Education Trends Blog by Gatlin Education Services

Provides information about online and traditional education trends.


Archive for August, 2007

Join us at the National Council for Continuing Education and Training (NCCET) annual conference.

Friday, August 31st, 2007

Gatlin Education Services will be attending the NCCET national conference in Louisville, Kentucky on Oct. 7 - 10. The NCCET conference is one of the best continuing education conferences of the year. The Council is committed to providing its members with benefits that keep them up to date on new trends, help maintain a personal and professional network, and give access to the latest leading edge programs throughout the country.

The NCCET leadership is active on the national scene, working with AACC Commissions, such as the Commissions on Economic and Workforce Development, and Learning and Communications Technologies. NCCET has actively been contributing to national policy development through our sponsorship of national colloquia on certification and credentialing (2001) and transcripting (2003), as well as our authorship of White Papers on these important topics.


Colorado State Approves Online University.

Thursday, August 30th, 2007

This post comes from The Chronicle’s Wired Campus Blog.

Yet another state university is hoping to strike gold with online education for working adults. Colorado State University’s Board of Governors on Friday approved $4.5-million for the creation of an online university, according to an article Sunday in the Coloradoan.

The online, nonprofit university, to be called CSU-Colorado, is being developed with the Colorado Community College system. It is expected to cost a total of $12-million and be open for business next year.

“We must reach broader student populations, particularly those who are geographically isolated or fall into nontraditional categories because of family, work, and financial need,” said the chancellor of the CSU system, Larry Edward Penley, in a statement posted on the university’s Web site.

Is demand for online education great enough to support another online institution from a state university? The University of Illinois and the University of North Carolina announced their own distance-education spinoffs earlier this year.


The adult education balancing act.

Monday, August 27th, 2007

This post comes from Canada.com. Going back to school when you have a job and a family is a daunting prospect. Now, imagine you’re also a single parent. Belynda Lee-Tjandra, an admissions officer at the Art Institute of B.C., opted for a distance-learning program with Alberta’s Athabasca University that let her work online at her own pace. She was also able to transfer half the needed credits toward her bachelor of administration degree from a college management program she’d previously completed. But she still felt like giving up more than once. “Balancing family, career and studies was taking its toll,” she admits.

She stuck it out, becoming part of a growing wave of adult students looking for new careers, advancement or just a personal challenge. The number of full-time adult students more than tripled between 1976 and 1996, and continues to rise, according to Statistic Canada. In 2001, 14% of men and 15% of women were taking courses, the majority earning a post-secondary degree at a community college or vocational school. Click here to read the rest of this article.


Blackboard, competitor reach agreement to end court fight.

Friday, August 24th, 2007

This post comes from BizJournals. IParadigms LLC has agreed not to sue educational software company Blackboard Inc. to settle a lawsuit.

Both companies sell online learning platforms for educational institutions. D.C.-based Blackboard provides software that universities and high schools use to put course materials and other information online. In July it released a new plagiarism detection feature.

Oakland, Calif.-based iParadigms sells online applications to identify plagiarism.

IParadigms received a patent May 15 related to technology for conducting a peer review process and evaluating the originality of documents.

Blackboard filed a lawsuit Aug. 3 asking a California federal court to prevent a patent infringement lawsuit by iParadigms and issue a finding that the company’s new patent is invalid. Blackboard chief legal officer Matt Small said his company began receiving “threatening” letters from iParadigms July 6.

Legal experts said Blackboard would needed to have convinced a judge that the company had a reasonable fear that iParadigms would sue for infringement to secure an order preventing a case before one was ever filed. Click here to read the rest of this article.


Sloan-C Annual International Conference on Online Learning announced.

