The Union School Corporation in the tiny town of Modoc—population 157—fits many stereotypes of quaint rural Indiana, with its corn fields, dirt roads and Angus cattle farm right next door to its school campus.
But it’s a different type of cow—the cash cow of an online school—that makes Union anything but a typical rural school district.
State legislators say they have put Union on the chopping block because of poor performance. But district leaders believe the real reason is so the state can reap the benefits of the Indiana Digital Learning School, a virtual school Union has overseen since 2017—growing to 7,500 students and paying the district an estimated $3 million in oversight fees annually.
Read more at Yahoo News.

