Online Learning Update

March 4, 2018

Understanding the New College Majority

Filed under: Online Learning News — Ray Schroeder @ 12:02 am

by Lindsey Reichlin Cruse, M.A., Eleanor Eckerson, Barbara Gault, , Institute for Women’s Policy Research

Independent college students, once considered “nontraditional,” now constitute the majority of students in the United States. As of 2012, just over half of all U.S. college students were independent (51 percent)—meaning they had at least one defining characteristic outlined in the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA), including being at least 24 years old; married; a graduate or professional student; a veteran; an orphan, in foster care, or ward of the court; a member of the armed forces; an emancipated minor; someone who is homeless or at risk of becoming homeless; or having legal dependents other than a spouse (Federal Student Aid n.d.; IWPR 2016a).

https://iwpr.org/publications/independent-students-new-college-majority/

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March 3, 2018

What Institutions Expanding their Online Degree Offerings Can Learn from the Recent Closure at University of Texas

Filed under: Online Learning News — Ray Schroeder @ 12:30 am

By Henry Kronk, eLearning Inside

Numerous universities have taken steps to significantly expand their online offerings in the past year. Notably, Purdue acquired Kaplan last spring to adopt its online framework; the University of Massachusetts system laid plans to make their online degrees nationally available in December; and LSU Baton Rouge pledged to match its in-person enrollment with online students in January.  Significant growing pains always come along with expansion online. In January, the faculty at Eastern Michigan University concluded arbitration with their board of directors for hiring a third party to take care of their online expansion. Professors continue to worry that, in the hands of a private company, their curriculum, courses, and degree experience will be compromised. The case of UT’s ITL confirms the fact that online courses are no silver bullet. Expanded course offerings must strike a compromise with the bottom line.

What Institutions Expanding their Online Degree Offerings Can Learn from the Recent Closure at University of Texas

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3 Reasons Millennials Might Choose Online Learning Over A Traditional Degree

Filed under: Online Learning News — Ray Schroeder @ 12:10 am

by Kaytie Zimmerman, Forbes

One way that millennials are finding success is by expanding their skill set via online learning. I don’t mean Youtube, though that can be a starting point to learn the basics of plenty of topics. By online learning, I mean formal learning platforms like Skillshare.  “Online learning has really taken off over the past few years,” said Michael Karnjanaprakorn, Founder and Executive Chairman of Skillshare, an online learning community. “One of the factors contributing to this growth is the changing work environment. The rapid pace of technological advancement requires workers to continually learn new skills to keep pace.” Online learning has really become a viable, convenient, and affordable way to expand skills necessary for their job or career.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/kaytiezimmerman/2018/02/18/3-reasons-millennials-might-choose-online-learning-over-a-traditional-degree/#1eb16974545b

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Open Education~I

Filed under: Online Learning News — Ray Schroeder @ 12:04 am

by Anirban Ghosh, the Statesman

Open licences are the outcome of an effort to protect the authors’ rights in an environment where the content (particularly when digitised) can easily be copied and shared without permission. Open licences seek to ensure that copying and sharing should happen within a structured legal framework that is more flexible than the automatic all-rights-reserved status of copyright. They allow permission to be given accurately, while relaxing the restrictions of traditional copyright. They allow for more flexibility in the use, reuse and adaptation of materials for local context and learning environment, while allowing authors to have their work acknowledged. In this context, OER means teaching and learning materials for which copyright has expired or for which copyright has been explicitly withdrawn by the author. Open licence does not mean that everything is open. Quite simply it gives us the right to use and at the same time impose certain restrictions.

https://www.thestatesman.com/opinion/open-educationi-1502587930.html

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March 2, 2018

Yale’s Most Popular Class Ever Teaches How to Live a Happier Life (Here’s What Students Learn)

