Even the necessary actions to battle the pandemic, these kinds of as donning masks and social distancing, have experienced major unintended repercussions on classroom dynamics. While it is paramount that we fight the pandemic, at some level the costs of these actions outweigh their advantages, particularly when learners all rip off their masks the moment they depart the school rooms.
Nevertheless, college students are saved in a limbo amongst pandemic and submit-pandemic, and nowhere is this a lot more evident than the persistence of online classes.
This semester, I have some in-human being courses and some on the internet programs. As a final result, I have to lease an apartment—in a metropolis 5 hours absent from my home—and commute to campus for only 1 or two courses. I’m not complaining, as I know other college students have it a great deal even worse than me. But you can see how disheartening it is to transfer away from house just to continue to keep taking Zoom lessons.
Regulate my routine to all on the net classes, and I can help save a few thousand dollars by living with my dad and mom in Houston. Modify my timetable to all in-individual, and at minimum I can get a usual education.
If I am heading to pay back the residing prices connected with in-person classes, then I assume in-person courses. The high quality of an on the net education and learning is just not on par with that of an in-particular person education and learning as I explored in a earlier post, quality inflation in the spring 2020 semester—when classes first transitioned online—caused GPA to bounce .5 details.
Let’s not overlook this info and fake that staying on-line is a good notion.
In some of my on-line classes, it feels as nevertheless we’re not getting course at all. There have been times where the professor literally makes the Zoom assembly from her Apple iphone. A person time, she bought disconnected since her phone experienced operate out of battery.
I have not realized a one point in that class, and I’m sure each individual pupil reading this has related horror tales.
Clearly the college doesn’t treatment, or they would have finished something by now. This is not the type of education we students signed up for when we pledged to LSU.
I adore LSU, but some of the decisions the college has produced in the course of the pandemic have been unwell-advised and ignorant. On-line training was, and continue to is, a catastrophe. Let us not cripple our education and learning any further more.
Samuel Camacho is a 21-12 months-previous economics junior from Maracaibo, Venezuela.
Answer – Transforming very best apply classroom pedagogy into an online platform in 8 months
Over the study course of two months, MLC (Moodle US) interacted with LRCE on a everyday foundation to style and design and create their on the net finding out platform. They also properly trained LRCE’s training employees and adjunct school in how to use the system and, in specific, how to develop each formative and summative assessments, provide grading and feed-back.
“Over 2 months, they empowered us, and our adjuncts to build out our programs. We ended up often committed to best techniques in our classroom pedagogy, but we wanted the guidance of MLC/Moodle US to translate that into an on-line atmosphere,” says Joyce.
Moodle Workplace was picked as the correct solution given the brief timeline of the project. Michelle Moore, Head of Buyer Good results at Moodle US clarifies, “Because we have excellent finding out layout authorities and community of contractors, we had been equipped to scale to meet the demands of LRCE immediately. As a workforce, we put in a lot of several hours to assistance them start on timetable. They have been adapting their total program on the fly and as they didn’t have the potential to do all of the system development and consumer administration guiding the scenes we ended up able to do that for them.”
MLC/Moodle US assisted the LRCE crew with taking care of and translating databases, developing classes from written content supplied and giving instruction and help as necessary to get them up and functioning as effectively and correctly as feasible. The modern MLC/Moodle US hybrid web hosting option, “unhosting” was selected to deliver LRCE reliability, scalability, ownership and protection of their information. Via the “unhosting” command panel, MLC/Moodle US educational designers ended up also capable to install the essential plugins without hold off on a incredibly time sensitive job.
Joyce claims, “We labored extremely intently with Studying Designer, Ryan Hazen. He speaks equally languages. He understands tutorial design, instructing techniques and pedagogy, but he also understands Moodle quite deeply. So, the mix of working with anyone who understands our educational ambitions as very well as the system intended that we could, and can carry on to, achieve our targets substantially faster. He has a prosperity of encounter and means that he can attract on at a moment’s see.”
Utilising a wide variety of multimodal things to do and methods, LRCE utilises asynchronous supply for the fundamentals and qualifications expertise study course work though are living sessions are committed to the investigation, discussion and rehearsal of training activities. Moodle’s Prohibit Entry feature allows LRCE lecturers to restrict the availability of any action or even a system area centered on a university student assembly specific requirements. This has reached sizeable time personal savings for instructors.
