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To: Jim Mulis who wrote (2318)7/27/1998 3:10:00 PM
From: whitephosphorus  Respond to of 4748
 
Stanford Release- Probably not eSchool

7/24/98

CONTACT: Imelda Oropeza, SCPD (650) 725-1538
e-mail: imelda@stanford.edu
David F. Salisbury, News Service (650) 725-1944
e-mail: david.salisbury@stanford.edu

Stanford offering its first complete online
degree program

This fall Stanford University will offer its first completely online
degree program: a master's in electrical engineering.

The students accepted into the degree program will compete
for graduate admission directly with electrical engineering
students who intend to complete their graduate work on
campus.

Related Information:

Stanford Center for Professional
Development
Stanford Center for Telecommunications
Electrical Engineering Department

"To the best of our knowledge, we will be the first major
research university in the U.S. to offer a master's degree
totally online," says Joseph Goodman, professor of electrical
engineering and senior associate dean of the School of
Engineering.

For nearly 30 years, Stanford's School of Engineering has
offered graduate engineering degree programs, non-credit
courses, certificate programs, seminars and short courses to
distance learners at some 300 companies using a combination
of microwave, videotape, satellite and two-way digital video
technology. Since 1994, the Stanford Center for Professional
Development (SCPD) has been experimenting with delivery of
courses via the Internet. After a research project with the
Stanford Center for Telecommunications demonstrated the
demand for online access among working professionals,
SCPD established Stanford Online to deliver Stanford
courses to the desktop of the distance learner. The service
already offers Stanford credit for a variety of online courses,
but, until now, there have not been enough online offerings to
allow a student to obtain an advanced degree in this fashion.

The start-up costs of putting the 30 courses being offered in
the new program online are being supported by a $450,000
grant from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. The grant will
cover incremental costs for the first two years of the program.
By the third year, participants expect it to be self-supporting.
The new web-based offerings will be priced similarly to
existing remotely delivered courses, which are considerably
more expensive than normal tuition.

The technologies involved in offering the online program
include audio/video streaming with synchronized slide shows.
Other technologies allow the electronic distribution of class
handouts and notes, synchronous and asynchronous
interaction among the students and between the students and
their instructors, and in some cases the electronic posting of
homework and exams. Stanford has joined with Microsoft
and Compaq to provide its online students with
state-of-the-art communications technology.

"We are going to give the people in industry the same courses
as if they were here on campus," says John Hennessy, dean of
the School of Engineering. "They will experience the same
intellectual rigor, the same up-to-date treatment of material.
This is what makes Stanford's continuing education programs
so successful."

Stanford studies have found that there is no difference
between distance learners and on-campus students when
judged by test scores, according to the program's overseers:
Goodman; Dale Harris, executive director of the Center for
Telecommunications; and Andy DiPaolo, director of the
Stanford Center for Professional Development and senior
associate dean. Under certain conditions, distance learners
actually score higher.

"In the industrial age we went to school. In the communication
age the school comes to us," DiPaolo says. "Through Stanford
Online we intend to prove this concept by making a portion of
the graduate engineering curriculum available to qualified
students anywhere, anytime and on demand."

On the other hand, there is little doubt that "virtual" students
miss out on a number of very valuable intellectual experiences
available on campus. To compensate at least partially for this
lack, the Center for Telecommunications will provide online
students with a variety of interactive seminars, regular online
discussions of relevant topics, and non-credit short courses on
practical telecommunications topics.

"Our primary goal is education," Harris says. "We will
consider our online degree to be successful only if it's the
highest quality available, and if the education of its graduates
compares favorably in all respects with that received by their
on-campus counterparts."

The Department of Electrical Engineering is one of 10
academic departments in the School of Engineering at
Stanford. Its graduate program was ranked first among those
at American universities by the National Research Council in
1995. The department awards approximately 285 master's
degrees annually. Participants expect about 50 students to
sign up for the online degree. By studying full time, a student
can obtain the degree in a single year. But most distance
learners are expected to take three to four years to complete
the program, producing a graduation rate of 10 to 15 online
master's students per year.



To: Jim Mulis who wrote (2318)7/27/1998 7:30:00 PM
From: art slott  Respond to of 4748
 
Hi ole buddy.
Here's an interesting site. At the bottom they talk about how cable must add new types of content.
mediainfo.com

Art