Sunday, July 18, 2010

On UC's Risky Venture Into Online Education / Mortarboards without the bricks

On UC's Risky Venture Into Online Education / Mortarboards without the bricks

On UC's Risky Venture Into Online Education

Mortarboards without the bricks

Sunday, July 18, 2010
Christopher Edley, dean of UC Berkeley School of Law, says online education could be an effective way to cut costs and preserve opportunity.
A handful of administrators at the University of California are spearheading an effort to create an ambitious online educational program for undergraduates. The idea is that UC could become the first top-tier American university to offer a bachelor's degree over the Internet. It's a thought-provoking, fascinating and innovative concept. It's also a highly risky experiment.
Online education has a place - even in the university system. For students, it's impossible to beat the convenience and the accessibility of online learning. For workers, it can be a great way to expand their knowledge base without having to leave their jobs. Corporations, small businesses, even traffic schools - all of these institutions have shown that there's a positive place for online education in our society.
But that doesn't mean that the UC should jump into the fray.
As it stands now, online education is a hodgepodge effort by private, for-profit companies that are making gobs of money - but not providing much in the way of quality to students. UC Berkeley Law School Dean Christopher Edley, who is leading the online charge, said he first noticed this while serving on a university task force about


Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/07/17/ED4S1EDLBO.DTL#ixzz0u2nNnPiy