Online Learning Consortium

The Online Learning Consortium, formerly called the Sloan Consortium (Sloan-C),[1] is an institutional and professional leadership organization dedicated to integrating online education into the mainstream of higher education. The goal of the Online Learning Consortium is to "help institutions and individual educators improve the quality, scale, and breadth of online education."[2] The Consortium was originally funded by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, and is now a non-profit, member sustained organization.

The Online Learning Consortium (OLC) helps learning organizations continually improve quality, scale, and breadth of their online programs according to their own distinctive missions, so that education will become a part of everyday life, accessible and affordable for anyone, anywhere, at any time, in a wide variety of disciplines. OLC supports the collaborative sharing of knowledge and effective practices to improve online education in learning effectiveness, access, affordability for learners and providers, and student and faculty satisfaction.

OLC maintains a catalog of degree and certificate programs offered by a wide range of regionally accredited member institutions, consortia, and industry partners; provides speakers and consultants to help institutions learn about online methodologies; hosts conferences and workshops to help implement and improve online programs; publishes the OLC View, the journal Online Learning (formerly the Journal of Asynchronous Learning Networks, JALN), and annual volumes of applied research studies; and conducts research, annual surveys on online learning and forums to inform academic, government and private sector audiences. OLC also offers an awards program and an effective practices database so members can share the lessons they have learned.

OLC generates ideas to improve products, services and standards for the online learning industry, and assists members in collaborative initiatives. Members include (1) private and public universities and colleges, community colleges and other accredited course and degree providers, and (2) organizations and suppliers of services, equipment, and tools that practice the OLC quality principles.

External links

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, October 18, 2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.