:2000[1]
Founder:Ronald J. Packard
Key People:Nathaniel BGreene Chairman
James J. Rhyu CEO
Location:Herndon, Virginia, U.S.
Area Served:International
Industry:Education
Products:Education software, textbooks, workbooks
Operating Income:$56.1 million (FY 2020)[2]
Revenue: $1.041 billion (FY 2020)
Equity:$675.33 million (FY 2020)
Num Employees:4,750 (FY 2020)

Stride, Inc. (formerly K12 Inc.) is a for-profit education company that provides online and blended education programs. Stride, Inc. is an education management organization (EMO) that provides online education designed as an alternative to traditional "brick and mortar" education for public school students from kindergarten to 12th grade (hence its former name), as well as career learning programs. As of 2012, publicly traded Stride, Inc. was the largest EMO in terms of enrollment.[3]

History

Finance

The company was founded by former banker Ronald J. Packard.[1] Initial investors in the company included Michael R. Milken and Lowell Milken of education company Knowledge Universe, who along with the Milken Family Foundation, invested $10 million.[1] Andrew Tisch of the Loews Corporation and Larry Ellison of Oracle Corporation also contributed venture capital.[1] It became a publicly traded company on December 13, 2007.[4]

Leadership

William Bennett, Secretary of Education under Ronald Reagan was hired as the company's first chairman of the board, serving until 2005.[5] In 2005, the Philadelphia Board of Education called for the termination of a $3M science curriculum contract with K12 after Bennett said,

"if you wanted to reduce crime...you could abort every black baby in the country and your crime rate would go down. That would be an impossible, ridiculous, and morally reprehensible thing to do, but your crime rate would go down."[6]
Bennett subsequently resigned from the K12 board and his part-time position with K12. The contract was not revoked, but was not renewed at the end of the contract term.[7] [8] Founder Packard resigned in 2014 to start Pansophic Learning.

On February 13, 2018, Stuart Udell resigned from his role as CEO. Nate Davis, the previous CEO, replaced Udell as the current CEO.[9]

On January 27, 2021, Stride Inc. (formerly K12 Inc.) announced Nate Davis would be retiring and James J. Rhyu will be taking over his role as CEO. Davis will remain as executive chairman of the board.[10]

Offerings

Education management

Stride, Inc. is a for-profit education management organization (EMO). In this sector, Stride does not operate physical schools, but provides online curriculum to homeschooled children and other schools. Stride was the largest EMO in the US in 2011–2012.[11] Stride's for-profit rival EdisonLearning has also moved away from physical schoolhouses to virtual offerings.

Stride offers its online curriculum at three levels:

In 2015, 526 virtual schools in the United States enrolled 278,511 students.[13]

Charter management

Stride competes with non-profit educational organizations known as charter management organizations (CMOs) that typically run brick-and-mortar schools. Other large non-profits are Imagine Schools (55 schools), KIPP (209 schools), and Cosmos. Multi-state EMOs and CMOs control about a third of the charter school market.[11] K12 provides to online non-profit CMOs including Agora and Insight in Pennsylvania.[14] The company manages state-funded virtual charter schools and hybrid schools in twenty-nine U.S. states and the District of Columbia.[15] In 2015, Stride was CMO (and charter holder) for schools enrolling 44,559 students.[16]

Curriculum

Stride's product line includes courses for pre-K, elementary, middle, and high school grades, online learning platforms, and educational software.[15] All courses provided by Stride Inc. are delivered through Brightspace, a D2L platform.

The K-8 curriculum includes core subject areas: math, science, language arts, history, art, music, and world languages. The majority of lessons in the early grades are offline using textbooks, printed materials, and hands-on activities.[15] The learning coach (typically a parent or guardian) is expected to spend three to five hours each day monitoring students' progress, logging attendance, and facilitating lessons. Short answer or multiple choice assessments are given at the end of most lessons in K-8 and are administered and recorded by the learning coach.[17] [18]

At the high school level (grades 9–12), students complete all coursework online. Less parental involvement is expected.[17] In high school, teachers monitor student's progress and grade tests and assignments.[19] In addition to core and comprehensive courses, students can choose remedial, Honors, Credit Recovery and Advanced Placement options.[20] [21] Unlike in the K-8 grades, high school courses take place mostly online. Students attend live online classes and have more communication with teachers, via e-mail, phone, and online conferences.[15] [22]

In all cases, the school assigns a state-certified teacher to assist the coach and student.[15] The cost to a sponsoring agency depends on the teacher-student ratio selected. Stride offered the Commonwealth of Virginia three plans: a teacher-student ratio of forty, fifty, or sixty to one.[23] Teacher interaction is accomplished through virtual classroom environments using Newrow, a virtual classroom conferencing system by Kaltura, telephone, and face-to-face meetings and events.[15] In hybrid schools, students complete the same curriculum but attend a physical building and participate in classes with other students and teachers.[15]

Branding

Stride, Inc. offers itself through a variety of brands.