Thursday, August 23rd, 2007

The Sloan Consortium will be holding their International Conference on Online Learning in Orlando, Florida from November 7 - 9. This conference, which will provide the latest information on asynchronous learning programs, processes, packages, and protocols, is geared to both experienced professionals and interested newcomers to online learning who hail from a variety of work sectors, including higher education, continuing education, business, government, health care, professional associations, and nonprofit organizations. It is especially designed to meet the needs of:

  • College-level faculty and administrators
  • Instructional technology and media professionals
  • Instructional designers
  • Trainers in public-and private-sector organizations

Adult scholarships available for low-income women to pursue education, training.

Wednesday, August 22nd, 2007

This post comes from District Chronicles. The AARP Foundation has a new scholarship program to help low-income women 40 and above to participate in education and training opportunities. Approximately 100 scholarships ranging from $500 to $5,000 are expected to be awarded in the first round. The process opens August 31, 2007 online at www.aarp.org/womensscholarship. Applications are only available online.

Priority will be given to women who are:

1. returning to the workforce after an extended absence;

2. individuals who are underemployed (in a job with limited pay, limited growth opportunities and limited benefits); or

3. grandmothers or other female relatives raising another family member’s child/children (with the ability to demonstrate significant financial responsibility for those child/children).

The application deadline is October 31, 2007. Scholarship recipients will be notified in January 2008 and funds will be made available shortly thereafter.


More students finish School, Given the Time.

Tuesday, August 21st, 2007

This post comes from the New York Times. Faced with 70,000 students or more who are years behind in obtaining the credits needed to graduate from high school, New York City is at the forefront of a movement to recognize that for a significant number, high school might stretch into five, six, even seven years.

David Dorsey, 22, with a diploma, and his mother, Lydia. He said of a counselor, “I just decided to show up to get her off my back.”

In an effort that has expanded across Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg’s second term, the city has spent nearly $37 million to identify and cater to students who are at the biggest risk of dropping out and has already contracted for $31 million more in programs.

The staggering numbers of those who are far behind cover almost a quarter of the city’s public high school population — students like Sunil Ragoonath, who at 18 had passed barely enough courses at John Adams High School in Queens to be considered a sophomore. He routinely skipped school. “All I had to do was walk out the door,” Mr. Ragoonath said recently.

To get younger students who have failed many classes back on track, Schools Chancellor Joel I. Klein has created more than two dozen “transfer schools,” and plans to open as many as 30 more over the next five years. The city also offers them intensive remedial courses.

For students past the traditional graduation age, the city has established special centers to provide counseling, night classes and an environment designed to avoid the stigma of being college age but in class with 14-year-olds. Some students also earn credits through summer school and community college classes.

When the programs began in 2004, they were serving roughly 2,000 students. That number has since ballooned to more than 7,000. Many students will graduate this week, after spending the summer earning final credits.

Mr. Ragoonath, now 19, plans to be one of them. Prodded by a guidance counselor, he enrolled last September in a center that runs night classes and promised him one last chance. Within months, he had earned a year’s worth of credits. This summer, he toiled over economics online and attended a fiber optics class at Queensborough Community College. “At last, I think I can say I am done,” he said.

New York is not unique in the vast number of students who are at risk of dropping out. In many large urban school systems, students, particularly poor minority students, can be as likely to drop out as to graduate, a decision that can have lifelong consequences. The earnings of high school dropouts have declined nearly a third over the past three decades, according to Achieve Inc., a nonprofit group that helps states raise academic standards. For those with no diploma, median family income was $32,379 in 1974, compared with $22,476 in 2004, measured in 2004 dollars.

Portland, Ore., Chicago and Boston are all using grants from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to study their own dropouts to start programs for students who have fallen woefully behind.

But nowhere is the effort as far along as in New York City. “The first thing we had to understand was how many kids were over age and off track — just to know the real size of the challenge we are dealing with,” said Adam Tucker, a program officer with the Gates Foundation, which gave New York a grant to study dropouts. Most of the city’s programs for dropouts are financed with taxpayer dollars.

New York officials acknowledge that students should complete high school in four years. But they consider every diploma a victory since the city’s four-year graduation rate hovers at 50 percent despite an uptick in recent years. For all students, the efforts end at 21, when the school system is no longer required by state law to educate them.

