Switch To Charter Allows Epic To Operate Rural District: Oklahoma Watch
Switch To Charter Allows Epic To Operate Rural District: Oklahoma Watch
Switch To Charter Allows Epic To Operate Rural District: Oklahoma Watch
The Ardmoreite
the lake and the tornado was won t know the size or the damage to Sulphur or the
east of the county.” intensity until a survey is immediate area. SEE BEAR, PAGE 5A
OKLAHOMA WATCH
COME IN FOR
Property of OPS News Tracker and members of the Oklahoma Press Association.
The Ardmoreite
May
e Epic. Epic planned to
consolidate the Norwood
Act allows a traditional
school district to convert
to a charter. The measure
least 2013-14. According
to court documents, 25
teachers and staff sued
ey and Panola districts, said specifically states, “A con- the district in 2015, alleg-
01 on Norwood Board President version school shall retain ing they were owed a total
to Danny Shoemaker. the characteristics of a of more than $91,000 in
ed But in December, the traditional public school.” back pay. A creditor took
2019 ke Norwood board rebuffed Sen. Ron Sharp, the the district to court
the proposal. R-Shawnee, said when over about $2,500 in un-
ile “It (the Epic propos- the bill was considered paid credit card bills.
Page ite al) would not benefit our in the Legislature, law- Then the state cut
A005 ver students, and we’re there makers didn’t discuss a school funding after a
nc- for the kids,” Shoemak- conversion school being revenue failure. The state
Clip ant er said, adding he was anything other than a Department of Education
resized n’t grateful their situation brick-and-mortar school gave the Panola school
42% n- wasn’t as dire as Pano- with regularly scheduled board an ultimatum: Bal-
rs. la’s. He questioned Epic’s classes. ance the books by July
From motives, suggesting they “This is Epic One-on- 1 or the students will be
A001 He were more about profiting One (the statewide virtual reassigned to neighboring
eir through its management school) at home under the districts.
n’t affiliate. “This was more pretense of a brick-and- The plan to convert to
uld to line somebody’s pock- mortar conversion char- a charter school seemed
Y ets,” he said. ter district,” he said. like the only option.
Ma- Epic officials have de- Some parents like the “Now we’re not going
oot nied they put profits over changes. Jessica Man- to be a charter school,”
n- education quality and ning, who lives in Wilbur- Corcoran, the superin-
es, say their school’s rap- ton, near Panola, sends tendent, told community
nd id growth is proof that her four children to the members gathered in the
ey their online and blend- school. “At first, people school’s cafeteria, accord-
nd ed models meet families’ had a mindset that our ing to a video posted to a
ily needs. Shelly Hickman, kids were going to be school district Facebook
ur a spokeswoman for Epic, staring at a computer all page. “We’re going to be a
will said Panola and Norwood day,” she said. “Elementa- conversion school, which
nd are examples of how Epic ry hasn’t changed. High means a traditional public
nd tries to make different school has more comput- school with charter rules.”
learning models work er work, but they still have Referring to the Epic
together to serve all stu- book work.” deal, Mikel Blake, then
u- dents. For the Panola deal, a Panola school board
00 But as a business, Epic Epic used a limited lia- member, said, “It bene-
ol- continues to explore bility company it formed fited them, it benefited us,
at ways of accelerating its in 2015 called Commu- it kept the school open.
rn growth. Combined, its nity Strategies-CA. Com- It didn’t make everyone
ng. own two schools — Epic munity Strategies-CA is a happy. There were people
virtual and Epic Blend- nonprofit LLC, while the who were unsettled.”