State and district sponsored homeschooling

Stride develops identities for specific opportunities. In Union County, Tennessee, it has operated Tennessee Virtual Academy since 2011.[24] [25] In Pennsylvania, it operates Insight Pennsylvania Cyber Charter School.[26]

Stride previously operated Hoosier Academy Virtual Charter School, an online charter school in Indiana that enrolled 3,681 students in 2016. The school was closed in June 2018.[27]

Private online K-12 schools

Stride, Inc. operates three online private schools: K12 Private Academy, George Washington University Online High School, and the Keystone School.[28] In 2011,[29] The George Washington University partnered with Stride to offer a full-time online private school accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools commissions on Elementary and Secondary Schools.[30]

Career learning

Stride, Inc. offers career and technical education programs at public schools, called Destinations Career Academies and Programs to students in grades 9–12.[31]

In 2020, Stride expanded into the adult learning space with the acquisition of data science and software engineering bootcamp Galvanize. With the companies rebrand in November 2020, it was announced that they would acquire Tech Elevator, a computer coding bootcamp, and MedCerts,[32] an online healthcare career training program.

Learning Solutions

In April 2014, Stride, Inc. established wholly owned subsidiary, Fuel Education.[33] Fuel Education operated as a separate legal entity from Stride, Inc., and houses different personalized learning programs.[33] The subsidiary has since rebranded as Learning Solutions.[34]

School assessment

The National Education Policy Center regularly conducts studies of the performance of Stride and other for-profit virtual schools including Connections Academy (a subsidiary of Pearson Education).[35] A study at Western Michigan University and the National Education Policy Center found that only a third of K12's schools achieved Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP), which is required for public schools by the federal No Child Left Behind (NCLB) legislation.[14] According to the Times, "By almost every educational measure, the Agora Cyber Charter School [a school run by K12] is failing." In Pennsylvania, 42% of Agora students tested at grade level or better in math, compared with 75% of students statewide. 52% of Agora students tested at grade level or better in reading, compared with 72% statewide.[14] Nonetheless, Agora brought K12 $72 million in the 2011 school year – more than 10% of K12's revenue.[14] Agora terminated its contract with K12 in 2014.[36] Proponents argue that such statistics are undermined by the fact that a significant proportion of newly enrolled students begin several grade levels behind because of a failure of brick and mortar schools.[14] Education reformers such as United States Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, have further stated that AYP is not an accurate measure of a school's performance and estimated that under NCLB, as many as "82 percent of America's schools could be labeled 'failing'".[37]

A paper by Yale students[38] found "With no exceptions, students enrolled in K12 schools performed worse in math than their district and state counterparts. With only one exception, they performed worse in English and language arts"

The press and politicians have been equally critical. A 2012 PolitiFact.com article noted K12's poor performance in Tennessee.[39] The New York Times investigated K12 and concluded that the company squeezes profits from public school funding by raising enrollment, increasing teacher workload, and lowering standards.[14] The Washington Post raised similar issues.[40]

K12 defends its position, describing its student base as "at risk" to begin with.[35]

Lobbying efforts

The New York Times wrote that K12's profits are used to pay for advertising and lobbying state officials. K12 spent $26.5M on advertising in 2010 and the company and its employees contributed nearly $500,000 to state political candidates from 2004 to 2010.[14] K12 has contributed money to organizations like Pennsylvania Families for Public Cyber Schools, which lobbied for online schools.[14] In Ohio, an organization founded by a K12 official hired temp agency workers to demonstrate with signs against state representative Steven Dryer, who challenged their funding.[14]

Ransomware attack

In November, 2020, Stride was attacked by Ryuk ransomware criminals, rendering some of Stride's records inaccessible and leading to the threatened release of students' personal information. The company paid an undisclosed ransom amount, saying, "Based on the specific characteristics of the case, and the guidance we have received about the attack and the threat actor, we believe the payment was a reasonable measure to take in order to prevent misuse of any information the attacker obtained".[41]

