Distance Education essays and research papers
370 Distance Education Free Papers: 201 - 225
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The Value of a College Education
The Value of a College Education The true meaning of value will be realized for me, when I have received my degree. That piece of paper will represent my commitment and my passion to exceed in the direction my life has taken me. The ticket to enjoy that thrilling ride will be available via that piece of paper provided to all graduating students. The importance of education has many features which scan deep in my
Rating:Essay Length: 965 Words / 4 PagesSubmitted: February 13, 2011 -
Present Career, Carrer Interest, and the Value of a College Education
Conflicts Resolutions within Work Groups There are many things to consider when talking about working within a group. One of the major things is conflicts between the group's members. People will always have conflicts among themselves and with others; it is just a way of life. One of the conflicts that occur within a group is Lack of Leadership, someone needs to be in charge and keep everyone else pointed in the right direction. Another
Rating:Essay Length: 2,733 Words / 11 PagesSubmitted: February 13, 2011 -
Educational Ethics and Technology
Technology can be an advantage or a bane for the student and the insructor in eductional arenas today and presents many ethical choices and problems. Ethics can be negatively impacted by these technological advances and are threatened more today than previously. Technology has created a ehole new area of discernment for educational ethics. Technology has brought marder society computers, the internet, cell phones, specialized function calculatore, online classroom, easier acess to databases, and even internet
Rating:Essay Length: 483 Words / 2 PagesSubmitted: February 13, 2011 -
Physical Education Class: The Perfect Place to Be Bullied?
Physical Education Class: the Perfect Place to be Bullied? Every day we are seeing how the population in our society acquires really bad habits that risk their health. Obesity has become an issue touching everybody’s life. People are wondering what the solution of the problem might be, and a good amount of them think that the only way to stop this increasing problem is to fight it from childhood. One of the ways to keep
Rating:Essay Length: 769 Words / 4 PagesSubmitted: February 14, 2011 -
Russian Education
RUSSIA - CULTURE - EDUCATION 1. Russian children begin school when they are 6 years old. Elementary school consists of the first 4 grades, middle school consists of 5 grades and high school is 2 grades. It is only required that children attend the first 9 grades. After that a child can go to work or do work/study. If a child wants to go to the University, however, he or she must complete all 11
Rating:Essay Length: 1,986 Words / 8 PagesSubmitted: February 15, 2011 -
Internet and Education: Virtual Classrooms for Everyone?
INTERNET AND EDUCATION: virtual classrooms for everyone? A dusty, one-room schoolhouse on the edge of a village. An overworked teacher trying to manage a room full of boisterous children. Students sharing schoolbooks that are in perpetual short supply, crammed in rows of battered desks. Children worn out after long treks to school, stomachs rumbling with hunger. Others who vanish for weeks on end, helping their parents with the year-end harvest. Still others who never come
Rating:Essay Length: 1,898 Words / 8 PagesSubmitted: February 15, 2011 -
Us Vs Japan's Education
Education is the foundation of a strong and productive individual as well as being the foundation for a strong and productive country. Any country that keeps its' people uneducated or does not help to educate them cannot hold them entirely responsible for their actions that result from their lack of education. The United States and Japan both feel very strongly about education and that they need to have well educated people. Both of these countries
Rating:Essay Length: 1,864 Words / 8 PagesSubmitted: February 15, 2011 -
Current Direction of Icts in Education
The Importance of ICTs in Queensland Education The modern generation schoolchildren are growing up in an environment where information and communication technologies are encompassing almost all area of there lives. It is the responsibility of Queensland Education to prepare students with the skills and knowledge they will need to take control of their digital futures (Education Queensland, 2003). Therefore, it is of upmost importance for teachers to integrate ICTs into the curriculum. This essay will
Rating:Essay Length: 532 Words / 3 PagesSubmitted: February 15, 2011 -
Problem Solvers for an Inner City Education
It's hard to believe that in this current age, one of the wealthiest nations in the whole world lacks the ability to properly give all of its youth a worthwhile education. Although almost every child goes through the same grade levels, many children, especially those from run down urban areas, do not receive a quality education. America has the greatest amount of knowledge at its fingertips that it has ever seen due to technological
Rating:Essay Length: 995 Words / 4 PagesSubmitted: February 15, 2011 -
Brown Vs Board of Education
May 17, 1954 was a date that would change history not only in the field of education, but in most peoples lives. In the year 1954 a cased named " Brown vs. The Board of Education " had been taken up all the way to the Supreme court. It was a controversial court case that tried to pass a law to un-segregate public school. The law was eventually passed, but caused mass outrages but also
Rating:Essay Length: 836 Words / 4 PagesSubmitted: February 16, 2011 -
What Is the Negative and Positive of Internet on Education?
There are several positive and negative impacts of the Internet on education. For rural areas especially, the access to information that the Internet offers is an incredible positive force, allowing almost anyone to find the answers to basic questions simply and easily. It helps education in that when someone is curious about something (and therefore open to learning), they can find out some information to feed that "learning hunger" immediately. If you are curious about
Rating:Essay Length: 325 Words / 2 PagesSubmitted: February 16, 2011 -
A Global Perspective on Bilingualism and Bilingual Education
A Global Perspective on Bilingualism and Bilingual Education ________________________________________ The number of languages spoken throughout the world is estimated to be 6,000 (Grimes, 1992). Although a small number of languages, including Arabic, Bengali, English, French, Hindi, Malay, Mandarin, Portuguese, Russian, and Spanish serve as important link languages or languages of wider communication around the world, these are very often spoken as second, third, fourth, or later-acquired languages. Fewer than 25% of the world's approximately 200
Rating:Essay Length: 1,897 Words / 8 PagesSubmitted: February 17, 2011 -
Our Society Is Overly Materialistic. We Center Our Lives on Acquiring Material Things at the Expense of Such Traditional Values as Family and Education.
Topic 2 " Our society is overly materialistic. We center our lives on acquiring material things at the expense of such traditional values as family and education." I agree with the issue that our society is becoming too materialistic. People are involved into a commercial world and forget their responsibilities to this society. The traditional value is taken place by materialistic culture. This is because that there is too much temptation to resist in this
Rating:Essay Length: 644 Words / 3 PagesSubmitted: February 17, 2011 -
Education as a Developmental Agent
Martha Nussbaum (2004) writes an emotionally charged article about the importance of educating women in the global south. She disparages some developmental theories that the economic growth in a country would automatically lead to better educational opportunities for women. (2004, p. 328) Nussbaum believes that, in fact, the education of women would have a domino effect on economic, social and political growth of women. She challenges government to make education for women a priority and
Rating:Essay Length: 1,443 Words / 6 PagesSubmitted: February 18, 2011 -
Compulsory Education
COMPULSORY EDUCATION The compulsory attendance act of 1852 enacted by the state of Massachusetts was the first general law attempting to control the conditions of children. The law included mandatory attendance for children between the ages of eight and fourteen for at least three months out of each year, of these twelve weeks at least six had to be consecutive. The exception to this attendance at a public school included: the child's attendance at another
Rating:Essay Length: 1,940 Words / 8 PagesSubmitted: February 18, 2011 -
Brown V. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas
Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas In 1950 the Reverend Oliver Brown of Topeka, Kansas, wanted to enroll his daughter, Linda Brown, in the school nearest his home (Lusane 26). The choices before him were the all-white school, only four blocks away, or the black school that was two miles away and required travel (26). His effort to enroll his daughter was spurned (26). In 1951, backed by the NAACP Legal Defense and
Rating:Essay Length: 1,184 Words / 5 PagesSubmitted: February 18, 2011 -
Sex Education
Children and young adults today distinguish right from wrong based on their previous knowledge. The education they receive plays a major role in the way they make decisions. Sex is a controversial topic brought up frequently throughout a child's life. Based on the way it is taught, the child makes decisions that may forever change his or her life. (Sex Education That 3) Although it is often opposed, the two most essential ways children learn
Rating:Essay Length: 1,305 Words / 6 PagesSubmitted: February 18, 2011 -
The Positive Effects of Technology in Education
