The first Internet-only school

Published: 11 March 1999 y., Thursday
Jones International University, which sells online courses for profit, has become the first Internet-only school accredited to grant college degrees. It operates out of a small suite of offices with nine full-time employees in Englewood, Colo, and is unrelated to Internet courses offered by Dow Jones & Co., the publisher of The Wall Street Journal and the Interactive Journal. Jones International received its bona fides last week from the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools, the main accreditor for higher education in its region. Like the hugely successful University of Phoenix, a unit of Apollo Group Inc. also accredited by North Central, Jones International_s business model features courses taught by part-time professors free-lancing from other schools to earn a little extra money. It hires professors from Columbia University, Stanford University and the University of Texas to design the courses. But instruction is delivered by adjunct faculty who lead e-mail discussions and grade papers and exams. This provides substantial savings from the costs associated with full-time university professors. Jones International offers bachelor_s and master_s degrees in business communications. Among other Internet education ventures, OnlineLearning.net has the exclusive rights to market noncredit versions of courses given at University of California at Los Angeles. Mr. Jones is the founder of Jones Intercable Inc., a large cable-TV company, and Mind Extension University, a cable network that provides degrees from existing colleges. Mr. Jones, who has agreed to sell his controlling stake in Jones Intercable to Comcast Inc. for $200 million, sees a huge market for "real-estate averse" schools such as his. Jones International started offering Internet courses in business communications four years ago. Since then, 950 people from 34 countries have enrolled in eight-week courses at an average cost of $700 for a three-credit graduate course. Jones International can_t match the state-subsidized prices of public schools. But it is far cheaper than private universities.
Šaltinis: Internet
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

New EU Students Eye UK and Ireland

The Applications of Students from the New EU Countries to UK Universities Have Shot up by Almost 140 Percent more »

Romania Telecom Selects Infinys from Convergys

Convergys Corporation, the global leader in integrated billing, employee care, and customer care services, announced that it has signed a contract to license its Infinys(TM) software to Romania Telecom more »

Education and Training for the Knowledge Economy

Welcome to seminar "Education and Training for the Knowledge Economy" on 29 July, 2004! more »

Cell phones test positive on AA flight

With television cameramen hovering, Qualcomm chief executive Irwin Jacobs sat in the front row of coach and made one of the first legal cell phone calls from a commercial jetliner more »

Japan school kids to be tagged with RFID chips

The rights and wrongs of using radio frequency identification (RFID) tags on humans have been debated since the tracking tags reached the technological mainstream more »

Is there life on other planets?

Super telescope aims to unlock clues to life beyond earth more »

France stands firm on scarf ban

France's education minister has vowed that a ban on Islamic headscarves in state schools will be enforced when the new term starts in September more »

Let’s Show the World the Power of Our Knowledge

For the first time the Diplomas of Master Degree in Information and Communication were handed to Vilnius University International Center of Knowledge Economy and Knowledge Management seniors on the 15 of June at 10 o’clock at the St. Johns’ Church.

more »

The Chess School of Anatolin Karpov Has been Open

The Chess school of Anatolin Karpov has been open more »

Bilateral talks

Russia and Turkmenistan begin talks to divide Caspian Sea bottom in Ashgabat more »