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Applegate, Edd – Online Submission, 2021
This paper examines several correspondence schools that developed courses in advertising for young men and women who were interested in learning about the subject but who were not necessarily interested in attending a college or university. In addition, the paper discusses the founding of the National Home Study Council, which developed standards…
Descriptors: Correspondence Schools, Advertising, Academic Standards, Educational History
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Kitongan, Vivian Grace L.; Gutierrez, Joselito C. – Asian Journal of Education and Training, 2022
At the onset of pandemic, schools offer online classes for those who have access to internet and correspondence-based learning (CBL) for those who have difficulties accessing internet signal. Hence, this study delved into the learning experiences of college students who subscribed to the CBL modality. Using phenomenology design, findings showed…
Descriptors: Distance Education, College Students, Student Experience, COVID-19
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Lembani, Reuben; Mulenga, Kabwe; Mwewa, Peter; Mhango, Lydia; Chaamwe, Nchimunya – Education and Information Technologies, 2023
This study investigated the preparedness and experience of students for the fast-paced convergence of ICT and higher education. Overall, 366 distance students with a history of self-directed learning through correspondence courses were profiled using structured text-based online interviews. Twelve students' attributes on ICT material possession…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Distance Education, Independent Study, Correspondence Study
Heller, Rafael – Phi Delta Kappan, 2020
Some Americans have always wanted their schools to provide a liberal education, giving students opportunities to read great books, study the academic disciplines, and expand their minds. But many others, perhaps most of us, have looked for ways to avoid the slow, hard work of academic learning. As the historian Robert Hampel explains, we tend to…
Descriptors: Acceleration (Education), Correspondence Study, Study Guides, Speed Reading
Peter M. Fulks – ProQuest LLC, 2023
There is a strident body of empirical research evidence that Higher Education in Prison (HEP) has a direct impact on reducing recidivism. Additionally for participants, it also increases the economic mobility and employability post-release. However, the ability to conduct randomly controlled trials with a distal measurement of recidivism is…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Correctional Education, Correctional Institutions, Instructional Effectiveness
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Li, Fengliang; Wu, Feiyu; Wang, Zhilin – European Journal of Education, 2022
Distance higher education plays a critical role in the promotion of regional equality in China by contributing to the availability of higher education. However, unbalanced regional development of distance higher education can lead to a widening of educational inequity. The study on which this article reports sheds light on the issue of unbalanced…
Descriptors: Distance Education, Rural Areas, Equal Education, Correspondence Study
Castro, Katherine; Jacobs, Travis; Eden, Emilee; Thiese, Matthew S.; Hegmann, Kurt T.; Allen, Joseph A. – Metropolitan Universities, 2022
Academic Medical Centers (AMC) are unique healthcare resources that offer services to their local communities. As societal priorities shift, AMCs are identifying approaches to practice community engagement. Although many examples of AMCs exist in the literature, few have targeted resources for specific health topics like occupational health. This…
Descriptors: Community Involvement, Medical Services, Universities, Occupational Safety and Health
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Mitchum, Catrina; Rodrigo, Rochelle; Staples, Shelley – Composition Forum, 2020
This program profile describes the process the Writing Program at the University of Arizona took to create a pathway to course completion for students during the pandemic-induced remote transition in Spring 2020. While the majority of students continued to have access to the hardware and software necessary to complete the term online, some…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Writing Instruction, Distance Education, College Students
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Maxwell, Katia; Pittman, Shannon; Hester, Leigh; Miller-Curtis, Vanessa; Roberts, Kim; Smith, Derrek – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2022
Higher education today is no longer what it once was. Once upon a time, students only had the option to attend classes in person. The first shift from this format happened when students began taking classes through correspondence, where materials were physically mailed out. Later, as technology increased, a new format led to students being able to…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Education Work Relationship, Educational History, Educational Change
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Higgins, Andrew – Journal of Open, Flexible and Distance Learning, 2020
The premise of this brief opinion piece is that the fundamental paradigm of education appeared with Plato. It is that there is a co-location in time and space of learners, teachers, and resources. The absence of any of these elements can lead to shortcomings in the meaning of the term "to be educated". Recent events such as COVID-19…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, COVID-19, Pandemics, Distance Education
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Johnston, Jason Paul – Online Journal of Distance Learning Administration, 2020
Distance education across all levels of education is growing at a rapid rate. As institutions and governments attempt to guide distance education, working definitions and their meanings conflict. Perhaps this is in part because administrators and practitioners are working from definitions that are decades-old. This paper suggests new definitions…
Descriptors: Distance Education, Definitions, Educational Change, Educational History
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Carvalho, João Vidal; Pereira, Rui Humberto; Rocha, Álvaro – Innovations in Education and Teaching International, 2020
Maturity models have been introduced over the last five decades as guides and references for information system (IS) management in organizations from different sectors. In the education sector, maturity models have also been used to evaluate higher education institutions (HEIs) across several dimensions, such as information and communication…
Descriptors: Information Systems, Higher Education, Information Management, Models
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Li, Kam Cheong – Knowledge Management & E-Learning, 2018
This paper offers a summary of the developments that open learning has gone through, from the stages before e-learning emerged to when it carved out a niche position. It first analyzes how open learning moved through five stages, and identifies the characteristics and dominant technology at each stage. The five stages cover the period from…
Descriptors: Open Education, Electronic Learning, Definitions, Educational Development
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Hunt, Stephen A. – History of Education, 2020
Correspondence education, or learning by post, lasted over 100 years in the UK; it had its roots in the nineteenth century, peaking in the mid-1960s. It was also widespread, numbering hundreds of thousands of enrolments, significantly increasing access to higher education. Yet it has been marginalised in accounts of British higher education. This…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Correspondence Study, Higher Education, Professional Education
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Pregowska, Agnieszka; Masztalerz, Karol; Garlinska, Magdalena; Osial, Magdalena – Education Sciences, 2021
Surprisingly, distance education is quite an old concept. Its origins date back to the first correspondence-based course, which took place via the postal service in Boston, USA, in the 18th century. Rapid technological developments, especially in video and audio streaming, have increased the availability of such courses and moved learning into the…
Descriptors: Distance Education, Online Courses, COVID-19, Pandemics
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