Beforehand, pupils submitted assessments across many platforms but learners now post inside Moodle and this has offered visibility and clarity on, as an instance, complex rubrics with up to 8 sections and 40 rows. Inside of the training certification program, system members are needed to add their lesson strategies, movie footage and the perform their learners entire. This is assessed by the LCRE and adjunct team, and each college student teacher is furnished feedback for each of these factors. In addition to this, the LRCE staff now evaluations the 100 practitioners or college student teacher collective final results against the rubric and then analyses that facts and the suggestions supplied to college students. This lets the staff to identify tendencies, any misconceptions or gaps in mastering and subsequently refine the curriculum and training course design to address individuals gaps – both in the current cohorts program supply and to inform improvements to the curriculum for new cohorts.
The examination of information has also authorized LRCE to develop customized and differentiated articles for training course participants. As an example, college student teachers entire a class on time management as element of their certification system. Nevertheless, there is some time among students completing the program and acquiring themselves in the classroom. LRCE determined that there is a subset of academics who struggle with this significant talent irrespective of finishing the study course. Therefore, they created a tailor-made training course specially developed to review and consolidate time administration capabilities. Again, this has allowed LRCE lecturers to focus additional deeply on comments and engagement while enabling the delivery of differentiated material certain to a subset of students’ demands.
“We also like Announcements and Activity Completion to aid hold our pupils up to day and on observe. Boards seriously aid to really encourage discussion and collaborative learning. We love that there are no boundaries. Other platforms can do six items definitely properly, but if you want to do things outside the house that you may possibly be at a lock. With Moodle it’s, “I’m positive Moodle can do this so let me decide on up the telephone and chat to an individual about how this can be accomplished,” concludes Joyce.
Benefits – Informing enhanced curriculum shipping and influence throughout the state of Louisiana
Soon after supply to the 2020 summer months cohort, My Understanding Consultants did an audit of LRCE Moodle classes and offered input on the excellent of shipping and how LRCE could additional utilise attributes available in Moodle to increase tutorial style and design. This has supported a continual approach of ongoing improvement. In addition, the Moodle system has authorized LRCE to extensively utilise details to tell differentiation and enhance curriculum style and design.
The transfer to on line shipping has allowed LRCE to supply classes to a few occasions as several members in teaching certification and supplementary qualifications than it did earlier by conventional classroom supply. In convert, this has enabled LRCE to lengthen its achieve and effects throughout the condition of Louisiana.
Lastly, in providing its systems by means of Moodle, LRCE is aiding academics to acquire their online discovering competencies which is in increasing desire for instructors throughout the United States and globally.
“The fact that our training is delivered by using Moodle inherently aids teachers to comprehend and acquire practical experience in what excellent on the net instruction appears like. When we design and style a course, we want to set up classes that are logical and clear for our learners on what they need to have to do, and how they will be evaluated for it. In our synchronous lessons, our scholar lecturers also get knowledge in how to generate participating and meaningful are living sessions. Broadly, they get publicity in how to create a properly designed Moodle class as well as how to use other platforms or software that we combine with Moodle”.
“Not only has Moodle designed efficiencies and informed advancements in our delivery, we can now have a greater impact on the instructor workforce in Louisiana than we at any time did ahead of,” says Joyce.
Obtain out more about Moodle US and how they function with US primarily based prospects to make sure the achievements of their on the web studying project.
To understand extra about the Louisiana Analysis Centre for Educators, take a look at their web page.
Last week’s elections showed that if democracy means closed schools, millions of American parents are prepared to go in a different direction. Fearful for the future of our democracy, millions of others felt a sense of loss. I feel that way about every election. Not because I’m always on the losing side, but because I grew up in Canada’s parliamentary system and remember elections as more fun than terrifying. Parliamentary democracies are less likely to produce demagogues since elections are at the constituency or riding level only. And within a constituency, there are often some very amusing candidates.
Not that there aren’t fringe candidates in U.S. elections. Last week’s New Jersey gubernatorial race included Socialist Workers Party candidate Joanne Kuniansky, a deli worker at Walmart. But Walmart deli doesn’t hold a candle to the UK’s Monster Raving Looney Party, which runs wacky candidates in the constituencies of prominent politicians in order to appear in ridiculous costumes next to the likes of Margaret Thatcher and Tony Blair as local results are read live on the BBC. The Monster Raving Looney Party has touted policies such as abolishing the income tax (only meant as a temporary measure during the Napoleonic Wars), minting a 99p coin, and punching holes in the roof of the Chunnel to create a mega carwash. Rather than advocating for hard Brexit or soft Brexit, the Party campaigned for an al dente Brexit. Monster Raving Looney membership only costs £12 per year and gets you a party ID card, a letter from the party leader, and a certificate of insanity.
