Florida A&M Partners with Univ of Phoenix for Online Ed

online_classA new research project by Florida A&M University Developmental Research School (FAMU DRS), the Thurgood Marshall Foundation and the University of Phoenix will provide support for the creation of online courses to better-serve minority students. African American students haven’t been as successful in online learning as other students, something the research project aims to overturn by designing new strategies that work for them.

The Tallahassee-based school will be able to use blended learning to prepare students for college and support them so they graduate on time. The strategies and approaches to come out of this new research project will be deployed at historically black colleges and universities (HBCU) across the county.

Superintendent Patricia Hodge says African American students will now get a chance to be successful in, and thanks to, online learning:

“In learning  and developing teaching strategies that work for African American students and poor students that haven’t been as successful, and bilingual students who haven’t been as successful, we hope as we develop those strategies we can roll them out to teachers across the county,” she said.

The online curriculum will improve and complement classroom teaching and will focus on math, which state exam results show is the subject FAMU DRS students struggle with the most. The online courses will be accessible through the University of Phoenix’s online platform in the form of learning resources and other materials, workshops and tutoring opportunities.

– See more at: Education News