Online Music Therapy student works to help veterans
Colorado State University students aren’t just in Fort Collins. In fact, thousands of current students live all over the nation and the world, and they’re accomplishing some amazing things.
Colorado State University students aren’t just in Fort Collins. In fact, thousands of current students live all over the nation and the world, and they’re accomplishing some amazing things.
Technological advancement has changed the writing process throughout the years. Just think about how different writing a paper on a modern computer is compared to writing a paper on an early generation computer, or a word processor, or a typewriter, or even by hand.
Not everybody is able, or wants, to go to a college campus to get an education. Thankfully, we live in an age when students have options. In the past decade, online education has become an increasingly popular choice for people of all ages, backgrounds, and fields of interest. Despite its popularity, though, many people still have questions about how online classes work. To answer some of those questions, this video offers an overview of what it’s like to take online courses from Colorado State University.
Taking an online course should be more than sitting in front of a computer — real engagement involves becoming a part of the community of learners.
Grab a seat in any classroom from kindergarten to graduate school. When it’s time for students to interact, you’ll probably notice the same voices and the same hands in the air. Typically extroverts, these students enjoy public interaction with others, which awards them nice participation points, and more importantly allows them to analyze and clarify their ideas about the topic at hand.
In a world of rising tuition costs and an increasingly competitive job market, folks are being forced to evaluate closely the benefit of continuing to the next level of their formal education, whatever that may look like.
With the fall semester beginning next week, Academic Computing and Networking Services (ACNS) reminds instructors that courses are now expected to be housed in Canvas rather than RamCT.
The Office of Engagement recently hosted a group of educators and community representatives from Anhui Province, China.
With just about six weeks until fall classes begin, faculty are being encouraged to make the transition from RamCT to Canvas now.
This week commemorates two important dates in U.S. history: Independence Day and the anniversary of the Morrill Act of 1862 -- the statute that established land-grant universities in the U.S. and ensured that every American could have access to a college education.