Van ed in Oklahoma City and similarly named Commu- Panola’s board unani-
ps, Tulsa — enrolled at least nity Strategies Inc. is the mously approved the plan
ne 23,000 students this year. tax-exempt nonprofit that on May 23, 2017.
w. A fourth blended center is is the legal name for Epic “Epic basically saved
Los expected to open this fall Charter Schools. us,” said Shannon Reed
near Rose State College Community Strate- Ferguson, a Panola school
in Midwest City. To at- gies-CA now receives all board member whose
ost tend, Epic students have revenue for Panola, in- daughter, Samantha, at-
re- to live in the same county cluding local property tends there.
ur as a blended center, and taxes, state aid and fed- Oklahoma Watch is a
ck the Panola school is their eral funding. nonprofit, nonpartisan
to: first foray into rural Okla- There is just one other media organization that
ox homa. conversion school in the produces in-depth and
47. Epic’s school in Califor- state: Millwood Elemen- investigative stories on
ded nia is also expanding, now tary in Oklahoma City, important issues facing
enrolling students from which converted in May the state. For more Okla-
five of the state’s most 2017, around the time homa Watch content, go to
populous counties. And Panola did. Millwood is oklahomawatch.org.
an Epic-related compa- still managed by the local
at ny is in contract negotia- school board.
na tions with Pulaski County
he Schools in Arkansas.
In the midst of that
st- growth, Epic has drawn
nd more scrutiny from law-
ver makers, the public and
ce, state and federal inves-
on tigators, the Tulsa World
on reported.
Purpose of Law
t,” One state legislator says
the law permitting the ar-
Property of OPS News Tracker and members of the Oklahoma Press Association.
The Edmond Sun
May
Epic opportunity for
hockey players
01
2019
Page
A001
Clip
resized
60%
PHOTO PROVIDED
Gordon Bell is giving Brighton Hendricks a private lesson at Arctic Edge earlier this month.
Hendricks is a student at Cross Timbers Elementary in Edmond.
Charter school, hockey “I want to target every single others live as far away as Yukon
kid who wants to play hockey, or Norman.
solidifies educational every single kid that wants to The school will enroll stu-
find a home,” said the school’s dents from first grade through
offering founder, Gordon Bell, a former high school — 6U through 18U
college and pro player who in hockey terms — with a
spent time with the old Central nucleus in the 9-14 age range.
BY TED STREULI Hockey League’s Oklahoma Academics will be offered
SPECIAL TO THE SUN City Blazers and Tulsa Oilers. through online charter school
Bell’s biggest challenge will Epic at a facility just west of
A new charter school set to be the shallow pool of potential Arctic Edge Ice Arena, where
open in September won’t teach students. There are only 368 students will get three on-ice
English or math before 10:30 players registered with the training sessions each week
a.m. That’s because the first Oklahoma City Youth Hockey plus a lot of hockey skills work
class of the day will probably Association, 104 of whom are in the school’s off-ice training
be Penalty Killing 101 or serious enough about hockey room.
Advanced Slapshots. to play on the organization’s Epic students see their
Welcome to Oklahoma travel teams. There is a cluster assigned teacher once per
Hockey Academy, home of the of 135 players in Edmond,
Thunderbirds. including 39 travel players, but
SEE THUNDERBIRDS | A3
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May 2019 Page resized From
01 A003 46% A001
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May 2019 Page resized
01 A001 45%
Property of OPS News Tracker and members of the Oklahoma Press Association.
The Norman Transcript
school has more computer our (local school) boards combining the local school
Switch: work, but they still have
book work.”
and superintendents and
communities that a teacher
board with Panola’s, which
would have given each
From Page A1 For the Panola deal, Epic in the classroom is where community fewer seats at F
used a limited liabil- education needs to be, and the table.
But in December, the ity company it formed in virtual can be a part of that After Norwood’s school o
Norwood board rebuffed 2015 called Community if it’s handled right.” board unanimously re- w
the proposal. Strategies-CA. Commu- Trice Butler, superinten- jected the agreement Dec. t
“It (the Epic proposal) nity Strategies-CA is a dent of Wilburton Public 13, the district’s superin- t
would not benefit our nonprofit LLC, while the Schools, which neighbors tendent Ken Bridges, who t
May students, and we’re there
for the kids,” Shoemaker
similarly named Commu-
nity Strategies Inc. is the
Panola, said she is con-
cerned that Epic is looking
Shoemaker said supported
the plan, resigned, after
h
v
01 said, adding he was grate-
ful their situation wasn’t
tax-exempt nonprofit that
is the legal name for Epic
to replicate what it’s done
in Panola in other districts.