The Canadian version of Monster Raving Looney is the Rhinoceros Party, so named because politicians are thick-skinned, slow-moving, and dim-witted, not to mention the large, hairy horns growing out of the middle of their faces. Rhino policies have included counting the Thousand Islands to see if the U.S. has stolen any, strengthening Canada’s military by towing Antarctica north to the Arctic Circle in order to monopolize cold (so Canada will be unbeatable in the next Cold War), and furthering higher education by building taller schools. The Rhino Party’s current platform says:
Canadian Heritage being THE number one priority of the Rhinoceros Party… make “Sorry” the new official motto of Canada. (I thought it already was. Sorry.)
Employment being THE number one priority of the Rhinoceros Party… reduce the number of accidents in factories by wrapping all workers in bubble wrap.
Education being THE number one priority of the Rhinoceros Party… replace teachers on leave with photos of famous scientists.
For millions of students in Zoom school last year, replacing teachers with photos of famous scientists wouldn’t have had much of a negative effect on learning. It might even have been salutary; online, even a patina of expertise attracts students.
Allowing experts to teach a multitude has been the promise of online learning since dot-com days of yore. In 2000, the New York Timespredicted that a “pot of gold” awaited top professors who’d leverage technology to sell “the knowledge inside [his or her] head directly to a global online audience. That means that, just by doing what [he or she] does every day, a teacher potentially could grow rich instructing a class consisting of a million students.”
Late last month, the marketplace for online courses from over 50,000 instructors – Udemy – went public at a $4 billion valuation. With nearly $500M in revenue over the past 12 months, $4 billion is a hefty 8x revenue multiple on a business that hasn’t yet demonstrated an ability to make money. As Susan Adams reported in Forbes, Udemy spends $1.20 to generate a dollar of revenue, prompting her to quote my partner Daniel Pianko: “It’s like the Polish farmer joke. The farmer goes home to his wife and says, ‘I made nine zloties selling my wheat.’ The wife slaps him across the face and says, ‘It cost us 10 zloties to grow the wheat.’ And the farmer says, ‘But I sold a lot of it.’” Udemy’s stock price has traded down from the IPO.
Udemy’s underlying challenge may be that not all experts are created equal. Consider the top-selling course, Double Your Confidence & Self-Esteem, taught by Jimmy Naraine, a “high-end coach” who “helps his clients [take] that big step to a completely different lifestyle” (and who must have an uncanny ability to quantify self-esteem – how else would he know it’s a double?). Or there’s Udemy for Recurring Income, where students learn how to come up with “profitable Udemy course ideas.” If the rule is that on the Internet, nobody knows you’re a dog, the exception may be online courses, as demonstrated by the tawdry universe of self-proclaimed experts shilling them. But just as the New York Times foresaw 21 years ago, the future of online learning won’t be driven by Udemy carnival barkers, but rather by real experts in two categories of real market value: (1) love; and (2) money.
Several strong businesses have already been built around love-courses – tapping experts to teach people what they’re passionate (or at least curious) about. MasterClass offers courses from experts you may have heard of: Alicia Keys on songwriting; Martin Scorsese on filmmaking; Gordon Ramsay on cooking; Frank Gehry on architecture; Carlos Santana on guitar playing; Christina Aguilera on singing; and Gary Kasparov on chess. It took MasterClass years to convince these masters to allocate time and attention to creating an online course, and presumably, like a book deal, meaningful guaranteed or advanced payments. But the upshot is a collection of 130 master classes attracting a great deal of interest from subscribers. And although The New Yorker is predictably snooty about the notion of mastery in a few hours, MasterClass is one of the few online education players to reach New York Times million-student status and was recently valued at nearly $3 billion.
MasterClass’s first masterstroke was recognizing that when it comes to conveying expertise online, brand matters a lot. According to TheNew Yorker, MasterClass has standing offers to Barack and Michelle Obama, Stephen King, and Elon Musk. Also on the list: Queen Elizabeth and The Pope (albeit in “non-actionable” status). Its second was recognizing that expertise isn’t worth much without production and design. Courses involve elaborate sets, big crews, and even stand-ins for lighting. Its Hollywood-caliber productions are budgeted at close to a million dollars per course. Production also includes instructional designers and interviewers working with experts to help them get their message across in the most teachable way. MasterClass itself has already become something of a brand. Steph Curry wanted to do a MasterClass because “I saw who you had on the shelf, and I want to be on the shelf with those people.” MasterClass is to Udemy as Penguin Random House is to self-publishing.