Filed under: Online Learning News — Ray Schroeder @ 12:10 am

By Scott Mautz, Inc

News flash–adult life is filled with unhappiness traps and the search for keys to happiness (or even a good happiness hack to help us get by). It turns out young-adult life isn’t much different. An incredible one in four students at Yale–1,200 students–take Laurie Santos’s Psych 157, “Psychology and the Good Life.” It’s the single largest class in Yale’s history, a class that requires a whopping 24 teaching fellows to administer, that had to move to a symphony hall to accommodate the class size, and that tanks registration for any course in its time slot. (As a result, the class won’t be taught in that format again, instead moving to an online video course format.)

https://www.inc.com/scott-mautz/yales-most-popular-class-ever-teaches-how-to-live-a-happier-life-heres-what-students-learn.html

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5 Tips for Success in Online Classes

Filed under: Online Learning News — Ray Schroeder @ 12:05 am

by University of Denver College of Professional and Continuing Studies
More and more working adults are taking online classes to meet the needs of their busy lives. Online learning can often be intimidating for those who have never done it but can be beneficial when managed right. Here are 5 tips to consider when taking online classes.

http://www.duprofessionaled.com/2018/02/16/5-tips-for-success-in-online-classes/

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State grant funding available to Penn State students taking online courses

Filed under: Online Learning News — Ray Schroeder @ 12:02 am

by Penn State University

Penn State students who enroll in online courses will be eligible for the Pennsylvania State Grant Program next year after lawmakers made permanent a pilot need-based funding program that was set to expire. State lawmakers approved the pilot program for distance learners starting in 2013-14. The program expanded eligibility requirements for funding through the Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency (PHEAA) to include online learners, who previously could not receive financial aid if they took more than half their credits online.

http://news.psu.edu/story/505854/2018/02/16/academics/state-grant-funding-available-penn-state-students-taking-online

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March 1, 2018

Consider Taking Online Courses as an On-Campus Student

Filed under: Online Learning News — Ray Schroeder @ 12:07 am

By Bradley Fuster, US News

Many on-campus college students take at least one fully online class at some point during their education. That’s according to a 2018 report from the Babson Survey Research Group, which found that more than half of the more than 6 million online students in the U.S. – referring to those who enrolled in at least one online class – complete both online and traditional coursework concurrently. As the line between online and residential students increasingly blurs, additional challenges and opportunities have emerged for learners. It’s important that the traditional degree-seeking student who’s taking a mixture of online and on-campus classes be mindful of the complexities of doing so.

https://www.usnews.com/education/online-learning-lessons/articles/2018-02-16/consider-taking-online-courses-as-an-on-campus-student

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IVY league universities are now offering free online courses

Filed under: Online Learning News — Ray Schroeder @ 12:05 am

By Sajeel Syed, TechJuice

Ivy league schools are now offering free online courses from various fields and subjects and all accessible to students from the comfort of their own home. The courses range from Computer Sciences, Arts to Engineering. These courses are constantly updated every other month and are easily accessible through Coursera. A website which connects you with all the courses on all IVY school’s websites and is also your next classroom. Sign into Coursera and pick your university and course you are interested and get a chance to study in these institutes.

https://www.techjuice.pk/ivy-league-universities-offering-free-online-courses/

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What Does ‘MOOC’ Mean Anymore? The Latest from Class Central

Filed under: Online Learning News — Ray Schroeder @ 12:03 am

By Henry Kronk, e-Learning Inside

MOOCs are beginning to really diversify in terms of form and subject matter. Chabad.org has an offering that teaches the nuances of Jewish prayer. The French political party En Marche put out a MOOC to foster political engagement at the community level. Dublin City University launched a MOOC to reconnect the descendants of the Irish Diaspora. Meanwhile, Udacity is becoming more of a for-profit vocational trainer than a MOOC provider. The number of price points are increasing at several other providers. And still, edX stays more or less true to MOOC form.

What Does ‘MOOC’ Mean Anymore? The Latest from Class Central

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