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by Ray Schroeder
This
first Sloan-C View column on news and research related
to online learning focuses
on some ways ALN is enabling wider access and greater
sharing of cost-effective resources:
A
University Is Not a Business (and Other Fantasies)
- Milton Greenberg, Educause Review — Milton
Greenberg, Professor Emeritus from American University
has written
a particularly timely and thorough essay on the
issues surrounding the convergence of the current
funding
crisis in higher education, the rise of the for-profit
university, and the advent of online learning.
This thought-provoking piece will be useful to
many in
our field who need to explain to faculty members
and administrators just how important online learning
is in assuring the future survival of their institutions.
UMassOnline
Revenue Grows 39% and Enrollments Grow 32% in FY
2004 - TMCnet — It’s great
to see online programs thriving in these difficult
fiscal times. UMassOnline certainly has a success
story to tell. Revenues this year are approaching
$13 million, up from $9 million in FY 2003.
Some
college-bound students playing catch-up online
- Wayne Ortman, Associated Press — Students
in South Dakota who have fallen short of qualifying
for the new $5,000 Opportunity Scholarship
program, now have the option of taking up to three
online
classes offered by Northern State University.
The scholarship program requires at least a 24
ACT
score and a number of specific college prep
classes. Northern
State University uses a grant to develop and
offer the classes in physics, senior math and Spanish
that are designed to help students meet their
deficiencies
and raise their ACT scores.
Internet-based
tools could bridge gap in chemistry education,
reports Carnegie Mellon Univ. — Carnegie
Mellon Professor David Yaron has pulled together
some exciting online resources for introductory
Chemistry educators who are seeking to provide
their students
with
real-life examples of practicing chemists. The materials
are located online at www.chemcollective.org. |
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UM
Releases Specs for eLearning Software Project — The
University of Michigan has released preliminary
specifications for developers seeking to contribute
to the open-source software course management system, Sakai. The Java-based
specs
will assure that software to be developed to support the project will operate
across the systems at adopting institutions. The Sakai project is supported
by a grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
We plan
to share selected items that have recently been posted
at the Online
Learning Update blog, which provides
daily summaries of news and journal articles in the
field with links to the complete articles. You can
always visit the Online
Learning Update blog to see
the latest items, and find many more articles posted
seven days a week at the Online
Learning Update blog.
Until next time, I’ll see you online!
~ Ray
Schroeder
Book
Reviews
For complete reviews, please
visit: http://www.sloan-c.org/
resources/reviews/index.asp
Faculty Guide for Moving Teaching and Learning to the Web, Second Edition,
Judith V. Boettcher and Rita-Marie Conrad Turning
Knowledge into Action, Lisa
A. Petrides
The Leadership
Dialogues: Community College Case Studies to Consider,
Larry W. Tyree, Mark David
Milliron, and Gerardo E.
de los Santos, Editors
Building
a Workforce System through Partnering,
Norm Nielsen, Dee Baird, Boo
Browning, and Mark David
Milliron, Editors
From Digital
Divide to Digital Democracy,
Gerardo E. de los Santos, Alfredo
G. de los Santos Jr.,
and Mark David Milliron, Editors
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ALN
Principles
Continued
from page 6
Principle 11: Provide continuous
training and support.
Introduce new technologies at a pace
that allows continuous training, feedback, collaboration
and sharing of effective
practices.
Principle 12: Choose appropriate technology.
- Use technologies for which
most users have access, gradually introducing options
for more advanced technologies
as user
access increases.
- Meet accessibility standards for disabilities.
- Exploit the advantages of technology for action
research, and for self-motivated and collaborative
learning across
space, time, disciplines, expertise and cultures.
Please see the full
PDF report including collaborators and the
slideshow. [1]
Image courtesy of Francine Van Meter, Cabrillo College;
accompanying
PowerPoint presentation courtesy of Alice Loddigs, Luther
Seminary.
[2] C. Twigg. Innovations in
Online Learning: Moving Beyond No Significant Difference. ©The
Pew Learning and Technology Program, 2001. Sponsored
by a grant from
the
Pew Charitable Trusts. Available: http://www.center.rpi.
edu/PewSym/Mono4.html#Anchor-Preface-49575_END.
[3] P. Valiathan. "Blended
Learning Models." Learning
Circuits, 2002. Available http://www.learningcircuits.
org/2002/aug2002/valiathan.html.
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New Issue is Now Available |
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| Issue
8:2 examines the Impact of Increasing Enrollment
on Faculty Workload and Student Satisfaction, the Best
Online Instructional Practices, and Evaluating Online
Discussions, among other topics. |
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