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Is Higher Ed Really Ready to Embrace Hybrid Learning?

Edsurge

The future of higher education will bring more hybrid learning models—but colleges may not yet have the staff and systems they need to scale up high-quality programs that blend in-person and online experiences. It may also mean doing more to truly prepare students for online learning. Online learning should not be easier.

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

Edsurge

And unsurprisingly, their reflections underscore dramatic shifts in teaching and learning either instigated or sped up by the pandemic. The spread of hybrid and online learning was named one of the top social trends. Higher education likely will never be the same again,” the report says.

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As Student Engagement Falls, Colleges Wonder: ‘Are We Part of the Problem?’

Edsurge

But declining student participation may also stem from the challenges inherent to remote and hybrid learning. It’s often said that online courses offer students increased flexibility—supposedly a positive quality. I learned over the pandemic that a personal email to a student that says, ‘Hey how are things going?’

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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. While the conversation was not explicitly about inclusive teaching, their reflections kept returning to inclusive pedagogy themes.

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