‘Online learning has become a part of the way we educate our kids’: K12 CEO

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Millions of schools in the U.S. have closed, forcing students to learn and study online. K12 CEO Nathaniel Davis joins Yahoo Finance’s On The Move panel to weigh in on his education company is faring amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Video Transcript

JULIE HYMAN: In the meantime, over the weekend, we heard from New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio that schools in New York City would remain closed through the end of the school year, although he got a little bit of pushback from the governor. This is the case, though, in many school districts now.

And we are joined now by someone who's offered some online resources for those with their kids at home-- not just now, but even before this. And that's Nate Davis. He's the CEO of K12. Thank you so much for joining us. He's joining us from Herndon, Virginia.

So Nate, how does K12 offer these resources? And those of us who have been doing this stuff at home now for a few weeks have realized just how challenging it is. What do you think is the most key thing when you're offering virtual learning for elementary school kids?

NATHANIEL DAVIS: Well, first of all, thank you, Julie, for having me on the call today. I appreciate it. Most important thing, I believe, is for children to have an easy access. Being able to get into this system, being able to navigate through content, is important. But it's got to be easy. And number two, it's got to be engaging.

Now, the third piece that I think is really important you've already mentioned. And that is parents have to be able to use the system in a way that helps their child, what we call a learning coach. That's a person who is monitoring what the child is doing, directing to different pieces of instruction, and knowing when they're making progress.

Those elements are important. I think what we all learned from this, however, is that being a learning coach is not easy, which means being a teacher is not easy. We should all learn to appreciate teachers from this.

ADAM SHAPIRO: Nate, I was curious-- it's Adam Shapiro, by the way-- if-- you know, so many kids now taking their lessons virtually. Is there less of a retention in what they're learning when it's this way, say, versus in the classroom with a teacher, a classroom of, say, 25 other kids?

NATHANIEL DAVIS: No. I don't think there's less retention. Matter of fact, some students actually learn more and perform better and engage better when they're doing it online. And all you have to do to realize that is look at every child in the United States who has some kind of device in front of them-- how much they learn from playing an online game, from communicating with their friends.