NEWS

Online Universities Get A Huge Boost From US Congress

Written by Akeel Shah
Published March 03, 2006
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In my experience (I'm currently a postdoctoral researcher working in an academic setting), most universities, like most academics, are quite conservative and slow to adapt when it comes to making structural changes to the educational experience (and in many ways when it comes to altering the content of the education itself). This is somewhat ironic considering our post-secondary institutions are also the center of most research and development which is ultimately the source of a tremendous amount of the innovation and growth that we see in all sectors of society. But given the cloistered nature of academia, largely protected from the free market and dominated by academics entrenched for life in little departmental fiefdoms, it's not surprising that many aspects of the academic experience are far from being dynamic. I have little doubt that commercial interests will lead the way in bringing education online. The potential, in terms of improving the quality of the experience and reducing expenses, is enormous. I look forward to what this change will bring and welcome anything that will encourage innovative and high-quality post-secondary learning and teaching.

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Online Universities Get A Huge Boost From US Congress
Published: March 03, 2006
Type: News
Section: Culture
Filed Under: Culture: Business and Economics, Culture: Education, Politics: Law and Rights, Sci/Tech: Internet
Writer: Akeel Shah
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#1 — March 3, 2006 @ 10:36AM — Eric Berlin [URL]

Nice piece Akeel, you've hit the irony (paradox?) on the head: academic institutions, the big battleships they are, are very slow to adopt technological change while the very researchers who are employed by them take part in many of the most cutting edge endeavors imaginable.

#2 — March 4, 2006 @ 12:42PM — Frank Summers

With some trepidation, I signed up last summer to complete my Bachelor of Science in Business Administration, specializing in IT from Colorado Technical University. I already had a BS degree in Geology from the 1970's from an unnamed state university. I was apprehensive in doing this, but my career crashed a few years ago and I am desperate to get a decent one back ($60k/yr cut to $20k/yr isn't pretty). With my work schedule, a traditional campus-based plan is completely out of the question. I have been very happy so far with the results of my decision. The tools made available to us students by CTU include live chat, IM, discussion boards and email. The instructors I have had so far are experienced consultants in their respective fields (business and/or academic), hold masters or doctorate degrees, or are doctorial candidates.

The course material is created by an education committee and focuses on real-world scenarios, from which we build our knowledge about the subject materials by writing short papers, PowerPoint presentations and discussion board postings with required comments to our peers' postings. Each class session also requires a group project where a group of 5-6 students have to work together on a project. To keep students honest, ethical and disciplined, CTU has an extraordinary anti-plagiarism policy and will not tolerate even a hint of it. All papers must be submitted in APA format with proper citations and references. Instructors will not allow students just regurgitate what they read in the papers. We are required to THINK for ourselves. All papers are graded on straight percentile scales. No grading curves used at all. Also, papers must be turned in on-time (Midnight of date-due). The official clock is the virtual campus server time. If submission of a paper is even one-minute late, the score is docked by 5%.

With my previous education credited to my academic plan, my program started at the junior level. I am now half way through the accelerated program used by the school and will graduate in November of this year. I have actually found this experience to be more satisfying to me than when I went to school in the 70's. I have met a diverse group of people and enjoy working with them on projects. I really do think that this will be a major way of obtaining higher education in the future, as long as the accreditation organizations are vigilant in ensuring that diploma mills do not flourish in this space.

#3 — March 4, 2006 @ 21:54PM — RJ Elliott [URL]

I earned my AA from a Community College, and a sizable portion of the classes were online.

I earned my BS from a public University and nearly all of my classes were online.

And I have just been accepted into a graduate program at a public University that will allow me
(if I choose) to take ALL of my classes online!

It is very convenient for me to be able to continue my education at a University that is relatively far away, and while continuing to work the bizarre hours my present job requires of me.

Online education (from credible Colleges/Universities) is the wave of the future!

#4 — April 8, 2008 @ 23:04PM — James [URL]

Its hard to tell if its worth the cost of going to school online when its often the same price as going to school in person

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