The push for alternatives came in part because of a lawsuit from a nonprofit group, Advocates for Children, which charged that many lagging students were being pushed out of school against their will. The suit was settled, and schools now conduct “exit interviews” with students who want to leave the system and suggest alternatives.

When officials began studying the problem in detail two years ago, there was only sketchy information about who these failing students were. New York commissioned a $2.6 million effort by the Parthenon Group, a Boston consulting firm, to find out more about those who left without diplomas.

With its data in hand, the officials roughly divide students into two groups. Younger students who are far behind enter the transfer schools, where smaller class sizes allow for personal attention. Students older than 17 who have enough credits to be considered at least a sophomore are sent to “young adult borough centers.” They take classes in traditional high schools, but at night, and with more individual attention.

“If I have a problem in class, I can go to the teacher and talk about it, not just sulk around,” said Monica Lopardo, 18, who transferred to the center affiliated with Lincoln High School in Brooklyn last year and expects to graduate in January.

School officials are convinced that with enough creativity, they can cobble together schedules to give the students the full platter of classes. “The transcripts come in a bit of a mess,” said Michele Cahill of the Carnegie Corporation, who created these alternative programs when she worked for Mr. Klein. “There are some who are missing all their gym classes but have passed three years of math.”

For those who work with these students, one of the most difficult tasks is convincing them that they can, and should, finish high school. “These are students who are really frustrated and ready to be out,” said Edita Volovodovskaya, who runs the John Adams Young Adult Borough Center, which is attached to John Adams High School. “But it takes a lot of work. They weren’t always willing to take a full load; they weren’t always willing to show up to class.”

That was precisely how David Dorsey behaved when he first started at the center. He was already 19 and half-heartedly thought he would have another shot at a diploma. But there were long stretches when he did not bother to show up. Then his phone would begin to ring. His counselor, a social worker from a local community center, called every day that he was absent.

“Finally I decided to pick up the phone, and this woman is on the other end saying, ‘Where are you? Get in here,’ ” Mr. Dorsey said. “I just decided to show up to get her off my back — otherwise she was going to be on my phone bill a lot.” He graduated at 21 and has now finished a semester at La Guardia Community College.

Night school also helps with the frustration of being older than classmates in traditional high schools. “You start to feel like an old man with little kids,” said Christian Alvarenga, who moved from regular school at John Adams to the night program after his fifth year of high school.

The embarrassment diminishes when students attend the borough centers. But they are still keenly aware that they are behind schedule.

Camry Petillo, 21, who finished the John Adams program in June, decided to forgo graduation. “I didn’t feel like I had a lot to celebrate,” she said. “I knew I should have been up there years ago.”


Florida leads growth in virtual schooling.

Monday, August 20th, 2007

This post is from eSchool News. The oldest and largest virtual school in the country, Florida Virtual School is still growing. Although some have raised questions about funding and the amount of social interaction that students receive, ed-tech advocates say the potential of FLVS, and other virtual schools, is unlimited, and can help struggling students become 21st century learners.
As a seventh-grader, Kelsey-Anne Hizer was getting mostly Ds and Fs and thought teachers at her Ocala, Fla., middle school weren’t giving her the help she needed. She was ready to give up. But after switching schools for eighth grade, Kelsey-Anne is receiving more individual attention, making As and Bs, and is enthusiastic about learning–even though she has never been in the same room as her teachers. Click here to read the rest of this article.


Gatlin Education Services offers new RFID training course

Friday, August 17th, 2007

We are pleased to announce our partnership with OTA Training, LLC to provide the premier product in electronic RFID education, RFID on the Web™.

Developed by the global leader in RFID training and certification, RFID on the Web is a comprehensive training solution built to supply students with the information necessary to implement RFID technology in various settings including supply chain logistics, manufacturing process improvement, health care and pharmaceutical authentication.

