My hometown news channel recently posted an AP story about how traditional students seem to enjoy “distance” learning, sometimes registering for online courses even if they live on campus.
What does this mean for small liberal arts institutions?
What does this mean for the (near) future of graduate school?
Will we see a dramatic increase in options for working from home?
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Comments 1
I found your website and thought you may be interested in MyiCourse.com, a free, web-based, e-learning platform that is “just right” for those faculty members who want the freedom to create their own on-line educational site, but do not have the budget, servers, IT department support or programming skills to access the typical e-learning solutions. Yes, I did say it was free. No limits. No contracts. No stripped down “free version” with the “real version” requiring money. MyiCourse platform allows a multi-media approach using video, audio, images and PDFs. We emphasize accountability for the students. Students are timed, tested and they can send their transcripts after course completion. MyiCourse.com also allows sharing of academic courses for all to use. In short, a great course on one of our sites can be imported and placed in the course catalog of other MyiCourse sites. MyiCourse also allows you to create a public site for everyone, or a private site that is closed and password protected.
I would invite you to drop by MyiCourse.com and click on the Learning Center link. Another option would be to Google Myicourse and see what others are saying. I would be most pleased to spend some time with you or others on the telephone and give you an online tour. Let me know what you think. MyiCourse.com, flattening the world one course at a time.
Thanks for listening.
Steve Foreman
Posted 13 Jan 2008 at 5:36 pm ¶steve@myicourse.com
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