Filter & Sort
What Worked This Spring? Well-Designed and -Delivered Courses
Professors and students alike viewed their remote learning experience most favorably this spring when their courses incorporated more "best practices." That's the path to making the inevitable virtual education better this fall.
COVID-19 Roundup: More Universities Announce Online Plans
Rutgers, Harvard, Princeton and Georgetown announce mostly online fall terms while ICE says international students cannot study fully online and remain in U.S. Georgia system reverses course on masks.
The Role of Learning in Colleges' Decisions About Fall
Presidents give their colleges and universities mixed grades on the remote learning they offered last spring. How is that influencing their decisions about reopening campuses this fall?
A Discounted ‘Gap Year’ Online
Park University is encouraging students from other institutions to transfer and study online for a year at a discounted tuition rate. Are special offers like this a good idea?
Trying to Make Sense of a Fluid Fall
As more colleges announce their instructional plans, two simulations suggest some of the likely challenges to a physical return. Others see opportunity for experimentation around teaching and learning.
Opinion
A Day in the Life of a Remote Undergraduate Student: Fall 2020
Beth Seltzer envisions how the term may unfold for a student who remains off campus in September.
Opinion
A Day in the Life of a Remote Instructor: Fall 2020
Jenae Cohn envisions how the term may unfold for a faculty member who remains off campus in September.
‘We’re All in This Together’
Most instructors were novices in a new environment last spring, and many sought help. In preparation for fall, colleges and others share their expertise freely. Here are some new initiatives.
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