Online schools could provide the solution to many of the problems faced by mature students. With more and more people finding that they need extra qualifications to advance in the employment market, mature students are often faced with a dilemma; how to obtain those coveted higher educational qualifications whilst juggling work, family and financial commitments. The ability to study online gives a prospective mature student the opportunity to study for a degree and other courses through their online education programs.
By studying through online schools, students are able to maintain their current standard of living, while working towards a better lifestyle. As such, there are many online schools offer a multitude of degree programs. But for those looking to pick up a new skill, better their performance at work, meet people, or just have fun, online classes are also a great idea. I also believe that attending online schools are perfect for people who are working full time because of the flexibility it allows. Since there is often no set class time, you can study and do the course work at your own pace, and whenever it is convenient for you!
ARE ONLINE SCHOOLS CONVENIENT FOR SPECIAL NEEDS STUDENTS?
Online schools have revolutionized the workplace for skilled teachers and administrators. The result of this union is the ability to create a tailored classroom for gifted, struggling and needs-based students that, until the advent of online learning, were often segregated to specialty teaching groups to meet their potential. As such, online schools can be of great help to students with disabilities allowing them to access materials in a digital format from home. However, if the material is not accessible, it can isolate students and lower their standard of education. But overall, online schools offer advantages over their campus-based counterparts. If you are looking for convenience, program choice, and a more satisfying classroom experience, you may find that online schools are superior to traditional college campuses. These type internet schools can obviously market almost anywhere in the world – they don’t care whether students come from Bar Harbor, ME or Chula Vista, CA. Last month alone, it was reported that there were over 4.5 million searches for ‘online college’. That’s a lot of searches! That this tells me is that there are a lot of people looking to expand on a particular skill set and/or better their existing knowledge. It may also mean that more and more students with special needs find it more convenient to learn from the privacy of their home in their own environment.
IS ATTENDING ONLINE SCHOOLS RIGHT FOR YOU?
Don’t get me wrong here, yes it is true, online schools are held to the same strict standards of quality, learning effectiveness, accessibility, and affordability by which traditional learning institutions abide. It has even been noted that man online schools have some of the best faculty in the country. There are hundreds of Accredited online schools that recruit only the best professors in their fields, most of whom are currently working in the their respective field. Another great reason why you should attend an online school is that they have limited overheads; they do not have to heat or cool classrooms for students, or repair buildings. Which brings me to my main point here that online schools will often cost less and take less time to complete making it easier for some to get the education that has been only dreamed of!
I believe that online schools are definitely the schools of the future although the heart of the battle in recognizing it full stop is really all about the personal contact between a student and teacher. Now, if you can push all the distraction aside since you have complete control of your environment, studying from home online can provide an education at a much lower cost than a brick and mortar school. Any online school merits exploration and asking the correct questions may assist students in selecting a suitable program. And certain online schools may also provide the opportunity to interact with students and teachers through message boards, email addresses, and live chat. Besides, is the half hour lunch break at traditional brick and mortar schools really enough time to socialize anyway? It is important to start today and research the possibilities of a new promotion at an existing company or even a new career of your dreams.
By: D. Grace
Baking Cookies While Attending Online Schools at Home
March 16th, 2010 by admin No comments »The Moral Education of Children
March 15th, 2010 by admin No comments »
Many parents are concerned about laying a good foundation for their children that they might grow to become moral, responsible adults. In part, parents often rely on Sunday school or other types of religious education to help convey the message of morality. In raising moral children, there are a few points that bear remembering.
First, child rearing is a developmental endeavor. That implies that children progress through moral stages and understandings at a certain (variable) pace. There is little evidence that children can be hurried along the developmental journey. There is a developmental track for moral development, social development, and cognitive development. All areas of development come into play in our efforts to raise moral children. Jean Piaget, the famous developmentalist, reminds us that young children have not yet arrived at the stage of formal, symbolic thought.
Many parents will attempt to moralize with children in abstract, moral discussions-suitably “watered-down,” or so they think, to meet their kids where they are. However, if research on cognitive development is at all correct, it is unlikely that children are being “converted” to a moral or religious stance. They may say “yes” and seem to get the point, but it is unlikely that they do.
A much better approach is to work on actions involving simple reciprocity, things like sharing of toys and friends. Young children are naturally egocentric. By involving them in such simple understandings as “you scratch my back, I’ll scratch yours,” children come to see simple morality as pragmatic, paving the way for the later stages when formal reasoning makes children receptive to more abstract appeals.
In terms of social development, Erik Erikson would no doubt point us to those natural conflicts that occur at each advancing stage of development. In the early stages when a child struggles between trust and mistrust, and shame and guilt vs. autonomy, children need reassurance. If they are subjected to constant moralizing and put-downs, they will likely adopt an outlook of inferiority. In addition, they will become increasing likely to look to an outside locus of control. The best way to raise autonomous, responsible adults is by acceptance as opposed to constant correction. Erikson’s theory predicts that someone might “get stuck” at an early stage if that stage is not successfully navigated.
Furthermore, problems may appear during the adolescent identity crisis of even later in adulthood. Lawrence Kohlberg was a theorist of moral development. His theory reminds us that young children do not see the world in such philosophical categories as moral or immoral. Here the focus is on reward and punishment. What is good is what brings a reward. They also develop a sense of parity; one hand washes the other. “If you are nice to me, I’ll be nice to you,” is one of the earliest orientations. In late childhood, children reach a stage of wanting things to be fair and law-driven. Here they are concerned about following the rules. It is not until adolescence or later that kids begin to see right and wrong in truly moral terms. From this perspective, the best we can do is “play along” with development. We must never expect young children to have a truly moral view of things. This is something they are “nurtured into.”
If caregivers follow the rule of gentle persuasion and fairness, children will naturally move into an understanding of morality. What about religious instruction? James Fowler has spoken to this at length. Combining theories of earlier theorists, he has noted that the earliest claim to faith is affiliative. Children make “professions of faith” to please their parents and feel a sense of unity with them. It is very doubtful that children really understand the notion of freely chosen conversion before early adolescence. How do we put all of this together to get some direction?
Follow the developmental curve. Meet children where they are. Do not moralize with them, and do not expect more than they are able to deliver. Keep discipline mild, and aim it towards learning such socialization skills as sharing in a polite and caring way. Do not expect little ones to be too selfless. Remember that childhood is not a race; the stages cannot be bypassed. Accept children where they are developmentally, and provide a warm nurturing environment. If we “teach from behind,” letting the child’s natural developmental stages take the lead, we will be doing the best we can to raise moral, responsible children who grow into moral, responsible adults.
By: James Alexander