What Is College At Home?
Basically, college at home means that the students do not take
their courses in a regular college classroom that they must travel
to. College at home is called distance education or distance
learning. Distance education means that the student, professor,
and college location are separated in some fashion. Generally
this means that the student completes most of their course work
in the comfort of their own home.
Distance education is simply a delivery method. Rather than
come to class and hear a lecture from a professor, the class is
delivered in another fashion. Distance education is not new.
Many authorities feel that the first home study course consisted
of lessons in shorthand offered by Caleb Phillips and advertised
in the Boston Gazette in 1728. This was before the U.S. was a
nation. In 1891 International Correspondence Schools was born
and offered vocational level courses. By 1913 ICS had enrolled
over 1.6 million students from around the world in one of their
150 courses. ICS remained in business until just a few years ago
when it was sold to a large book publisher. Over the years ICS
offered a variety of subjects like jewelry making, pet grooming,
animal care, early childhood education, teacher assistant, and
dental assistant. They also began offering high school diplomas
and associate degrees. You may have seen advertisements on
television for ICS over the years. Colleges began establishing
correspondence divisions starting in 1891 with the University of
Chicago. (Information for this paragraph taken from "We
Succeed Through Home Study" by Howard Poteet, 1986).
| Correspondence, Radio, and TV Courses |
Distance education has taken different forms over the years. The
correspondence model is very popular to this day. The US Postal
Service is used to get mail from the school to the student and
vice versa. Students receive their books and a study guide by
mail when they register for a class. The study guide is like a blue
print for the course. It spells out exactly how you are to proceed.
It lists reading assignments in the text as well as some type of
assessment like a quiz or written assignment. Students mail the
assignments to the instructor who grades the assignment and
then returns feedback to the student. Some correspondence
courses have a separate text book and sometimes the reading
material or lessons are written by the school's faculty. College
courses frequently require one or more proctored exams. The
school sets up a criteria of who may serve as a proctor but
usually it can be a librarian, certified teacher, local college
professor, education officer, or clergy.
In the past courses have been offered over the radio. Students
listened to lectures delivered over the radio and completed
assignments and a proctored exam. This lost its appeal as other
technology developed. College courses are offered on television
sponsored by a local college. Students might be required to come
to campus for a short orientation at the beginning and a final
exam at the end of the course but in-between students watch the
course on TV. The lectures are generally shown on a public
station very early in the morning. Students who can not watch
when they are shown on TV can video tape the programs or
rent/borrow the tapes at the library. These TV courses are still
very popular and the ones that I have seen are very well
produced.
Courses can also be delivered by some type of satellite
connection at a specific facility. For instance, a company can set
up such a program where employees can watch a course on
closed circuit television at their place of work which can be far
from the actual college. This is great for company sponsored
educational programs but not good for an individual learners.
The newest innovation in distance education is college courses
delivered over the Internet. Students use their computer and their
Internet Service Provider (ISP) to access their online classes.
When a student registers for a course they are provided with a
sign on name and a password. Most online courses are similar to
a regular 15 week semester. Some colleges also offer
compressed 6 or 8 week semester. The college usually provides
some type of orientation for "newbies" so they know what to do
and how to navigate the system. Online courses are completely
different and unfamiliar to students who are not familiar with the
online format. There is no room number that you find by walking
down the hall and no teacher sitting at a desk to greet you.