Remove Educational Technologies Remove Hybrid Courses Remove Online Learning
article thumbnail

Is Higher Ed Really Ready to Embrace Hybrid Learning?

Edsurge

It’s the seventh edition of the Changing Landscape of Online Education (CHLOE) report. In the survey, chief online officers predicted that by 2025, programs and courses that mix on-campus and online learning experiences will become the norm for undergraduate students, graduate students and adult learners.

article thumbnail

When His Roster Outgrew His Classroom, This Prof Mastered Modular Online Curriculum

Edsurge

Today, Robertson’s course consists of 150 to 200 online modules, each of which includes a video presentation , a section from his own book Marketing Fundamentals for Future Professionals , and—coming soon—an active learning exercise. See sidebar, “Robertson’s Content Options for Hybrid Courses.”)

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

Up Next For Higher Ed? Cryptocurrencies, Political Battles and Hybrid Learning

Edsurge

The spread of hybrid and online learning was named one of the top social trends. The report says that institutions will need to focus on developing strong teaching practices for these modes of instruction and do more to support students learning online or in hybrid courses.

article thumbnail

Does Online Education Help Low-income Students Succeed?

Edsurge

From the start, access has been the defining achievement of online learning. For a couple of decades, I championed online learning for its ability to uproot entrenched ideas in education, especially by engaging students in active learning, a pedagogical style rarely practiced on campus. Or so I thought.

Education 147
article thumbnail

Faculty Say Online Programs ‘Cannibalize’ On-Campus Courses at George Washington University

Edsurge

At least 70 programs at GW offer online degrees, enrolling more than 4,200 students in baccalaureate to doctoral-level programs, according to the report. The point is that [part-time instructors] are very attractive in the online programs because they are inexpensive.

article thumbnail

?Can Online Teaching Work at Liberal-Arts Colleges? Study Explores the Pros and Cons

Edsurge

The findings paint a complicated picture of whether online teaching can work for humanities courses at liberal arts colleges, and how much effort they take to produce. For some students (45 percent of the respondents), the online or hybrid courses were somewhat better or much better than in-person.

Art 121
article thumbnail

What College Students Wish Professors Knew About Inclusive Online Teaching

Edsurge

It’s not surprising that most higher education articles published since March 2020 begin by calling to mind that year’s unprecedented move to remote instruction and online learning—and with good reason. Are those devices capable of running the necessary educational technology tools and platforms needed in your classes ?

Teaching 212