Some programs are self-paced,
others are
instructor-led, but all are managed by
highly experienced partners with excellent reputations.
-- Self-paced courses
are asynchronous, i.e., they can be started at any time; and students
can work at their own speed. Their content is presented via text,
photos, charts, images, PowerPoints with audio, video clips, and
other media which the student examines at his or her own pace. While
enrolled, students can pose questions and receive answers to their
questions from subject matter experts, usually within 24 hours.
-- Instructor-led courses
are synchronous, i.e., they have specified
starting dates, ending dates, and may have scheduled online meetings
during which the instructors make presentations and answer students'
questions. Assignments have specified due dates. Instructor-led courses
are usually more expensive than self-paced courses that cover a similar
range of subject matter at comparable depth.
Whenever possible, we will provide
alternative formats for the same subject, i.e., a self-paced course
AND an instructor-led course.
HUCE welcomes feedback from
students while courses are in session, requests extensive course
evaluations by students
when courses are over, and conducts periodic follow-up surveys of
students to determine how useful the courses have proven to be in the
students' quests for promotions, raises, and better job opportunities.
Question: Should you consider
taking online courses?
Answer: Yes, if you
can work in relative isolation for long periods of time. As Aristotle
observed, almost twenty-five hundred years ago, man is a social
animal. Most people feel a need for frequent interactions
with other people, and preferably face-to-face. Distance
learning offers the convenience of learning in one's own home or in
other comfortable study environments, and usually for a substantially
lower tuition than comparable face-to-face courses. But this convenience
and lower tuition carries a social cost: loss of face-to-face
contact with the instructor and with other students.
So the question becomes: Is
the amount of time required to take an online course within your personal
isolation limits? Only you can answer that question, and the
best way for you to discover your limits is by taking an online course
in a subject in which you are really interested. You should note that
asynchronous, self-paced courses may be cheaper, but they can be more
demanding than synchronous, instructor-led courses in this regard because
synchronous courses provide opportunities for you to interact with
other students who are currently enrolled in the same classes via email,
chat rooms, IM, discussion boards, wikis, blogs, and other Internet-based
media.