Online teacher
Getty Images
Because there’s only one Queen of England (and it’s not clear to me what her MasterClass would be –corgis?), another company in the passion category is pushing the envelope on expert branding for online education. Yellowbrick, a University Ventures company, offers career discovery courses that chart a path to careers in dream fields like videogames, sneakers, or streetwear. As the real experts in these areas aren’t necessarily brand names (at least not to people whose idea of fun is writing newsletters), Yellowbrick brands experts by promoting where they work: Google, ESPN, the Brooklyn Nets, Stephen Curry 30, Inc, and Yellowbrick’s university partners like Columbia, NYU, FIT, and Parsons School of Design. Like MasterClass, Yellowbrick invests heavily in course design and production, and like MasterClass, Yellowbrick is growing rapidly.
So what about category #2, money-courses? Not as celebrity-dense for sure, but the Yellowbrick model ought to work: branding experts through where they work e.g., prestige companies like Microsoft, Amazon, or Tesla. So who’s combining high production values and instructional design with online learning from branded experts in sectors of significant economic opportunity?
Coursera is a natural first stop, delivering experts via high-value courses in data science and self-driving cars from brand-name university partners like Johns Hopkins and University of Toronto, as well as courses and certificates from technology brands like IBM and Google. But with over 3,000 courses, Coursera isn’t delivering MasterClass-level production. Likewise, with its acquisition of Coursera rival edX, 2U may be thinking about instilling its renowned production values into edX’s most popular money-courses. Udacity is laser-focused on skill gap sectors and its approximately 100 courses have higher production values. But Udacity treads lightly with branding instructors; course marketing focuses on the meat and potatoes of tech skills with no branded experts in sight. Pluralsight is similarly focused on high-value tech courses, but instructors look like a more curated version of Udemy: some world-class experts, others may be the Jimmy Naraine of microservices architecture.
In online learning, the biggest difference between self-proclaimed experts and real experts is that real experts are too busy with their day jobs to think about packaging and selling courses. Just as passive candidates for jobs are often more desirable than active candidates (the ones you really want probably already have good jobs), real experts in hot sectors need to be sold on the idea of an online course; before it can be designed, produced, packaged, and sold to learners, the best online learning is sold to real experts. And selling experts is not for the faint-hearted, let alone fly-by-night e-learning companies. It requires reputation, proven production capabilities (i.e., quality on par with what experts do in their professional lives), distribution, and an economic model that will get an expert’s attention. Notably, none of the aforementioned online learning leaders have taken this MasterClass approach.
Among money-courses, the best synthesis to date is found at Reforge. With a subscription model like MasterClass, Reforge organizes courses around business problems like retention and engagement, experimentation and testing, and monetization and pricing. Who builds and leads them? Executives from companies like Tinder, SurveyMonkey, HubSpot and Instacart. Reforge has attracted these experts through MasterClass-like persistence and networking (and presumably an attractive economic model). And as with MasterClass, it’s now at the point where tech leaders are seeking out Reforge.
Beyond branded experts and production values, Reforge has added a critical third element that we haven’t seen in less expensive love-courses: synchronous learning. Reforge casts itself as a membership network where “each has something to offer.” So in addition to 2-3 hours of self-paced material each week, members attend live sessions where instructors apply concepts through work-based scenarios.
Earlier this year, departing New York Times CTO Nick Rockwell included a shout out to Reforge in his farewell: “Reforge in particular really helped us educate ourselves en masse, injecting great thinking and practice into the org. I think about 150 Timesians went through their Growth Series.” Reforge’s growth is outpacing an already fast-growing sector, and its formula represents the future of online learning.
Where are universities in this picture? After all, selective schools are top brands themselves – brands already leveraged by Coursera, edX, and Yellowbrick.
There are four reasons to believe colleges and universities won’t be launching Reforge-like models anytime soon:
1. As digital transformation accelerates, the most sought-after experts in the highest value sectors are practitioners, not theorists – those who do rather than teach. If your goal is economic advancement (i.e., making money), who would you rather learn from? Someone who’s done it or merely taught?
2. The vast majority of higher education courses are developed and delivered by a single faculty member. In contrast, Reforge courses are developed and taught by teams; the product strategy course is led by a former product director at Facebook, the former product director at Slack, and the chief product officer at Eventbright. In the future of online learning, classes taught by a single instructor may become an anachronism.