serving six months in the
position. Bridges could not
H
a
as dire as Panola’s. He Charter Schools. Butler said her primary be reached for comment. o
questioned Epic’s motives, Community Strategies- concern is her belief that
2019 suggesting they were more
about profiting through its
CA now receives all rev-
enue for Panola, including
students at Epic are receiv-
ing a subpar education. She
Hope and uncertainty M
T
management affiliate. “This local property taxes, state cited Epic’s low high school F
was more to line some- aid and federal funding. Panola and Epic officials
graduation rates and high a
Page body’s pockets,” he said. There is just one other numbers of students leav-
declined several requests
by Oklahoma Watch to
D
Epic officials have denied conversion school in the ing Epic and returning to m
A002 they put profits over state: Millwood Elementary traditional schools with
tour Panola school and
speak to students and staff.
o
education quality and say in Oklahoma City, which academic credit insuffi- t
their school’s rapid growth converted in May 2017, cient for the time they were School board president t
Clip Randy Conley provided a
is proof that their online around the time Panola enrolled. (Epic maintains C
resized and blended models meet did. Millwood is still man- that some students come written statement saying
parents and faculty are
34% families’ needs. Shelly aged by the local school to them behind in credits
grateful for the school’s
d
Hickman, a spokeswoman board. and the school helps them m
for Epic, said Panola and catch up.) partnership with Epic, w
From Norwood are examples Epic’s presence in Panola which he said has been d
Financial crisis beneficial both financially
A001 of how Epic tries to make has also raised concerns
and academically.
w
different learning models The Panola district had about aggressive attempts c
work together to serve all to attract students and “Today, our school d
been struggling with its finances are sound and we
students. finances since at least teachers from surround-
But as a business, Epic ing school districts even in have improved (from F) r
2013-14. According to to an overall grade of ‘C’
continues to explore ways court documents, 25 the middle of the academic B
of accelerating its growth. year. from the state,” he said. o
teachers and staff sued the The letter grade is for Pa-
Combined, its own two district in 2015, alleging Panola spent $650 for I
schools — Epic virtual and postcards, and at least nola Elementary, a preK-8 t
they were owed a total of school.
Epic Blended in Oklahoma more than $91,000 in back some were sent to address- i
City and Tulsa — enrolled es in nearby Wilburton The financial uncertainty t
pay. A creditor took the the in Panola, and the transi-
at least 23,000 students this district to court over about school district, promising w
year. A fourth blended cen- a customized education tion to Epic, have caused o
$2,500 in unpaid credit many students to leave. Pa-
ter is expected to open this card bills. for students and touting
fall near Rose State College the school’s “double-digit nola’s enrollment is down t
Then the state cut school
in Midwest City. To attend, academic growth.” 35 percent from 2014, O
funding after a revenue
Epic students have to live Butler called this “preda- according to state data. It
failure. The state Depart-
in the same county as a tory marketing” and said slipped by 2.7 percent, or a
ment of Education gave
blended center, and the the statements made on three students, from 2017 o
the Panola school board
Panola school is their first an ultimatum: Balance the postcard are mislead- to 2018. i
foray into rural Oklahoma. the books by July 1 or the ing. Still, Conley says, “If it w
Epic’s school in Califor- students will be reassigned Panola elementary wasn’t for Epic, Panola b
nia is also expanding, now to neighboring districts. students did post positive school would no longer U
enrolling students from The plan to convert to a academic growth on the exist … We hope that B
five of the state’s most charter school seemed like latest school report cards, more of the students that
populous counties. And an the only option. with 80 percent of stu- left Panola for Wilburton a
Epic-related company is in “Now we’re not going dents improving between and surrounding districts y
contract negotiations with to be a charter school,” 2016-17 and 2017-18. But during our uncertain time B
Pulaski County Schools in Corcoran, the superin- only 27 percent of those return to us.” s
Arkansas. tendent, told community students scored on grade Reporter Andrea Eger of A
In the midst of that members gathered in the level, compared with 57 the Tulsa World contrib- m
growth, Epic has drawn school’s cafeteria, accord- percent in Wilburton and uted to this story. h
more scrutiny from law- ing to a video posted to a 51 percent statewide. Oklahoma Watch is a b
makers, the public and school district Facebook nonprofit, nonpartisan b
state and federal investi- media organization that
gators, the Tulsa World
page. “We’re going to be a Changes at school produces in-depth and B
conversion school, which
reported. means a traditional public investigative content on a P
Panola is so small that
school with charter rules.” range of public-policy issues g
teachers handle at least
Purpose of law Referring to the Epic facing the state. For more g
two grades apiece. It has
deal, Mikel Blake, then Oklahoma Watch content, 1
a Class B basketball team,
One state legislator says a Panola school board go to oklahomawatch.org. t
but there’s no art, physical
the law permitting the ar- member, said, “It benefited education or music, par-
rangement in Panola was them, it benefited us, it ents say. Epic’s taking over
never intended to be used kept the school open. It management of the school
by a virtual school. didn’t make everyone didn’t change that.
