Online courses continue to become more popular in the United States, and with good reason. In 2016-17, overall postsecondary enrollment dropped by almost half a percent, while the number of students who took at least some of their courses online grew by 5.7%. Over the last 15 years alone, online enrollment has quadrupled!
However, a report from George Mason University claims that the growth in online enrollment has been “disproportionately large in the for-profit sector.” Further, “online coursework has contributed to increasing gaps in educational success across socioeconomic groups while failing to improve affordability.” In essence, online is growing, but is it truly making higher education more available to those most in need?
Who is leading the trend today when it comes to online education? The following statistics help us see a clearer profile of the typical online student, and the more we see, the more it begins to make sense:
If you are wondering why online education is so popular, consider the key advantages which online education can bring for people in today’s busy world:
Online education is certainly changing the way we view pathways to career and vocational success. But not all institutions have yet started moving in this direction. We do expect to continue to see further changes, as institutions across the world begin to target new groups of individuals and handle the squeezing market. But it is this squeezing market and new set of technologies that makes online and distance education the next step to a truly globalized world of education.