3. In producing a MasterClass or a Reforge course, instructors are likely to hear this a lot from producers: “feel free to put this into your own words, but say something like…” Practitioners who don’t teach for a living are grateful for the help. Faculty not so much.
4. Even if faculty can get over these hurdles, it’s hard to see universities matching the course quality learners will come to associate with brand-name experts. Not only in terms of production values, but also instructional design. As Jeff Young noted last month in EdSurge, during a grand tour of commercial expert-led courses, Grand Valley State math professor , Robert Talbert was blown away by “the quality of the video, the programming, the selection of tools, [and] the construction of the learning materials.” He especially called out the instructional design: “One thing that I did not expect to see was just the quality, the pedagogical quality of the learning materials. They had put some serious time and effort—with probably a small army of instructional designers.” There’s simply no reason to believe colleges and universities have a monopoly on world-class instructional design. Some of the best work is being done by instructional design service providers with no formal higher education affiliation, like Freedom Learning Group, an Achieve portfolio company.
The onset of instructional design service providers, course production infrastructure, and best practices for online learning has yet another impact on colleges and universities. Because as MasterClass and its brethren have shown, said infrastructure can be extended to translate expertise from practitioners with no training or teaching experience whatsoever. So the money in online learning will be in tapping branded experts – mostly practitioners – in a highly curated and designed manner and assembling the resulting content into learning experiences that are lavishly produced and synchronous. While Coursera, edX, and Yellowbrick will ensure universities make an appearance (primarily for love-courses), establishing the requisite expert networks for money-courses will be led by Reforge-like models in verticals like financial services, healthcare, pharma, retail, logistics, automotive, and consumer products, and economy-shifting subsectors of tech like AI and BCI (brain-computer interfaces).
In the New York Times article from 2000, an unnamed “president of an elite eastern university” said he “always thought our new competition [online] was going to be Microsoft University.” He wasn’t entirely wrong. Microsoft won’t do it, but specialists like Reforge will.
Like most things digital, online learning will help the rich get richer. And the real rich (in terms of money, not love) are practitioners, not professors. Ironically, after a year of unprecedented advances in online learning at colleges and universities, it’s clearer than ever that the future of online learning lies off campus. Only rhinos, monster raving looneys, and higher education leaders might think otherwise.
Factors such as the growing advantages of online learning and rapid penetration of internet-enabled devices will drive the growth of the Online Education Market.
Company Profiles
The online education market report includes information on the product launches, sustainability, and prospects of leading vendors including 2U Inc., Ambow Education Holding Ltd., Coursera Inc., edX Inc., iTutorGroup, LinkedIn Corp., McGraw-Hill Education Inc., Pearson Plc, Udacity Inc., and Udemy Inc.
Some Companies with Key Offerings
2U Inc., –The company offers a line of low-cost tools to help students better engage in online learning.
Ambow Education Holding Ltd. – The company offers a line of courses related to school education, tutoring services, international education programs, and online educational offerings through its business segment K-12 Education.
Coursera Inc. – The company offers online courses including free courses and university degrees at a breakthrough price.
Competitive Analysis
The report includes the competitive analysis, a proprietary tool to analyze and evaluate the position of companies based on their industry position score and market performance score. The tool uses various factors for categorizing the players into four categories. Some of these factors considered for analysis are financial performance over the last 3 years, growth strategies, innovation score, new product launches, investments, growth in market share, etc.
Market Segmentation
By Type, the market is classified into Higher education, Test preparation, Language and casual learning, Prim & sec supplemental edu., and Reskilling & online certifications.
By Geography, the market is classified as North America, APAC, Europe, South America, and MEA. APAC will have the largest share of the market.
Related Reports Edtech Market –The Edtech market has the potential to grow by USD 112.39 billion during 2021-2025, and the market’s growth momentum will decelerate at a CAGR of 17.85{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf}. Download a free sample now!
Virtual Schools Market in North America –The virtual schools market in North America has the potential to grow by USD 294.17 million during 2021-2025, and the market’s growth momentum will decelerate at a CAGR of 4.78{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf}. Download a free sample now!
