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Showing 1 to 15 of 36 results Save | Export
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Colin Beer; Kate Ames; Noal Atkinson; Damien Clark; Peter Hosie – Journal of Global Education and Research, 2024
University degrees are usually delivered in defined sessions--by term, semester, or in week-based blocks--whereby students are required to complete their studies by the due date. Term or session-based schedules that require students to complete the study within set timeframes are, however, potentially restrictive. Temporal challenges associated…
Descriptors: Student Satisfaction, Electronic Learning, Flexible Scheduling, Teaching Methods
Melissa Lent – Center for an Urban Future, 2024
Nearly one-quarter (23 percent) of all degree-seeking undergraduate students at the City University of New York (CUNY) are adult learners--students over the age of 25. These students are juggling an outsized share of family and work responsibilities compared to the traditional 18-year-old freshman. They are much more likely to be among the 31…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Adult Learning, Family School Relationship, Paying for College
Tennessee Board of Regents - The College System of Tennessee, 2021
While statewide initiatives like Tennessee Reconnect have lowered the barriers to higher education access for many some college experience but no degree (SCND) adults, these efforts alone may be insufficient to ensure adults' success. The Pathways to Success for Students with Some College, No Degree project seeks to build a body of evidence about…
Descriptors: Adult Students, Reentry Students, Community College Students, Success
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Yoko Kobayashi – RELC Journal: A Journal of Language Teaching and Research, 2023
Situated in the domain of Global Englishes research, this study explores a question of how far the issue of the English model for Japanese learners is complicated by the hierarchical coexistence of regular English courses taught by Anglophone English teachers and extracurricular online English lessons taught by non-Anglophone instructors. A…
Descriptors: Teacher Student Relationship, Native Speakers, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
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Goode, Elizabeth; Nieuwoudt, Johanna Elizabeth; Roche, Thomas – Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, 2022
One Australian public university is radically changing the way it delivers higher education, introducing a 6-week immersive scheduling delivery model across all units and courses. Despite the emerging success of block and immersive models for raising the performance of diverse student cohorts, the design factors underpinning positive outcomes are…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Online Courses, Learning Modules, Synchronous Communication
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Houlden, Shandell; Veletsianos, George – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2019
Flexible approaches to online learning are gaining renewed interest in some part due to their capacity to address emergent opportunities and concerns facing higher education. Importantly, flexible approaches to online learning are purported to be democratizing and liberatory, broadening access to higher education and enabling learners to…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Higher Education, Access to Education, Criticism
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Cacicio, Sarah; Shell, Alison R.; Tare, Medha – Adult Literacy Education, 2022
In the hours following the 2020 COVID-19 outbreak and subsequent shutdown, educators across the nation were suddenly tasked with teaching online. As Jen Vanek describes in "Supporting Quality Instruction: Building Teacher Capacity as Instructional Designers (Part 1 of 3)" (EJ1344704), the majority of educators had to quickly learn and…
Descriptors: Adult Educators, Adult Education, Teaching Methods, COVID-19
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Safsouf, Yassine; Mansouri, Khalifa; Poirier, Franck – Journal of Information Technology Education: Research, 2020
Aim/Purpose: This study focuses on the learners' success toward learning management systems in higher education in Morocco and also proposes a theoretical model to better understand the determinants of learners' satisfaction, self-regulation and continuance intention to use these systems. For this purpose, variables which may have a positive or…
Descriptors: Management Systems, Metacognition, Student Attitudes, College Students
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Sheail, Philippa – Distance Education, 2018
This article engages with the persistent theme of flexibility in online distance education. It argues that, while a discourse of flexibility promises opportunities for access to online education, it also has the potential to devalue it by paying too little attention to education's time-consuming practices, often perpetuating a notion of teaching…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Distance Education, Access to Education, College Students
Martin, Michaela; Furiv, Uliana – UNESCO International Institute for Educational Planning, 2022
When making study choices, students often find it challenging to identify their interests and strengths. Higher education (HE) systems that do not offer opportunities for reorientation and transfer run the risk of some students never completing their studies. This policy brief examines the different flexible pathways institutions can choose to…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Student Interests, Educational Policy, Decision Making
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Mansbach, Jessica; Austin, Ann E. – Innovative Higher Education, 2018
Students' demand for online learning continues. At the same time, results of multiple studies from the early 2000s through the present day point to a set of common concerns that may explain faculty members' hesitation and resistance to online teaching. However, less is known about how faculty members experience online teaching, especially the…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Faculty Development, Teacher Attitudes, Teaching Methods
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Stone, Cathy; Freeman, Elizabeth; Dyment, Janet; Muir, Tracey; Milthorpe, Naomi – Australian and International Journal of Rural Education, 2019
Online study is generally associated with the terms "flexible" and "flexibility." Many students choose to study online specifically for the flexibility that is offered, hoping they can combine their studies with multiple other responsibilities in their lives. For students living in regional and rural areas, such flexibility can…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Flexible Scheduling, Equal Education, Educational Experience
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Jose, Betcy; Berry, Michael; Andrews, Leah – American Journal of Distance Education, 2019
This study investigates whether differences in learning styles exist between students in online and face-to-face (FTF) sections of political science courses taught by three instructors. Some studies suggest that student preferences regarding online or FTF formats are influenced by their preferred modes of learning. Independent learners, for…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Political Science, Cognitive Style, Online Courses
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Yu, Eunjyu – Journal of Educators Online, 2020
This article identifies factors that help Generation Z students succeed in a fully online learning environment for communication skills. Out of a diverse number of learner characteristics, the learners' home institutions significantly impacted their preference for instructional delivery modality. The participants described a flexible schedule and…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Age Groups, Online Courses, Blended Learning
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Stickney, Lisa T.; Bento, Regina F.; Aggarwal, Anil; Adlakha, Veena – Journal of Management Education, 2019
The nature and antecedents of faculty satisfaction in online higher education have not received much scholarly attention yet, despite the growing literature that indicates the relevance of faculty satisfaction for outcomes such as the success of e-learning programs, student learning, and student satisfaction. This exploratory study surveyed 171…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Teacher Attitudes, College Faculty, Job Satisfaction
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