Sewa Motor Jogja 2023 Batara Kresna Rental Motor Wisata Tarif Sewa Murah Mulai 50rb / 24jam Fasilitas 2 Helm 2 Jas Hujan Free Antar Untuk Varian Matic Dan Jemput Motor Ke Hotel, Stasiun Tugu, Stasiun Lempuyangan, Dan Lokasi Dimana Anda Berada. Bisa Sewa Harian, Mingguan Maupun Bulanan Pesan Lewat WA 081213359726
Online Education May Transform Higher Ed
Online Education May Transform Higher Ed Can online education be the rock that
disturbs the placid waters of American
higher education? Several industry experts
believe it will have a significant ripple effect
on colleges and universities of all sizes in
coming years—but only if it's subject to
regulation, governed by a common set of
accreditation standards, and widely
accepted by institutions who have long clung
to the traditional face-to-face model of
instruction.
Citing the vast online enrollment gains made
by for-profit institutions like the University
of Phoenix and Kaplan University, Louis
Soares, director of postsecondary education
at the Center for American Progress,
recently dubbed online education a
potential "disruptive innovator" in the higher
ed landscape. Much in the way cell phones
disrupted the traditional landline-based
model or discount retailers like Wal-Mart
revolutionized the nation's retail market, the
for-profit sector—though a subject of
intense scrutiny in recent years—has driven
changes that could greatly affect the world
of higher education, Soares argues.
"A disruptive innovation always starts out at
a lower quality," he says. "[But], if you take
that for-profit energy out of higher
education, online [education] wouldn't have
grown the way it has in the last 10 years."
[Read about the partisan battle over for-
profit education.]
In the coming decade, experts say, college
students should expect an increased
presence of online classes at traditional
nonprofit schools. Already, about 30
percent of American college students take at
least one course online, says Elaine Allen,
statistical director of the Sloan Survey on
Online Education, which monitors student
involvement in online higher education.
Though wholly online programs generally
target nontraditional students, established
institutions that are populated by
traditional, high-achieving students are
starting to embrace the technology. The
University of North Carolina—Chapel Hill
and the University of Southern California are
among the highly regarded schools that
have recently adopted online-centric
programs.
Efforts made by such schools are not the
culmination of a movement online, but
rather a hint of inroads into a new market,
experts say. "We're at the beginning of elite
schools starting to take online seriously,"
says Richard Garrett, managing director at
research firm Eduventures. "They're trying
to marry the online experience with the
brand of the institution."
As technological capabilities expand and
more traditional schools embrace online
education in the coming years, schools may
opt to replace many of their massive, entry-
level courses that are traditionally taught in
vast lecture halls and are characterized by
little to no individual interaction between
students and professors, experts say. "Is
there a secret sauce to a professor sitting in
front of 400 students and lecturing that
couldn't be [replicated] online?" asks
Soares, of the Center for American
Progress.
[Learn about the effectiveness of blended
learning.]
Standardized methods for training
professors to teach online is another
potential change on the horizon, and one
that is essential to online education's future
viability, experts claim. Currently, there is no
standard for training professors to teach
online courses. That need could be met by
an association of online schools introducing
a pedagogy or could be regulated by an
accrediting body, says the Sloan Survey's
Allen.
It's a void that will need to be filled for the
quality of online education to increase and
for online instruction to be widely accepted
at mainstream universities, she says.
"Training is all over the map," Allen adds.
"We need to do something about that to
address quality." Online Education May Transform Higher Ed
Langganan:
Posting Komentar (Atom)
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar