Although online education is no longer new, it continues to grow at breakneck speed, challenging the dominance of the brick-and-mortar classroom in the Information Age.
According to eLearning Industry, the global online learning market will reach $398 billion by 2026. Up from $165.21 billion in 2015. 49% of students worldwide have taken an online course in the past year. In 2017, 77% of US organizations utilized e-learning systems.
E-Learning Advantages
According to Orbis Research, among the factors propelling the rise of e-learning: low cost, easy accessibility, more people on the Internet (43% of the global population by recent estimates), and a surge in the number of smartphones (owned by 36% of the world’s population). Mobile apps are making it easier to learn anytime, anywhere.
Student demographics further favor the digital classroom, starting with the tech-obsessed Gen Z and Millennial cohorts who dominate higher education. The numbers of older, employed students with families are increasing, as is the globalization of higher education. All of these trends are served by the flexibility of online education.
Technologist Ken Mazaika of the Firehose Project identifies these additional e-learning advantages:
E-Learning Disadvantages
Sander Tamm of E-student.org details these potential drawbacks to online classes:
Yet despite the drawbacks, one thing is for certain—e-learning is here to stay and will only grow larger. So, let’s explore some best practices to optimize the e-learning experience.
Online Teaching Tips from the Experts
Instructional Designers Andrew Salcido and Jessica Cole of Arizona State University, a pioneer in online education, offer these tips for educators:
Flower Darby, a senior instructional designer at Northern Arizona University, and co-author with James M. Lang of Small Teaching Online (Jossey-Bass, 2019), offers these tips on The Chronicle of Higher Education website:
These e-learning technologies are on the rise in 2020, according to the Neo Blog:
FinancesOnline.com details increasing use of these technologies and practices:
• Mobile learning using apps.
• Social learning using platforms that enhance online collaboration and cooperation.
• Microlearning—breaking learning into bite-sized chunks.
• Adaptive learning which uses data to personalize learning to the individual.
• Curating freely available information on the Internet.
As with any sea change brought by technology, online learning will continue to have its advantages, disadvantages, and hiccups as it permeates the education landscape. But few can argue with the reach and power of the Internet to bring education to an ever-expanding web of humanity.