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Opening Arguments

Learning curve

More and more online courses are available at Indiana colleges and universities, and I've noticed Gov. Daniels has been all over TV lately with ads touting WGU Indiana, the state's newest university, which offers more than 50 accredited online bachelor's and master's programs. Somebody had better start ramping up the pitch a little, because the public apparently isn't buying it.

Delivering courses in cyberclassrooms has gained broad acceptance among top college leaders, but the general public is far less convinced of online education's quality, according to new survey data released this week by the Pew Research Center, in association with The Chronicle.

Just over half of the 1,055 college presidents queried believe that online courses offer a value to students that equals a traditional classroom's. By contrast, only 29 percent of 2,142 adult Americans thought online education measured up to traditional teaching. The presidents' survey included leaders of two-year and four-year private, public, and for-profit colleges and was conducted online. The public survey was conducted by telephone.

The gauge of differing perceptions comes at a critical moment for online education. Just 10 years ago, few colleges took teaching onto the Internet, and skepticism about the practice was the norm among professors and university leaders.

Now many studies have proved the effectiveness of online instruction, and colleges trying to cut costs and serve students who want more convenient options are embracing this form of teaching.

I'm not sure the public's acceptance is lacking just because people doubt the effectiveness of online study. The cost is surely a factor as well. The basic tuitition at WGU Indiana is$2,890 per term. Yes, that's a substantial savings compared to the rates of other Indiana schools, but it's still a big chunk of change.

I suspect some people will never accept online schooling -- it you don't go to the building and sit down in a classroom with a teacher in front of you, it's not the real thing. But the Next Big Thing -- widespread use of holographic display technology -- could change that.

Comments

littlejohn
Tue, 08/30/2011 - 12:23pm

And just imagine the giant strides holographic displays will provide for pornography.

William Larsen
Tue, 08/30/2011 - 1:02pm

I would not say that $2,890 is a substantial cost savings. I paid my kids Fall tuition recently and this is about a $100 savings. In addition, online does not provide the face to face in office help you can get on campus. As for learning and creating associations using (smell, touch, hearing, sight, etc) I find that internet most likely does not use all of ones senses and that the static environment does not create the significant difference needed for retention of material.

Harl Delos
Wed, 08/31/2011 - 9:21am

Where are your kids going to college, Mr. Larsen?

The Indiana University says $9524 for 2 semesters of tuition, plus another $8520 for a dorm room - and that's for Indiana residents. The cost for out-of-state students is $20,000 higher.

By the time you include all the costs - insurance, interest on the car loan, depreciation, tires, water pumps, washer fluid, parking, traffic tickets, car washes, etc., the IRS rate of 55.5 cents a mile is about right - and at that rate, what would it cost to commute to IPFW from Decatur, if tuition were free?

Not to mention that half of all students these days are "non-traditional" students. Having your husband attend classes with sweet young things could cost you more than just money- and divorce is VERY expensive....

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