Distance learning, even when you're not so distant
From The New York Times: Online education is best known for serving older, nontraditional students who can not travel to colleges because of jobs and family. But the same technologies of distance learning are now finding their way onto brick-and-mortar campuses, especially public institutions hit hard by declining state funds. Across the country, online education is exploding: 4.6 million students took a college-level online course during fall 2008, up 17 percent from a year earlier, according to the Sloan Survey of Online Learning. A large majority — about three million — were simultaneously enrolled in face-to-face courses, belying the popular notion that most online students live far from campuses. This may delight undergraduates who do not have to change out of pajamas to “attend” class. But it also raises questions: Is it possible to learn as much when your professor is a mass of pixels whom you never meet? How much of a student’s education and growth — academic and personal — depends on face-to-face contact with instructors and fellow students?