Online Education Market Scope
Report Coverage
Details
Page number
120
Base year
2019
Forecast period
2020-2024
Growth momentum & CAGR
Accelerate at a CAGR of 18{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf}
Parent market analysis, Market growth inducers and obstacles, Fast-growing and slow-growing segment analysis, COVID-19 impact and future consumer dynamics, market condition analysis for the forecast period
Customization purview
If our report has not included the data that you are looking for, you can reach out to our analysts and get segments customized.
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“The US Postsecondary Online Education Market: Size, Trends and Forecasts (2021-2025 Edition)”, provides an in depth analysis of the postsecondary online education market of the US by value and by volume. The report provides a detailed analysis of the US postsecondary online education market by institution type.
The postsecondary online education market can be segmented into undergraduate and graduate postsecondary education. Undergraduate postsecondary education is the formal education undertaken after completing the secondary school, while graduate postsecondary education generally known as post-graduation are the professional or research studies in various disciplines.
Further, the US postsecondary online education market operates with the help of three types of institutions, namely, public not-for-profit, private not-for-profit and private for-profit institutions.
The US postsecondary online education market has increased at a significant growth during the year 2020 and projections are made that the market would rise in the next four years at a significant CAGR i.e. 2021-2025 tremendously. The online postsecondary education market in the US is expected to increase due to increasing adoption of microlearning, rising urbanization rate, higher spending on education, growing penetration of IOT devices, increase in educational attainment, etc.
Yet the market faces some challenges such as limited access to internet in remote areas, growing not-for-profit competitors, availability of free online content, etc. The postsecondary online education market also follows some market trends, which include growth of smart education and learning, artificial intelligence, learning management system, etc.
The report also assesses the key opportunities in the market and outlines the factors that are and will be driving the growth of the industry. Growth of the US postsecondary online education market has also been forecasted for the period 2021-2025, taking into consideration the previous growth patterns, the growth drivers and the current and future trends.
American Public Education, Grand Canyon Education, Adtalem Global Education and Apollo Global Management (Apollo Education Group) are some of the key players operating in the US postsecondary online education market, whose company profiling has been done in the report. In this segment of the report, business overview, financial overview and business strategies of the companies are provided.
Key Topics Covered:
1. Executive Summary
2. Introduction 2.1 Postsecondary Online Education: An Overview 2.1.1 Introduction 2.1.2 Online Program Management (OPM) 2.1.3 Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) 2.2 Postsecondary Online Education Segmentation 2.2.1 Postsecondary Online Education Segmentation by Education Type 2.2.2 Postsecondary Online Education Segmentation by School Type 2.2.3 Postsecondary Online Education Segmentation by End User 2.3 Postsecondary Online Education: Advantages and Disadvantages 2.3.1 Postsecondary Online Education Advantages 2.3.2 Postsecondary Online Education Disadvantages
3. The US Market Analysis 3.1 The US Postsecondary Online Education Market: An Analysis 3.1.1 The US Postsecondary Online Education Market by Value 3.1.2 The US Postsecondary Online Education Market by Volume 3.1.3 The US Postsecondary Online Education Market Volume by Institution Type 3.1.4 The US Postsecondary Online Education Market Value by Segments (Undergraduate and Graduate) 3.1.5 The US Postsecondary Online Education Market Volume by Segments (Undergraduate and Graduate) 3.2 The US Postsecondary Online Education Market: Segment Analysis 3.2.1 The US Undergraduate Online Education Market by Value 3.2.2 The US Undergraduate Online Education Market by Degree Programs 3.2.3 The US Undergraduate Online Education Market by Volume 3.2.4 The US Graduate Online Education Market by Value 3.2.5 The US Graduate Online Education Market by Degree Programs 3.2.6 The US Graduate Online Education Market by Volume
4. Market Dynamics 4.1 Growth Drivers 4.1.1 Rise in Educational Attainment Rate 4.1.2 Increase in Disposable Income 4.1.3 Growing Penetration of IOT Devices 4.1.4 Growth in Adoption of Microlearning 4.1.5 Increasing Urbanization Rate 4.1.6 Rising Education Spending 4.2 Challenges 4.2.1 Limited Access to Internet in Remote Areas 4.2.2 Online Availability of Free Content 4.2.3 Rising Not-for-Profit Competitors 4.3 Market Trends 4.3.1 Artificial Intelligence 4.3.2 Smart Education and Learning 4.3.3 Learning Management System
5. Competitive Landscape 5.1 The US Postsecondary Online Education Market: A Financial Comparison 5.2 The US Postsecondary Online Education Market Volume by Players
6. Company Profiles 6.1 Business Overview 6.2 Financial Overview 6.3 Business Strategy