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Jeff Seaman, Ph.D.
The Sloan Consortium is just completing
a comprehensive national study of online learning in
Higher Education. Working from a representative sample
of all United States institutions of higher education,
this study has collected data on attitudes and practices
from over 990 institutions.
The Sloan Consortium would like to thank all the institutions that took the time to respond to our study. The information you have provided will allow us to publish comprehensive and up-to-date study of the nature and extent of online learning.
First Results
While analysis process has just begun, we can provide you with some summary tables of what we are discovering.
Online versus Blended
The
study used the Sloan definitions of online and blended
courses, where at least 80 percent of the course
content had to be delivered online to be considered
an "online" course, and between 30 and 80 percent
delivered online to be considered a "blended or hybrid" course.
Overall, well over half of the entire sample provides
both at least one online and one blended course (56.4%).
An additional 16.0% offer online courses, but no
blended courses, while 8.9% offer blended but no
online. Overall, only 18.7% of all the institutions
did not offer either type of instruction.

Public institutions are much more likely to provide online courses than are private schools.

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