Here is an interesting story that explains the fascination of this faculty with online education. Below I have copied some of the points that have caught my attention.
Last August, Marc Andreessen, the man whose Netscape Web browser ignited
the original dot-com boom and who is now one of Silicon Valley’s most
influential venture capitalists, wrote a much-discussed op-ed in the Wall Street Journal.
His argument was that “software is eating the world.” At a time of low
start-up costs and broadly distributed Internet access that allows for
massive economies of scale, software has reached a tipping point that
will allow it to disrupt industry after industry, in a dynamic
epitomized by the recent collapse of Borders under the giant foot of
Amazon. And the next industries up for wholesale transformation by
software, Andreessen wrote, are health care and education. That, at
least, is where he’s aiming his venture money. And where Andreessen
goes, others follow. According to the National Venture Capital
Association, investment in education technology companies increased from
less than $100 million in 2007 to nearly $400 million last year. For
the huge generator of innovation, technology, and wealth that is Silicon
Valley, higher education is a particularly fat target right now.
...The ongoing carnage in the newspaper industry provides an object lesson
of what can happen when a long-established, information-focused
industry’s business model is challenged by low-price competitors online.
The disruptive power of information technology may be our best hope for
curing the chronic college cost disease that is driving a growing
number of students into ruinous debt or out of higher education
altogether. It may also be an existential threat to institutions that
have long played a crucial role in American life.
Click here to read the entire story.
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