Click
Here
for more articles |
|
|
What's
The Difference Between Distance Learning
And American Public Schools? |
by:
John
Tipton |
Before
distance learning and elearning, students
in rural
school districts were often at a great disadvantage
when it
came to subjects being offered. A small
school district
sometimes didn't have the resources to attract
teachers
that were in high demand.
Math, science and foreign language classes
were often
limited because of this shortage. Today,
distance learning
and elearning have changed the way school
districts
determine class schedules, making many more
opportunities
available to students.
Public schools have changed dramatically
over the past
century and a great number of those changes
can be put down
to two factors - state and federal mandates
governing the
classes that must be offered and requirements
for
graduation, and (of course) the ever-increasing
world of
technology.
Computers have made the world a global neighborhood
in
which anyone can instantly communicate with
those from
another country, even if that country is
half way around
the world. Language and time differences
are virtually the
only barriers. This means that distance
learning and
elearning are a part of the curriculum of
many schools.
As schools began to connect to the Internet,
the immediate
concern in most cases was how to regulate
the use. The next
was how to best use the technology to benefit
school
districts and students. Distance learning
and elearning
became the way to provide options, especially
in those
rural districts that couldn't meet state
mandates.
Consider the situation of many smaller,
rural schools. If
the school is required to offer a foreign
language but
can't recruit a teacher, what should happen
to that school?
Forced consolidations have been common in
some states.
Students lost the benefits of schools in
their own towns
and faced long bus rides to new districts.
With distance learning and elearning, more
schools can meet
the state and federal mandates to offer
specific classes.
Consider yet another situation. A smaller
district has four
students who show great promise in their
math studies and
it's quickly apparent that they could go
well beyond the
normal math classes offered in high school.
There's no one on the teaching staff capable
of teaching
those advanced concepts and it's financially
impossible to
hire someone for that task alone. Distance
learning or e-
earning could provide those classes.
Special needs children are another group
to greatly benefit
from distance learning and elearning. While
many issues can
only be dealt with between teacher and student,
face-to-
face, there are many things that can be
taught and learned
online.
Whether the subject of distance learning
or elearning is a
foreign language or sign language, and whether
the class or
courses are being offered to one student
or the entire
student body, distance learning and elearning
have become
an important tool for many public schools.
===========================================================
Find out why distance learning lets anyone
go back to
school. Discover what you need to look for
in a distance
learning program, and what you should avoid.
Click
http://www.distance-learning-exclusive.com/distance-learning-colleges.html
About the author:
John Tipton dropped out of school early,
and worked boring
jobs for 20 years. Then he discovered 'distance
learning'
and finally got the education he missed.
After lots of
different courses at lots of different schools,
Peter
shares his experience in this series of
useful articles.
Circulated by Bandoni
Media
|
|