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Tempered Expectations

Survey shows academic leaders' enthusiasm for online education dipped in 2013 after interest among institutions with no such offerings faltered.
Opinion

Tech Alone Won't Cut It

Electronic advising systems have plenty of potential, writes Melinda Mechur Karp. But they will fall short without more attention to the messy, human side educational technology.

Scaling Back in San Jose

University will offer a new round of the courses it created with Udacity -- but this time as regular college classes.

Incomplete Rates

A survey of distance education providers shows colleges and universities are failing to track -- or refusing to report -- course completion rates.

The First Cohort

AT&T employees, men and domestic students dominate the first cohort of Georgia Tech's new fully online master's degree program.

Rutgers Boycott Expands

Professors in School of Arts and Sciences joins the Graduate School in shunning online program partnership with Pearson.

Competent at What?

Lumina Foundation creates group of colleges working on competency-based degrees, with goals of defining what works and what, exactly, competency-based education should be.

Confirming the MOOC Myth

At a conference on MOOC research, speakers back up commonly held beliefs about the medium with data.