“We are very pleased to be working with Gatlin, the recognized leader in online education, to provide our premier e-learning product,” said Robert Sabella, CEO and founder of OTA Training, LLC. “Through this partnership, quality RFID training will be made accessible to more than 300 universities worldwide.”

OTA Training designed RFID on the Web as an interactive course using flash animated simulations based on real RFID implementation projects to give students a comprehensive knowledge of how RFID is applied in a real-world environment.

“Today, there is a rapidly growing number of uses for radio frequency identification,” said Stephen Gatlin, founder of Fort Worth-based Gatlin Education Services. “The demand for RFID certified professionals is overwhelming due to so many commercial factors driving the adoption of this technology.”

The 70-hour course is now available through Gatlin’s partnership with major colleges and universities. Upon completion of the course, students will be provided with a certification voucher in order to take their CompTIA™ RFID+ certification exam and become RFID+ Certified.

About Gatlin Education Services:
Established in 1989 by Stephen Gatlin, Gatlin Education Services is the largest provider of Web-based, instructor-supported training to community colleges and universities. Gatlin’s courses are open enrollment, allowing interested students to start their desired training immediately. Gatlin’s online career training courses are designed to provide the skills necessary to acquire professional caliber positions for many in-demand occupations.

About OTA Training, LLC:
OTA Training, LLC operates for the sole purpose of educating companies on how to implement RFID successfully. To provide our students with the most in-depth, relevant, and practical RFID training we use the E3 Learning System, a proven methodology that makes our training Effective, Engaging and Easy to Follow. All of OTA’s instructors are qualified RFID professionals and possess the real world knowledge and experience to prepare you for the challenges of implementing RFID technology.

Based in Dallas, Texas, OTA offers RFID training courses worldwide. We take great pride in providing state-of-the-art training tools, with up-to-date content in the best RFID training centers around the globe. Any of our courses can be customized to fit your company’s requirements and can be conducted at your location. More information is available at http://www.otatraining.com/


Gatlin partners with Vubiz Ltd. as an eLearning Center partner.

Friday, August 17th, 2007

Gatlin Learning, Inc. announced today it has reached an agreement with e-learning provider Vubiz Ltd. that will make learning fun and effective for students. Vubiz will contribute instructional content for Gatlin’s eLearning Center, more than 101 courses in business, finance and personal enrichment online programs.

Winner of the 2005 Canadian Awards for Training Excellence, Vubiz is a full-service e-learning company that produces high quality content for thousands of banks, associations and businesses across the United States and Canada. The e-learning provider will supply Gatlin Learning with courses including Community Development, Customer Service, Financial Basics, E-Commerce, Call Center and Sales and Marketing. Courseware provided by Vubiz includes professionally designed content that is interactive and available in several languages. In addition, each course will incorporate online customer service, project management and program evaluation.

“We are very pleased to announce our partnership with Vubiz,” said Stephen Gatlin, founder of Fort Worth-based Gatlin Learning, Inc. “They’ve been around since the beginning of e-learning and have vast experience in the industry. Our students will truly benefit from their expertise in training and education.”

About Gatlin Learning, Inc.
Gatlin Learning, Inc. is the Internet’s foremost resource of e-learning content. Thousands of self-study courses from the world’s leading online education companies have been amassed into one place – theelearningcenter.com – and are available for direct sale to students anywhere in the world. Gatlin Learning partners with businesses and institutions of higher learning to create completely individualized portal Web sites where students have direct access to both certificate and non-certificate, non-credit courses. The result is a comprehensive and user-friendly one-stop shop where students and business professionals can meet their continuing education needs and get on the fast track to a long and successful career.

About Vubiz Ltd. Founded by John Bulloch, Vubiz commenced operations in late 1995 as a not-for-profit company called the Learning Institute for Small and Medium Sized Enterprise (LISME). In 2000, the company was incorporated and changed its legal name to Vubiz Ltd. Vubiz is an approved provider of online training content for the USA Learning initiative (formerly GoLearn) for the US government as well as the VOR for the Canadian government.