A 2016 change to the happy. There were people But other aspects have
Oklahoma Charter School who were unsettled.” changed. Teachers can
Act allows a traditional Panola’s board unani- work part-time at Panola
school district to convert mously approved the plan and part-time at Epic or
to a charter. The measure on May 23, 2017. another school. Super-
specifically states, “A con- “Epic basically saved us,” intendent Corcoran, for
version school shall retain said Shannon Reed Fergu- example, earned nearly
the characteristics of a son, a Panola school board $87,000 in 2018, but only
traditional public school.” member whose daughter, $4,500 was for his role at
Sen. Ron Sharp, R-Shaw- Samantha, attends there. Panola; he is actually a full-
nee, said when the bill was time Epic employee.
considered in the Legis- Concerns about Epic And Epic uses Panola as
lature, lawmakers didn’t a hub for giving standard-
discuss a conversion school Epic’s rapid rise and ized tests to its statewide
being anything other than push into school district virtual school students in
a brick-and-mortar school management has many the area.
with regularly scheduled traditional school leaders In the Norwood district,
classes. wondering what’s next. which rejected Epic’s man-
“This is Epic One-on- Pam Deering, executive agement proposal, Epic of-
One (the statewide virtual director of the Coopera- ficials deny that they were
school) at home under the tive Council for Oklahoma the ones who approached
pretense of a brick-and- School Administrators, district leaders.
mortar conversion charter said the state’s lack of in- “Norwood reached out
district,” he said. vestment in public educa- after hearing how we were
Some parents like the tion over the last decade able to financially and
changes. Jessica Manning, has contributed to many academically turn around
who lives in Wilburton, educators’ frustration with Panola,” said Hickman, the
near Panola, sends her four Epic. Epic spokeswoman.
children to the school. “At “There is a concern, yes, Shoemaker, the Nor-
first, people had a mindset that someone could swoop wood board president,
that our kids were going to in and offer a huge chunk said the company offered
be staring at a computer of change to take over laptops for students and
all day,” she said. “Elemen- a school,” Deering said. a stipend for internet
tary hasn’t changed. High “We just have to educate services, but they pitched
Property of OPS News Tracker and members of the Oklahoma Press Association.
Stillwater NewsPress
School’s switch to
May
01
charter allows Epic to
2019
Page
operate rural district
A002 By Jennifer Palmer to them last year with a ment affiliate.
Oklahoma Watch nearly identical proposal “This was more to line
Clip
resized to convert the school to somebody’s pockets,” he
PANOLA – To save a charter managed by said.
46% his financially imperiled Epic. Epic planned to Epic officials have
school district, Panola consolidate the Norwood denied they put profits
Superintendent Brad and Panola districts, said over education quality
Corcoran in 2017 pitched Norwood Board Presi- and say their school’s
a plan to convert the dent Danny Shoemaker. rapid growth is proof
traditional public district But in December, the their online and blended
into a charter school. Norwood board rebuffed models meet families’
In becoming a charter, the proposal. needs. Shelly Hickman,
Panola Public Schools “It (the Epic proposal) a spokeswoman for Epic,
would turn over its would not benefit our said Panola and Nor-
management to a com- students, and we’re there wood are examples of
pany affiliated with for the kids,” Shoemak- how Epic tries to make
Epic Charter Schools, er said, adding he was different learning models
the largest online school grateful their situation work together to serve
in the state. The school wasn’t as dire as Pano- all students.
board agreed. la’s. He questioned Epic’s But as a business,
The Epic-related firm motives, suggesting they Epic continues to explore
contributed $100,000 were more about profit-
toward Panola’s debt as ing through its manage- See Charter, Page A8
part of the agreement.
