Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Online education meets needs diverse of college students



(Photo by David Paul Morris/Getty Images)
The traditional format for a classroom pretty much stays the same regardless of the school at which a student is obtaining their college education. If the school caters to the affluent, the student body will reflect this.

If the school is easily accessible to those in a low economic status, again, the student body will reflect this. 

A new study shows that the online classroom caters to all types of students, regardless of their background.
In online college courses, students are able to access online programs that will meet their educational needs, at their own pace. When a student attends class, the last thing they want is to have to worry about how others will view them, based on their socio-economic status.

One advantage of the online classroom is this – you are free from this judgment. Some online instructors have learned that it is not the school that helps students succeed, but the motivation of that student within the school. What does this mean? That even if a school is not considered an Ivy League school, students will still benefit greatly from online studies. One researcher comments:
“The notion that online courses might work at MIT or Harvard or Stanford or Carnegie Mellon is in a certain sense neither here or there, because those places are going to survive and thrive whatever they do,’’ said James McCarthy, president of Suffolk University, who helped design and implement the new study. “Whether this approach works across a broader spectrum of institutions is what really matters.’’
Sources: Boston.com

What do you think of these insights? How can an online education college program equally benefit both the student from an affluent background as well as one from a modest background?  

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