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Online Education News Archive

26-Mar-2007

  • Invest in Yourself and Make Your Dreams Happen (Advocate Tribune)

    (ARA) - Don P., a federal law enforcement official from Texas, knew he wanted a better career, but wasn't certain about how to get it. "At the time I was looking for a career change from information technology and I thought a criminal justice degree would help me do that.


  • ClassesUSA.com Launches Exclusive Online Education Tips & Advice Section (PR Newswire via Yahoo! Finance)

    ClassesUSA.com®, an Experian company and the Web's leading provider of online higher-education information, announced the launch of its online education Tips & Advice section.


  • Global Cash Flow Network, Inc. Transforms The Work At Home And Home Business Industry With Free Online Education, ... (PRWeb via Yahoo! News)

    Global Cash Flow Network announces the world premier of the ultimate one stop shopping program...My Web Cash Store...where buying and selling products and services from major brand name stores from one location never was easier.


  • Online Education Puts Highly Valuable Psychology Degrees Within Reach (Evening 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.


  • Is Online Learning For You? (Southwest Daily 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.


  • Online education slow to load (The Springfield News-Leader)

    Jefferson City -- Missouri, for the first time this fall, will offer hundreds of students a chance to take online courses for free throughout the state. But many parents are upset because middle-school students will be left out for now.


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