That company manages
the small district for a
more than 10 percent cut
of its funding. Panola’s
high school students now
have the option to attend
most classes online from
home.
The deal was unprec-
edented. Not only was it
one of the first conver-
sions-to-charter in the
state, it allowed Epic’s
company to operate a
school and gain many
benefits denied other
charter schools: It could
tap into and spend local
property tax revenue to
cover costs of student
transportation, school
buildings and sports fa-
cilities, like traditional
school districts.
And Epic didn’t stop at
Panola.
Leaders at Norwood,
another small district
nearly 100 miles north
of Panola in the town of
Hulbert, say Epic came
OM FRAMES, INC.
ming
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May 2019 Page resized From
01 A008 37% A002
Stillwater NewsPress
his execution tried and the link in Lockett’s fem of the problems they In a recent interview With nitrogen inha
orig.pdf 1 01-May-19 15:17:52
Property of OPS News Tracker and members of the Oklahoma Press Association.
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May 2019 Page resized
01 A02 49%
Property of OPS News Tracker and members of the Oklahoma Press Association.
The Dewey County Record
Switch to Charter
Schools allows Epic to
operate rural districts
May By Jennifer Palmer to serve all students.
Oklahoma Watch But as a business, Epic
02 7RVDYHKLV¿QDQFLDOO\LP- continues to explore ways of
periled school district, Panola accelerating its growth. Com-
Superintendent Brad Corco- bined, its own two schools —
2019 ran in 2017 pitched a plan to Epic virtual and Epic Blended
convert the traditional public in Oklahoma City and Tulsa
Page district into a charter school. — enrolled at least 23,000
In becoming a charter, students this year. A fourth
A008 Panola Public Schools would blended center is expected to
turn over its management to a open this fall near Rose State
Clip FRPSDQ\ DI¿OLDWHG ZLWK (SLF College in Midwest City. To
resized Charter Schools, the largest attend, Epic students have to
46% online school in the state. The live in the same county as a
school board agreed. blended center, and the Panola
7KH (SLFUHODWHG ¿UP VFKRROLVWKHLU¿UVWIRUD\LQWR
contributed $100,000 toward rural Oklahoma.
Panola’s debt as part of the Epic’s school in Califor-
agreement. That company nia is also expanding, now
manages the small district for HQUROOLQJ VWXGHQWV IURP ¿YH
a more than 10 percent cut of the state’s most populous
of its funding. Panola’s high counties. And an Epic-related
school students now have the company is in contract nego-
option to attend most classes tiations with Pulaski County
online from home. Schools in Arkansas.
The deal was unprecedent- In the midst of that growth,
ed. Not only was it one of the Epic has drawn more scrutiny
¿UVW FRQYHUVLRQVWRFKDUWHU from lawmakers, the public
in the state, it allowed Epic’s and state and federal inves-
company to operate a school tigators, the Tulsa World re-
DQG JDLQ PDQ\ EHQH¿WV GH- ported.
nied other charter schools: It Purpose of Law
could tap into and spend local One state legislator says
property tax revenue to cover the law permitting the ar-
costs of student transportation, rangement in Panola was
school buildings and sports fa- never intended to be used by a
cilities, like traditional school virtual school.
districts. A 2016 change to the Okla-
And Epic didn’t stop at homa Charter School Act
Panola. allows a traditional school
Leaders at Norwood, an- district to convert to a char-
other small district nearly WHU 7KH PHDVXUH VSHFL¿FDOO\
100 miles north of Panola in states, “A conversion school
the town of Hulbert, say Epic shall retain the characteristics
came to them last year with of a traditional public school.”