See also

Notes and References

  1. August 11, 2008. Virtual Schools, Real Business. Forbes. October 8, 2012.
  2. Web site: K12 Inc. Company Profile. Hoovers. Dec 8, 2017.
  3. Web site: Profiles of For-Profit and Nonprofit Education Management Organizations. National Education Policy Center . Miron . Gary . Jessica L. Urschel . Mayra A. Yat Aguilar . Breanna Dailey . January 2012 . November 8, 2012.
  4. Web site: New York Stock Exchange. K12 Inc.. October 8, 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20121011124136/http://www.nyse.com/about/listed/lrn.html. October 11, 2012. dead.
  5. Bill Bennett: The Education of an E-School Skeptic. Businessweek. https://web.archive.org/web/20120707085308/http://www.businessweek.com/stories/2001-02-13/bill-bennett-the-education-of-an-e-school-skeptic. dead. July 7, 2012. February 13, 2001. October 8, 2012.
  6. Web site: Hot debate about revoking K12's science contract . Paul Socolar . The Notebook.com . Winter 2005 . 2010-04-17 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080908114152/http://www.thenotebook.org/editions/2005/winter/hot.htm . 2008-09-08 . dead.
  7. Web site: Anonymous - Contract with K12 for science curriculum lapses. Summer 2006. The Notebook.com.
  8. News: Bennett Quits K12 Board After Remarks. The Washington Post. October 4, 2005. October 8, 2012.
  9. News: K12 CEO resigns after refusing to accept role changes at online-education company. Owens. Jeremy C.. MarketWatch. 2018-02-14. en-US.
  10. Web site: 2021-01-27. Stride, formerly K12, names new CEO. 2021-02-03. Virginia Business. en-US.
  11. Web site: Charter School Operators. In Perspective. 10 November 2017.
  12. News: 'Blended learning' model pitched to several Southern Berkshire school leaders. The Berkshire Eagle. 2018-01-21. en.
  13. Book: Molnar. Alex. Virtual Schools in the U.S. 2017. April 11, 2017. National Education Policy Center. 21 January 2018.
  14. News: Stephanie Saul . Profits and Questions at Online Charter Schools . . December 12, 2011 . 2011-12-13 .
  15. News: Virtual schools are multiplying, but some question their educational value. Layton . Lyndsey . Emma Brown . November 22, 2011 . October 8, 2012 . The Washington Post.
  16. Web site: Woodworth. James L. Charter Management Organizations 2017. Center for Research on Education Outcomes. 23 January 2018. 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20180117200122/http://credo.stanford.edu/pdfs/CMO%20FINAL.pdf. 17 January 2018. dead.
  17. Full-Time E-Learning Not Seen as Viable Option for Many. Davis . Michelle R. . February 4, 2011 . October 8, 2012 . .
  18. Web site: Virtual schools on the rise, but are they right for K-12 students? . Jones . Athena . January 30, 2012 . November 1, 2012 . CNN .
  19. Web site: How K12 high school differs from K–8. K12 . October 8, 2012 .
  20. Web site: High school course list. K12 . October 8, 2012 .
  21. Web site: Keeping Pace with K-12 Online & Blended Learning. Evergreen Education Group. November 1, 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20121224135904/http://kpk12.com/cms/wp-content/uploads/KeepingPace2012.pdf. December 24, 2012. dead. mdy-all.
  22. Web site: Virtual schooling offers tuition-free education, but it's not for everyone. Hundley . Wendy . August 23, 2012 . November 1, 2012 . Dallas Morning News.
  23. News: Saul. Stephanie. Profits and Questions at Online Charter Schools. 22 January 2018. New York Times. December 12, 2011.
  24. News: Balakit. Melanie. Push fails to keep Tennessee Virtual Academy open. 21 January 2018. The Tennessean. April 21, 2015.
  25. News: Balakit. Melanie. Court: TN Virtual Academy can remain open. 21 January 2018. The Tennessean. June 12, 2015.
  26. News: Woodall. Martha. Court sides with proposed cyber charter backed by Stride Inc.. 21 January 2018. Philadelphia Inquirer. May 18, 2017.
  27. News: Weddle. Eric. Hoosier Academies Virtual Charter School To Close In June. 7 February 2018. Indiana Public Media WFYI. September 29, 2017.
  28. News: 3 Growth Stocks for Those Moving Up in the World. McNew. Todd Campbell, Rich Smith, and Seth. The Motley Fool. 2018-01-19. en.
  29. News: GWU launches online prep school. Vise. Daniel de. The Washington Post. 2011-01-22. 2018-01-19. en-US. 0190-8286.
  30. News: George Washington University Online High School to Hold In-Person Graduation Ceremony. 2018-01-19. en.
  31. News: Destinations Career Academy of Colorado Now Accepting Enrollment for 2018-19 School Year. 2018-01-17. en.
  32. Web site: Stride, Inc. to Acquire Healthcare Talent Development Pioneer, MedCerts . Business Wire . 17 November 2020 . 11 June 2021.
  33. News: K12 Inc. Building a New Identity for Part of the Company. Education Week. 2018-01-18. en-US.
  34. Web site: Fuel Education Service Station.
  35. News: KAMENETZ. ANYA. Virtual Schools Bring Real Concerns About Quality. 20 December 2017. NPR All Things Considered. February 2, 2015.
  36. News: Woodall. Martha. Pa. seeks financial, contract info from Agora Cyber Charter. 15 February 2018. Philadelphia Inquirer. May 24, 2016.
  37. Duncan Says 82 Percent of America's Schools Could "Fail" Under NCLB This Year. United States Department of Education. March 9, 2011. October 8, 2012.
  38. Web site: K12 Inc.: Virtually Failing our Students. 2017-04-04. 2020-07-30. Yale Education Studies.
  39. News: Chattanooga senator slaps virtual school company for "results at bottom of the bottom". October 7, 2012. McMillin. Zack .
  40. News: Virtual schools are multiplying, but some question their educational value. The Washington Post. November 20, 2012. November 22, 2011. Layton. Lindsay. Emma Brown.
  41. Web site: Abrams. Lawrence. K12 online schooling giant pays Ryuk ransomware to stop data leak. December 2, 2020. BleepingComputer. December 4, 2020.