Educate Yourself Online.com logo
Google
Web educate-yourself-online.com

Online Education News Archive

02-Jan-2008

  • Will Online Learning Work for You? (Benton Evening News)

    (ARA) - Want to advance your career or change jobs altogether? If the answer is yes, then what's holding you back? More often than not it's the lack of an advanced degree.


  • Psychology Degrees Through Online Education (The Beaver County Times)

    (ARA) - According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics 40 percent of psychologists are self-employed, with clinical psychologists earning anywhere from $50,000 to over $100,000. The average salary for a psychology professor was $82, 554 for the academic year of 2005-2006, according to the College and University Professional Association for Human Resources.


  • Online Education Increasingly Popular Among Students (Benton Evening News)

    (ARA) - Many people think about going to college. Whether they've never gone, have attended some college, or already obtained a degree, each person's situation and career goals are unique.


  • UI's Global Campus program readies for launch (The Champaign News-Gazette)

    12:01 a.m., Jan. 2: Zero hour for the University of Illinois Global Campus. More than two years since UI President B. Joseph White posed the idea of creating a fourth, virtual campus, and over a year since an administrative and faculty report put the proverbial stake in the ground and outlined a possible structure for the initiative, prompting numerous debates about how online education ...


  • Is Online Education Right for You? (Benton Evening News)

    (ARA) - These days getting an education online is so popular that you'll be hard pressed to find an institution that doesn't offer an assortment of Web-based programs. Still the format can be puzzling and cause you to think about things that you've always taken for granted.


  • Is Online Learning For You? (Benton Evening News)

    More and more college students are taking classes online, according to a new survey by the College Board and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. About 3.2 million people took at least one college course online during the fall of 2005 term, compared to 2.3 million in the fall of 2004.


  • Longview native touts online learning (The Daily News)

    Thanks to quickly evolving access to online education, teenage mothers can stay in school and still spend time at home caring for children.


  • The World's great Universities - Live & Online (Arts Journal)

    There has never been a more exciting time for the intellectually curious. The world's top universities have come late to the world of online education, but they're arriving at last, creating an all-you-can eat online buffet of information. And mostly, they are giving it away.


  • Back to Online Education News Archive