a nearly identical proposal to Sen. Ron Sharp, R-Shaw-
convert the school to a char- nee, said when the bill was
ter managed by Epic. Epic considered in the Legislature,
planned to consolidate the lawmakers didn’t discuss a
Norwood and Panola districts, conversion school being any-
said Norwood Board Presi- thing other than a brick-and-
dent Danny Shoemaker. mortar school with regularly
But in December, the Nor- scheduled classes.
wood board rebuffed the pro- “This is Epic One-on-One
posal. (the statewide virtual school)
“It (the Epic proposal) at home under the pretense of
ZRXOG QRW EHQH¿W RXU VWX- a brick-and-mortar conversion
dents, and we’re there for the charter district,” he said.
kids,” Shoemaker said, adding Some parents like the
he was grateful their situation changes. Jessica Manning,
wasn’t as dire as Panola’s. He who lives in Wilburton, near
questioned Epic’s motives, Panola, sends her four children
suggesting they were more WRWKHVFKRRO³$W¿UVWSHRSOH
DERXW SUR¿WLQJ WKURXJK LWV had a mindset that our kids
PDQDJHPHQW DI¿OLDWH ³7KLV were going to be staring at a
was more to line somebody’s computer all day,” she said.
pockets,” he said. “Elementary hasn’t changed.
(SLF RI¿FLDOV KDYH GHQLHG High school has more com-
WKH\SXWSUR¿WVRYHUHGXFDWLRQ puter work, but they still have
quality and say their school’s book work.”
rapid growth is proof that their For the Panola deal, Epic
online and blended models used a limited liability com-
meet families’ needs. Shelly pany it formed in 2015 called
Hickman, a spokeswoman for Community Strategies-CA.
Epic, said Panola and Nor- Community Strategies-CA
wood are examples of how LVDQRQSUR¿W//&ZKLOHWKH
Epic tries to make different
learning models work together (Continued to page 9)
Property of OPS News Tracker and members of the Oklahoma Press Association.
The Dewey County Record
Charter Schools_____
similarly named Commu- handled right.” combining the local school
nity Strategies Inc. is the tax- Trice Butler, superinten- board with Panola’s, which
H[HPSW QRQSUR¿W WKDW LV WKH dent of Wilburton Public would have given each com-
May legal name for Epic Charter Schools, which neighbors munity fewer seats at the ta-
Schools. Panola, said she is concerned ble.
02 Community Strategies-CA that Epic is looking to repli- After Norwood’s school
now receives all revenue for cate what it’s done in Panola board unanimously rejected
Panola, including local prop- in other districts. the agreement Dec. 13, the
erty taxes, state aid and federal Butler said her primary district’s superintendent Ken
2019 funding. concern is her belief that Bridges, who Shoemaker said
There is just one other con- students at Epic are receiv- supported the plan, resigned,
version school in the state: ing a subpar education. She after serving six months in
Page Millwood Elementary in cited Epic’s low high school the position. Bridges could
Oklahoma City, which con- graduation rates and high not be reached for comment.
A009 verted in May 2017, around numbers of students leav- Hope and Uncertainty
the time Panola did. Millwood ing Epic and returning to 3DQROD DQG (SLF RI¿FLDOV
Clip is still managed by the local traditional schools with aca- declined several requests
resized school board. GHPLF FUHGLW LQVXI¿FLHQW IRU by Oklahoma Watch to tour
39% Financial Crisis the time they were enrolled. Panola school and speak to
The Panola district had (Epic maintains that some students and staff.
From EHHQ VWUXJJOLQJ ZLWK LWV ¿- students come to them be- School board president
nances since at least 2013-14. hind in credits and the school Randy Conley provided a
A008 According to court docu- helps them catch up.) written statement saying par-
ments, 25 teachers and staff Epic’s presence in Panola ents and faculty are grateful
sued the district in 2015, al- has also raised concerns about for the school’s partnership
leging they were owed a to- aggressive attempts to attract with Epic, which he said has
tal of more than $91,000 in students and teachers from EHHQEHQH¿FLDOERWK¿QDQFLDO-
back pay. A creditor took the surrounding school districts ly and academically.
