Texas Students Could Be Required to Seek Off-Campus Learning OptionsBy Marc Parry
A Texas higher-education panel is recommending that students be required to complete at least 10 percent of their degrees outside the classroom, through options like online courses.
The proposal is one of several online-learning ideas in a new draft report prepared in response to Gov. Rick Perry's call for higher-education cost-savings recommendations.
The report also recommends that the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board be given authority to create a new institution to offer associate's programs online.
"If the University of Phoenix can be successful" providing online programs, "the question needs to be asked: Can the public sector do the same?" said Bernie Francis, a member of the committee of education and business leaders that the coordinating board established to produce the report. Mr. Francis, chief executive of Business Control Systems, stressed that he was offering his own opinion and not speaking on behalf of the committee.
It would be unusual for a state to mandate that college students take online courses, according to several national distance-learning experts. But there are other state and campus efforts now under way to shift instruction online. The Minnesota State Colleges and Universities, for example, announced a new push to have 25 percent of all system credits earned through online courses by 2015, nearly triple the 2008 level of 9.2 percent. ..........(more)
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http://chronicle.com/blogPost/Texas-Students-Could-Be/25935/