Online Education -- Changing the Way We Learn One Mouse Click at a Time
It is hard to imagine
a world without the Internet. Since the mid 1990s,
it has revolutionized the way people around the world
communicate, shop, entertain and conduct business.
Today, at the crest of this global transformation,
colleges and universities steadily have added online
courses to their curricula -- not only to compete
with other schools, but to afford educational opportunities
that meet the demands of a student’s busy lifestyle.
A university’s online education offering is
often designed with an eye toward the adult learner
who may be struggling to balance the demands of work,
family and classes. Or as in Peter VanAmburgh’s
case, unable to attend classes because of a military
deployment. VanAmburgh is a Lieutenant Colonel with
the Georgia Army National Guard. His unit was mobilized
to the war in Iraq in February 2004. At the time he
was in the dissertation phase of his doctoral studies
and didn’t want to put his studies on the back
burner, so he took his classwork with him. “Most
of my fellow soldiers were very surprised I brought
my educational pursuits to the Gulf operation with
me,” says VanAmburgh. “Even after a hard
day’s work, I was known to dust off -- literally
-- my dissertation project on my laptop to make some
progress on it during downtime.”
VanAmburgh credits Argosy University/Sarasota’s
flexible doctoral committee with allowing him the
opportunity to finish his degree in a rather unorthodox
fashion. “As educators, our priority is helping
our students achieve their academic goals,”
says Dr. Celia Edmundson, department head of the Organizational
Leadership Program in the School of Psychology and
Behavioral Sciences at Argosy University/Sarasota.
Online learning isn’t
just helping soldiers who are deployed overseas reach
their higher learning goals. It’s also an important
tool for people who live in our nation’s 50th
state. Because of geographical boundaries, a strong
majority of the students enrolled at Argosy University/Honolulu
take their courses online as well.
“Online courses enable
students to have access to high-quality education
no matter where they live or work,” says Dr.
Boris Porkovich, president of Argosy University/Honolulu.
Dr. Jean Ramage, head of Argosy
University/Honolulu’s school psychology department,
emphasizes the economical advantage that helps many
of her school’s students: “Online courses
assist us in serving students on the neighboring islands
who would have to pay hundreds of dollars for a round
trip airline ticket, just to attend a class in Oahu,”
she says.
Online courses can be coupled
with the traditional classroom setting, too, creating
a successful hybrid of convenience and education.
Dr. Elaine Artman, chair of the Department of Education
at Argosy University/San Francisco Bay area, explains
how the principle is being applied in the school’s
new Teacher Credential Program. “Methods courses
are face-to-face on weekday afternoons and Saturdays
for seven weeks, and the theory courses are taught
online. Students can complete all the coursework in
one 15-week term this way. The second 15-week term
is for the field work (student teaching).”
And as the “experience”
continues to evolve, so does the way college students
of all ages and backgrounds are improving their lives.
Forget eBay -- whether students live on an island
in the Pacific Ocean or are stationed in a Middle
Eastern desert, the Internet can enable them to pursue
one of the most valuable possessions they can ever
own -- an education.