Leaked List Shows Top Government and Law Enforcement Officials Possess Bogus Degrees

A list featuring the names of over 9,000 degree mill “graduates” was released today by the

A list featuring the names of over 9,000 degree mill “graduates” was released today by the
European researchers participating in the European Learning Grid Infrastructure (ELeGI) project recently completed an online learning platform that automatically responds to individual students’ learning styles as well as teacher input. The ELeGI promises to revolutionize online pedagogy by rendering the online learning platform fluid: instead of adapting to the platform, teachers have the platform adapt to them.

The actual driving portion of driver’s education courses remains offline, for obvious reasons.
One of

John McCain is thus far the sole candidate who has discussed online education.
As the presidential campaign nears a fever pitch, candidates have been expanding, revising, and flip-flopping their positions at an ever increasing pace. In fact, one would be hard-pressed to find a subject upon which either candidate has not opined. Yet, the campaign discussion surrounding online education is barely a whisper—surprising neglect for a topic that directly affects millions of Americans. Hit the jump for our assessment of both candidates’ positions.

Blackboard + open source = future?
The course management behemoth Blackboard has recently announced a partnership with the open-source course manager

Old school.
Anyone who has attended an institution of higher learning in the last several decades can attest to the astronomically high cost of textbooks. Students frustrated by the seemingly unjustifiably high price of course materials can take solace in the rising popularity of “open textbooks.” These books contain all the same content as their “closed” counterparts, with one important difference—they are free. While some online schools have been using free or low cost ebooks in the place of traditional textbooks for several years, the expansion of this trend to brick-and-mortar institutions is encouraging. Once again, technology first adopted by online schools is spreading to the mainstream. (

Are online degrees more acceptable today than they were five years ago?
The results of a recent poll conducted by career statisticians Vault, Inc. maligning the quality of online education have been widely publicized in the last week. But are the results as significant as many publications have claimed they are? Probably not. Moreover, most reports (in CNN Money and Yahoo Finance) gloss over the finding that does point to improving attitudes toward online degrees—83% of respondents stated that online degrees are more acceptable today than they were five years ago.

One of the biggest barriers to creating an online learning environment identical in experience to traditional education is test proctoring. A provision in a bill expected to pass before Congress by the fall aims to resolve this issue by mandating that universities use biometric technologies to proctor online tests.

A deleted scene from the 2007 film I Am Legend depicts Robert Neville (Will Smith) attending a
According to a July 10 article in Science Daily, online courses taken by nursing and healthcare staff could prove essential in combating an epidemic outbreak. While the article’s headline is misleading–it’s actually about how an online course helped hospital staff learn to contain the risk of hospital-acquired infection–online tutorials could in fact be key to containing a real-life epidemic. The rapid distribution of information on online learning platforms makes it easy for a central authority to respond to a crisis by sending out an informational bulletin.

But is the program accredited?
The Je Khenpo,