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20 avril 2013

Free to All

http://chronicle.com/img/photos/biz/icons/the-conversation-newheader.pngBy Robert Darnton. Some have detected a revolutionary message behind the choice of today as the date to launch the Digital Public Library of America—a project to make the holdings of libraries, archives, and museums freely available in digital form to all Americans. They’re right.
“On the eighteenth of April, in Seventy-five,” as Longfellow put it in “The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere,” Paul Revere did not merely warn the farmers of Lexington and Concord that the redcoats were coming. His “midnight message” was a call for liberty. To free Americans’ access to knowledge may not be so dramatic, but it is equally important; for Revere and all the founding fathers knew that a republic could not flourish unless its citizens were educated and informed. Read more...
20 avril 2013

New MOOC Provider Says It Fosters Peer Interaction

http://chronicle.com/img/photos/biz/icons/wired-campus-nameplate.gifBy Jake New. The field of massive-open-online-course providers is becoming crowded. That’s even more so at Stanford University, where Udacity and Coursera, two of the largest providers, got their start. Now there’s a new platform to add to the list. NovoEd, which officially opened on Monday, will begin offering seven courses to the public next week, as well as 10 private courses for Stanford students. Amin Saberi, a Stanford professor and the start-up company’s founder and chief executive, said there’s a key difference between NovoEd and existing MOOC options: peer interaction. Read more...
20 avril 2013

Online-Learning Portal Allows Educators to Create Adaptive Content

http://chronicle.com/img/photos/biz/icons/wired-campus-nameplate.gifBy Jake New. Imagine more than 1,000 nurses learning how to use defibrillators at once, each delivering shocks to a single patient. If a patient dies, the instructor is immediately told which nurse failed, and the nurse then tries again, but with more assistance. It’s not a process patients would want in the real world, but it’s one example of what can be done virtually with a new online-learning portal called Smart Sparrow, said Dror Ben-Naim, the start-up company’s founder. Smart Sparrow, which was officially launched on Tuesday at the Education Innovation Summit, in Scottsdale, Ariz., is an online-learning platform that allows anyone to create what Mr. Ben-Naim calls adaptive content. “The stress is on anyone,” he said. Read more...
20 avril 2013

Competency-Based Education Advances With U.S. Approval of Program

http://chronicle.com/img/photos/biz/icons/wired-campus-nameplate.gifBy  Marc Parry. Last month the U.S. Education Department sent a message to colleges: Financial aid may be awarded based on students’ mastery of “competencies” rather than their accumulation of credits. That has major ramifications for institutions hoping to create new education models that don’t revolve around the amount of time that students spend in class. Now one of those models has cleared a major hurdle. The Education Department has approved the eligibility of Southern New Hampshire University to receive federal financial aid for students enrolled in a new, self-paced online program called College for America, the private, nonprofit university has announced. Read more...
20 avril 2013

What Colleges Can Learn About Applicants From When They Apply

http://chronicle.com/img/photos/biz/icons/headcount-newnameplate.gifBy James Roche. Several years ago, as director of institutional research and a member of the enrollment-management team at Washington State University, I and some of my colleagues were reviewing our admissions process. As we pored over an already-very-thorough application-review procedure to see what else we could consider, one member of the group joked that maybe we should just admit students as they applied, first come first served, until we hit our enrollment target. While we never pursued that route, the idea made me wonder if there was a connection between when in the admissions cycle applicants submitted their application and other factors, such as their incoming quality measures and their performance and persistence at the university. Read more...

