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Opinion

Emergency Remote Instruction Is Not Quality Online Learning

Widespread misconceptions have arisen, write members of the National Council for Online Education, but when done correctly, online courses can be as effective as face-to-face ones.

Colleges Cope With IT Staff Flight in Wake of Pandemic

With information technology skills in high demand across industries, many colleges are finding they can’t hold on to talent.

A Massive Disruption, a Range of Student Reactions

Age, gender and year in college affected how likely students were to struggle with remote learning and mental health challenges during the pandemic, according to the National Survey of Student Engagement.

Course Hero, Ed-Tech Company, Hires Ed-Tech Critic

The platform for sharing course materials is hiring critical digital pedagogy scholar Sean Michael Morris to help it reinvent how it approaches teaching and learning.

Community College’s Controversial Partnership Draws Federal Scrutiny

U.S. Department of Education has started a program review to study financial aid practices at Ohio’s Eastern Gateway Community College.

Gender Identity Norms Shift, and Institutions Move to Reflect Them

Institutions are tweaking campus information systems to make them better reflect students’ gender identities but are finding the technology to do so challenging.

An Online ‘Moon Shot’ for the Developing World

A new, free online certificate program from Arizona State’s Thunderbird School of Global Management will be offered in 40 languages and seeks to reach refugees, women and others in the developing world.

UAGC's Struggles Grow as Lawsuit and Investigation Outcomes Loom

With its accreditor’s decision on potential sanctions due soon, the University of Arizona Global Campus is also contending with lower-than-expected enrollment and a California lawsuit against its corporate partner.