Filter & Sort
Learning to Adapt
Newark's Essex County College tried adaptive learning software to improve remedial math success rates. It hasn't worked, as students and faculty have struggled with the "self-regulated" approach to learning.
Multiple Personalities, Disorder
Researchers at Harvard U and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology find a uniquely MOOC way of cheating.
Taking a Step Back
Middlebury will sell its stake in for-profit online language learning provider, an initiative that never sat right with many faculty members. But future online education initiatives are in the works.
'Women Supporting Women Online'
Bay Path University, a women's college, has expanded its enrollment by moving beyond its traditional student population. Can it find success online?
Does Online Ed Lack 'Integrity'?
A last-minute wording change in Hillary Clinton's higher education plan about online programs draws criticism from distance learning experts.
Opinion
Going Online, Being Digital
After more than 25 years of technology-enabled education, college leaders are shifting their focus to how digital technology can improve learning of all kinds, Peter Stokes argues.
Antiskimming Software
Business professors find another use for software created to help them teach case studies: preventing students from skimming.
Opinion
Feuding Over Digital Courseware
The debate over digital courseware's adoption suffers from oversimplification, writes Gates Bryant, who breaks down the nuances of the important discussion.
Pagination
Pagination
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