This link has been bookmarked by 25 people . It was first bookmarked on 29 Jun 2009, by brenda213.
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09 Jul 09
Steve RansomCommunity colleges and high schools would receive federal funds to create free, online courses in a program that is in the final stages of being drafted by the Obama administration.
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07 Jul 09
Kathleen NThe Obama administration is pushing for creating free online courses at the high school/community college level, focusing on basic skills and job training. Some sort of examination/assessment is also possible, plus the idea of mixing free and paid courses at community colleges to reduce the cost of tuition.
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03 Jul 09
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As someone who believes community college should be part of the K-12 public education system, I feel this program could be a step in the right direction. I'm confused and a little concerned, however. Would these classes have instructors? Or would students be left to complete coursework on their own? Without some real-world facilitation, I have difficulty believing students requiring basic skills will fare well in purely online courses.
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I find my IN classroom experiences are always better. Personal interaction and engaging the energy of the instructor is irreplaceable still for me.
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As a student, when I cannot reach an instructor in a virtual environment when I do not understand a concept, I get 'trapped' in my own frustrations of wrapping my head around something I do not understand and bear the learning curve until I get an email response... Although GradeGrinder and other such automated softwares do help, they do not support the learning of the lessons... I personally find it best to have a blended teaching environment so when I am studying on my own I can reach my instructor for that critical teachable moment.
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Last week, the UK announced an initiative to make the UK a global leader in Online Education, and there are already several other governments actively heading in this direction. The US is strategically positioned to retain its global leadership in this growing and important sector, but a multi-year National Online Higher Education Plan needs to be in place to maximize our nation's ROI from these type of investments in public online education.
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02 Jul 09
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Dennis OConnorSomething for all of us interested in e-learning and online teaching to be watching is a proposal to provide Community Colleges with a new hope that will serve students seeking job skills.
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June 29, 2009
WASHINGTON -- Community colleges and high schools would receive federal funds to create free, online courses in a program that is in the final stages of being drafted by the Obama administration.
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The funds envisioned for open courses -- $50 million a year -- may be small in comparison to the other ideas being discussed. But in proposing that the federal government pay for (and own) courses that would be free for all, as well as setting up a system to assess learning in those courses, and creating a "National Skills College" to coordinate these efforts, the plan could be significant far beyond its dollars.
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the impact of bringing free online courses to those who may need basic skills and job training could have much more of an impact than the free courses from elite universities.
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"I couldn't think of a more important target than high schools and community colleges for open courses," he said.
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According to the draft materials from the administration, the program would support the development of 20-25 "high quality" courses a year, with a mix of high school and community college courses. Initial preference would go to "career oriented" courses. The courses would be owned by the government and would be free for anyone to take. Courses would be selected competitively, through peer review, for support. And the courses would be "modular" or "object based" such that they would be "interoperable" and could be offered with a variety of technology platforms.
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Advocates for open courses guess that the proposal reflects the ideas of Martha J. Kanter, the under secretary of education. Kanter was previously chancellor of the Foothill-De Anza Community College District. In that position, she helped to create the Community College Consortium for Open Education Resources, which has pioneered the idea of making textbooks and other course materials for community college students available free and online.
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As for concerns that the students who could benefit might not have laptops or Internet access, Bonk said that was a real concern. But now, he said, students lack those things and perceive college as too expensive. By making courses available free, he said, communities can then expand library access to computers, or start laptop programs -- and this will make more sense when the tuition issue is removed. "I think the ability to tell people, 'Hey there are these courses now available for free' is going to create incentives for lots of laptop programs to appear," he said.
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J. Noah Brown, president of the Association of Community College Trustees, said that the proposals the administration is drafting "reflect big priorities of ours." Brown said that the colleges recognize that the administration "can't cure all of our infrastructure ills" or sagging budgets. But he said that with community colleges being forced to limit enrollments in ways "that break my heart," these programs are a huge advance.
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wayne andersonUS Government planning to invest 9 billion for open online course development by high schools and community colleges. Courses would be focus on basic skills for employment.
education eLearning eLearningFuture DeptEd open university openeducation online courses
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behind the movement to put more courses online -- and offer them free -- and is also pushing that movement in the direction of community colleges
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more skills training and education to even a small percentage of those leaving high school without a diploma or those who have no college education,
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would support the development of 20-25 "high quality" courses a year
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would be owned by the government and would be free for anyone to take
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preference would go to "career oriented" courses
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would be "modular" or "object based"
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a "National Skills College" at a community college that would, among other things, work to develop examinations that could be given at the end of the courses so that colleges
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employers and students could judge how much learning had taken place
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National Skills College would work to promote programs that might mix the free courses with tuition courses so students could earn degrees at lower cost
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While the program is described as one that emphasizes community colleges and high schools, it would be open to public agencies and to private for-profit or nonprofit groups.
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community colleges would need to agree to track and report on student outcomes, and to set targets for graduation rates and "employment-related outcomes," while also serving "high need populations."
