Posts Tagged learning
Online Learning and Higher Education
One way that the use of networks in online learning could be approached is to take a conventional campus-based model of higher education, with lectures and tutorials, and overlay these with telecommunications to make them “distant”. Let us look at the ingredients in turn.
Lectures can be televised, with a lecturer at one location being displayed on large screens at some remote lecture theater, or even in industrial concerns or homes. The EuroPACE enterprise of the late 1980s was supported by a number of commercial organizations. International authorities were filmed, in studios, lecturing on their subjects. These lectures were transmitted by satellite to the subscribers, who typically recorded the programs at their site and viewed the material at their leisure. Those studying the material could contact the lecturer over the following months, if they so chose. The enterprise was discontinued after a number of years, though there have been attempts to resurrect this. It seems to have failed because of the extreme remoteness of the student, with no real ability to ask questions or other devices to engage the student in the process of learning.
Tags: course, courses, distance education, distance learning, distance learning course, distance learning courses, e learning, e learning courses, education, higher education, learning, learning courses, online, online learning, program, programs, science, special, student, students, study, training, tutors, universities, universityRelated posts
Computer Education – The Most Common Mistakes People Make in Computer Education
Computers have become an essential part of everyday lives. With the ever growing number of computer applications to learn, people easily can get frustrated. So lets look at some common mistakes people make when trying to learn how to use the computer or software such as Office, Word, Excel, Ebay etc…
Mistake 1
People tend to beat themselves up unnecessarily. In the computer world, mistakes are quite common. Just entering one incorrect letter, number, or symbol and your whole operation can grind to a halt. Even the very best of us has accidentally deleted the wrong file. When it comes to operating complex software applications you should not feel bad when problems occur.
Related posts
College Financial Aid – How Your Student Can Help
There are a number of things you can do to prepare your child for no debt college besides starting a college savings account. In my family I taught my kids the value of money and as they finished high school, the importance of investing. My goal was for them to take ownership of their money and to know how easily it can slip away. I wanted to raise savers and not borrowers. This pays off when they go to college because they will avoid the prison of credit cards so promoted on college campuses and they will become partners with me in getting grants for their education.
As a young parent I never saved for college. But I did something even better: I taught my kids the value of money and the horrors of debt. Now they have lifelong skills regarding money that will enable them to succeed from college all they way to a comfortable retirement. I began early to expect that they be involved in the process of managing money. My wife’s parents have faithfully given all their grandkids money at Christmas. So I made a point to set up “Accounts” for all my kids where I could keep a ledger for them of their savings balance and interest earned. I paid them the going CD interest rate, typically 5% and enjoyed explaining to them how their money grew over time by earning interest from the bank. Whenever they spent some money, I showed them how it left their account. And should they ever spend over their balance, I showed how they got charged interest for debt. This taught them the value of money in a tangible way. Proof of the result from this training can be found in my oldest daughter’s bank account. A junior at a university, she has $10,000 in her checking account from work and savings that earns 4% interest. She makes $30 a month in interest while her peers pay that on their credit card debt. Granted, I also coached her how to find a free checking account that pays 4%, but I have been training her to think this way since she was three years old. She is learning that wealth creation builds peace and makes life much more fun. Think she will have a peaceful, successful life as an adult? You bet. You should train your kids the same way. Start early.
Tags: accounting, adult, college, college degree, college s, college savings, community college, course, credit card, credit cards, degree, education, financial aid, for college, go to college, grants, high school, higher education, learning, money for college, parents, pay for college, quality, scholarship, scholarships, school, schools, science, student, students, training, universityRelated posts