20 avril 2013

How Should Colleges Ask About Students’ Sexual Orientation?

http://chronicle.com/img/photos/biz/icons/headcount-newnameplate.gifBy Tammy R. Johnson. In recent years, there has been increasing interest among admission officers regarding the identification of LGBT students on campus. Reliable statistics about LGBT populations on campuses across the country are all but non-existent, and many progressive institutions are aiming to remedy that problem. It is a growing concern: How can schools provide outreach and support (and increase retention rates) for LGBT students if this at-risk population continues to be invisible? Likewise, LGBT campus groups are almost uniformly in favor of collecting reliable data that will document the presence of LGBT students on campus, which would help these groups advocate more successfully for funding and support. In the research-based environments of most college campuses, there is little opposition to collecting data to identify LGBT students. Faculty and staff who are even remotely familiar with the unique struggles faced by many LGBT students understand the justifications for identification.  Disagreement usually arises, however, when campuses begin to wrestle with the question of how to collect the data. Read more...

20 avril 2013

Invest in Your Staff—It Can Pay Off

http://chronicle.com/img/photos/biz/icons/headcount-newnameplate.gifBy Ed Trombley. For the past several years, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University has partnered with the University of Central Florida to offer the Leadership Enhancement Program to populations that are underrepresented within the university management structure, specifically women and minority faculty and staff members. Operated under the supervision of each university’s Office of Diversity Initiatives, the stated goals of the program are to enable participants to gain career enhancing skills and experiences to become successful leaders. The program is tailored to meet the individual needs and career goals of participants, and to empower them and help them develop a sense of who they are. Read more...

20 avril 2013

Creating an Environment That Helps Adult Students Succeed

http://chronicle.com/img/photos/biz/icons/headcount-newnameplate.gifBy Beckie Supiano. Adult students are an unrecognized minority group at traditional colleges. Not only are there fewer students who fall into that category, but the institutions have been set up to serve a different type of student. That’s the case two administrators at Mount Mercy University made here on Wednesday at a session of the American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers’ annual meeting. The two officials—Colette Atkins, assistant dean of adult accelerated programs, and Jason Clapp, the registrar—described how they had worked together to meet the needs of older students who have job and family responsibilities on top of academic ones. In the coming years, the adult-student population is projected to grow more quickly than the traditional-age one nationwide, Mr. Clapp said. “We need to be paying attention to that market.”
Mount Mercy started an accelerated program for working adults in 1997, and it has “just boomed in our community,” Mr. Clapp said. Today close to a quarter of the Iowa university’s enrollment is in that program. The university has teamed up with a nearby community college that offers a similarly structured program to start students on the path to a bachelor’s degree. A number of local employers offer partial tuition reimbursement. More recently the university has started graduate programs for adult students on a similar model. Nontraditional students face additional barriers to college access, and the speakers offered some ideas on how colleges can help mitigate them. Some barriers are situational, they said. For example, older students often have family obligations. They may have to travel for work or be on a shift schedule. Limits of money and time are also concerns. Read more...

20 avril 2013

Building Strong Alumni Networks to Help Bring In the Class

http://chronicle.com/img/photos/biz/icons/headcount-newnameplate.gifBy Katrina L. Heilmeier. Alumni volunteers can be extremely valuable resources throughout the recruitment process. Their first-hand knowledge of history, traditions, and spirit give alumni a unique voice in speaking to students and families about the value of a degree from your institution. Alumni volunteers can assist recruitment throughout the entire admissions cycle by participating in college fairs, interviews, high-school visits, on and off-campus programs, letter-writing campaigns, and more. Alumni-volunteer networks can also provide passionate alumni a way to give back time and talent to the university and maintain a strong bond with the institution. Read more...

20 avril 2013

Did Harvard Students’ Backgrounds Change With Aid Policies?

http://chronicle.com/img/photos/biz/icons/headcount-newnameplate.gifBy Beckie Supiano. In 2004, Harvard University announced generous new financial-aid policies under which families making less than $40,000 a year would not have to contribute to their child’s education. The university also said it would increase its efforts to recruit disadvantaged students. Lawrence H. Summers, Harvard’s president at the time, described the moves as a way to narrow the gap in opportunities available to students from different backgrounds. So, did the backgrounds of students attending Harvard change after the aid policies did? The short answer: yes, especially in the first year. A new paper by a Harvard senior, Nicholas Galat, takes up that question. Read more...

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