Abstract As technology expands into homes and businesses around the world, this paper looks at how schools will also benefit from its integration. With the “No Child Left Behind Act” as a guide to challenging new standards, schools need to look at the different types of technology available to them now and how it will benefit not only the students but also what this could mean for instructors and administrators too. In order to meet
Rating:Essay Length: 2,931 Words / 12 PagesSubmitted: February 18, 2011 -
True Education
True Education James Bond Stockdale's ideal of true education simply put is an education that is well rounded with lessons that will help a person not only when things are going well, but also when times are tough. Anyone can steer the ship when the water is calm, but it takes a true captain to take the helm through a storm. True education encompasses modern lessons as well as an understanding of the antiquity. Coming
Rating:Essay Length: 583 Words / 3 PagesSubmitted: February 18, 2011 -
Special Education
Special education has come a long way since the concept came about in the 1700s. In that era people with disabilities were considered to be hopeless, an embarrassment to their families and were therefore hidden or abandoned. Today, in America, those who have special needs are increasingly gaining acceptance in society and their rights as individuals are being acknowledged, particularly in education. With the passing of important laws such as the Rehabilitation Act, Americans
Rating:Essay Length: 2,268 Words / 10 PagesSubmitted: February 18, 2011 -
Sexual Education: Comprehensive Vs. Abstinence-Only
Sexual Education: Comprehensive Vs. Abstinence-Only High school is either the best days of your life or four years of struggling and mild torture for teens, and the pressure to be sexually active can push adolescents towards the latter. The idea that sexual activity is the ticket to popularity is burned into teens brains by the media, through television, major label music, and movies, their peers, and celebrity role models. They are bombarded with images and
Rating:Essay Length: 1,282 Words / 6 PagesSubmitted: February 19, 2011 -
Educational Vision
American public education is in a crisis because the U.S. does not towards any type of democratic reform with the inherent belief that U.S. democracy has reached its highest achievement. This lethargy extends into an American public that does not actively participate in government elections, climbing illiteracy rates among the general population and people who do not actively criticize society or fight for social change. At the heart of this, public education is not used
Rating:Essay Length: 633 Words / 3 PagesSubmitted: February 19, 2011 -
Education in the Colonial Era
The Puritans are best known for fleeing to America to escape religious persecution in England. They settled mostly in the New England area as our school books tell us, they landed on Plymouth Rock. They built their new society entirely on the belief that the "Bible was God's true law" (Kizer). Consequently, education became an important part of Puritan life. According to the Puritans, "Satan was keeping those who couldn't read from the scriptures" (Education
Rating:Essay Length: 808 Words / 4 PagesSubmitted: February 20, 2011 -
Pennsylvania Special Education
Inclusionary Classroom Practices Assignment: "What's happening in your state" Interview February 3, 2006 Steve Oltman I had the opportunity to interview Doris Martin, Director of Special Education Services for the Quakertown Community School District. Three questions were presented to Ms. Martin concerning IDEIA and how it affects our school district. Ms. Martin responded with a 4 page synopsis on the affects of the recent changes included in IDEIA. The information in the following paragraphs is
Rating:Essay Length: 645 Words / 3 PagesSubmitted: February 20, 2011 -
Great Depression and Education
During the Great Depression receiving an education was becoming more and more difficult for southerners. From not being able to afford the required supplies needed, to not being able to pay the tutions, many people found it nearly impossible to attend school. The novel, To Kill A Mockingbird written by Harper Lee shows how the lack of education in society during the Great Depression affected Southerners lives, not allowing them to change their futures for
Rating:Essay Length: 1,381 Words / 6 PagesSubmitted: February 21, 2011