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01 Jul 09
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Advocates for open courses guess that the proposal reflects the ideas of Martha J. Kanter, the under secretary of education. Kanter was previously chancellor of the Foothill-De Anza Community College District. In that position, she helped to create the Community College Consortium for Open Education Resources, which has pioneered the idea of making textbooks and other course materials for community college students available free and online.
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30 Jun 09
euro thingObama administration may propose "open" classes and create "National Skills College" to coordinate offerings at high schools and community colleges. Other help for 2-year institutions may include $10 billion facilities loan fund.
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Community colleges and high schools would receive federal funds to create free, online courses in a program that is in the final stages of being drafted by the Obama administration.
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reach more students and to link basic skills education to job training.
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John White, press secretary for the Education Department
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the federal government pay for (and own) courses that would be free for all, as well as setting up a system to assess learning in those courses, and creating a "National Skills College" to coordinate these efforts, the plan could be significant far beyond its dollars.
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and offer them free -- and is also pushing that movement in the direction of community colleges.
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"This is so spot on in terms of what's needed," said Curtis J. Bonk, a professor of instructional systems technology at Indiana University at Bloomington and author of The World Is Open: How Web Technology Is Revolutionizing Education (forthcoming from Jossey-Bass).
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the impact of bringing free online courses to those who may need basic skills and job training could have much more of an impact than the free courses from elite universities.
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the impact on the individuals and the economy could be huge.
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According to the draft materials from the administration, the program would support the development of 20-25 "high quality" courses a year, with a mix of high school and community college courses. Initial preference would go to "career oriented" courses. The courses would be owned by the government and would be free for anyone to take. Courses would be selected competitively, through peer review, for support. And the courses would be "modular" or "object based" such that they would be "interoperable" and could be offered with a variety of technology platforms.
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work to develop examinations that could be given at the end of the courses so that colleges, employers and students could judge how much learning had taken place.
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And the National Skills College would work to promote programs that might mix the free courses with tuition courses so students could earn degrees at lower cost.
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t would be open to public agencies and to private for-profit or nonprofit groups.
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Martha J. Kanter,
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the Community College Consortium for Open Education Resources, which has pioneered the idea of making textbooks and other course materials for community college students available free and online.
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"It's time for this," he said.
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'Hey there are these courses now available for free' is going to create incentives for lots of laptop programs to appear," he said.
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The discussion draft for the job training program calls for spending $500 million a year in the first five years of the program, during which grants would be awarded competitively to community colleges, and $1.3 billion after that, at which point 50 percent of funds would be awarded by formula to states, 25 percent awarded to those states showing high performance programs, and 25 percent to community colleges, awarded competitively.
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To be eligible, community colleges would need to agree to track and report on student outcomes, and to set targets for graduation rates and "employment-related outcomes," while also serving "high need populations." Funds could then be used to create programs that "blend basic skills and occupational training," to provide "comprehensive, personalized services to help students plan their coursework and careers and support services that will keep them in school," and to create programs in partnerships with employers
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The loan fund for community college facilities would receive $10 billion under the plan.
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States would distribute funds based on "demonstrated need," with an emphasis on expanding capacity in programs that "meet employer needs in the areas of health care, green jobs, science, engineering and technology."
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but that they were generally encouraged by the ideas in play.
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He said that colleges are being forced to turn students away, "which is the wrong thing to be doing in this economy," and that the funds for job training programs could help community colleges educate more people, and help them prepare for good jobs.
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Boggs said that his association has estimated a $100 billion need for new community college facilities,
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Boggs also noted the unusual prominence that the administration is giving to community colleges as institutions that can help deal with the country's economic mess. "I think the spotlight is really shining on community colleges right now," he said.
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Christy TuckerThe Obama administration is pushing for creating free online courses at the high school/community college level, focusing on basic skills and job training. Some sort of examination/assessment is also possible, plus the idea of mixing free and paid courses at community colleges to reduce the cost of tuition.
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Bonk said that administration's ideas about open courses are consistent with the "convergence" he sees taking place in online learning. There is a growing belief that for many kinds of courses, there are best providers whose work can be made available online, there are large numbers of students who could benefit from those courses, and those who might benefit don't necessarily have a lot of money.
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29 Jun 09
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Mathieu PlourdeCommunity colleges and high schools would receive federal funds to create free, online courses in a program that is in the final stages of being drafted by the Obama administration.
community college free OpenEducationalResource OpenCourseware USA grant politics UDSocialMedia
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Community colleges and high schools would receive federal funds to create free, online courses in a program that is in the final stages of being drafted by the Obama administration.
The program is part of a series of efforts to help community colleges reach more students and to link basic skills education to job training. The proposals are outlined in administration discussion drafts obtained by Inside Higher Ed.
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brenda213Obama administration may propose classes and create National Skills College to coordinate offerings at high schools and community colleges. Other help for 2-year institutions may include $10 billion facilities loan fund.
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