the district to court over about even in the middle of the aca- ³7RGD\RXUVFKRRO¿QDQF-
$2,500 in unpaid credit card demic year. es are sound and we have im-
bills. Panola spent $650 for post- proved (from F) to an overall
Then the state cut school cards, and at least some were grade of ‘C’ from the state,”
funding after a revenue fail- sent to addresses in nearby he said. The letter grade is for
ure. The state Department of Wilburton school district, Panola Elementary, a preK-8
Education gave the Panola promising a customized edu- school.
school board an ultimatum: cation for students and touting 7KH ¿QDQFLDO XQFHUWDLQW\
Balance the books by July 1 or the school’s “double-digit aca- in Panola, and the transition
the students will be reassigned demic growth.” to Epic, have caused many
to neighboring districts. Butler called this “preda- students to leave. Panola’s en-
The plan to convert to a tory marketing” and said the rollment is down 35 percent
charter school seemed like the statements made on the post- from 2014, according to state
only option. card are misleading. data. It slipped by 2.7 percent,
“Now we’re not going to Panola elementary students or three students, from 2017 to
be a charter school,” Cor- did post positive academic 2018.
coran, the superintendent, told growth on the latest school re- Still, Conley says, “If
community members gathered port cards, with 80 percent of it wasn’t for Epic, Panola
in the school’s cafeteria, ac- students improving between school would no longer exist
cording to a video posted to a 2016-17 and 2017-18. But … We hope that more of the
school district Facebook page. only 27 percent of those stu- students that left Panola for
“We’re going to be a conver- dents scored on grade level, Wilburton and surrounding
sion school, which means a compared with 57 percent districts during our uncertain
traditional public school with in Wilburton and 51 percent time return to us.”
charter rules.” statewide.
Referring to the Epic deal, Changes at School
Mikel Blake, then a Panola Panola is so small that
school board member, said, teachers handle at least Quality
³,WEHQH¿WHGWKHPLWEHQH¿WHG
us, it kept the school open. It
two grades apiece. It has a
Class B basketball team, but Quick Lube
didn’t make everyone happy. there’s no art, physical edu- Since 1981
There were people who were cation or music, parents say. We service all Autos
unsettled.” Epic’s taking over manage- & Trucks (up to 2.5
Panola’s board unanimous- ment of the school didn’t ton)
ly approved the plan on May change that. 12 Brands of Oil-All Oil Filters-Over
23, 2017. But other aspects have 200 Air Filter Sizes-Differential,
“Epic basically saved us,” changed. Teachers can work Radiator, & Transmission Flushes
said Shannon Reed Ferguson, part-time at Panola and part- Eight Full Time Service People
a Panola school board mem- time at Epic or another school. No Appointments
ber whose daughter, Saman- Superintendent Corcoran, Just Drive In
tha, attends there. for example, earned nearly
Concerns About Epic $87,000 in 2018, but only Quality Products
Epic’s rapid rise and push $4,500 was for his role at Pan-
into school district manage- ola; he is actually a full-time Quality People
ment has many traditional Epic employee.
school leaders wondering And Epic uses Panola as 2600 Oklahoma Ave., Woodward
what’s next. a hub for giving standardized 580-256-4070
Pam Deering, executive tests to its statewide virtual Mon-Fri 8 am to 5:30 pm
director of the Cooperative school students in the area. Sat 8 am to Noon
Council for Oklahoma School In the Norwood district,
Administrators, said the state’s which rejected Epic’s man- "We don't give you time
lack of investment in public DJHPHQW SURSRVDO (SLF RI¿- to miss your car!"
education over the last decade cials deny that they were the
has contributed to many edu- ones who approached district
cators’ frustration with Epic. leaders.
“There is a concern, yes, “Norwood reached out af-
that someone could swoop ter hearing how we were able
in and offer a huge chunk of WR¿QDQFLDOO\DQGDFDGHPLFDO-
change to take over a school,” ly turn around Panola,” said
Deering said. “We just have Hickman, the Epic spokes-
to educate our (local school) woman.
boards and superintendents Shoemaker, the Norwood
and communities that a teach- board president, said the com-
er in the classroom is where pany offered laptops for stu-
education needs to be, and vir- dents and a stipend for inter-
tual can be a part of that if it’s net services, but they pitched
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