Mikeie Reiland is a staff writer for Education at Forbes Advisor. Before coming to Forbes Advisor, he wrote magazine journalism for publications like the Oxford American, Bitter Southerner, and Gravy.
With five years of experience as a writer and editor in the higher education and career development space, Ilana has a passion for creating accessible, relevant content that demystifies the higher-ed ...
With more classes transitioning to online this fall because of the coronavirus pandemic, colleges and universities are increasing efforts to provide students with computers, WiFi hot spots and tech ...
A flurry of colleges has made the formal, if inevitable, announcements in the last 10 days that summer sessions -- or at least the first scheduled sessions for those that have multiple summer start ...
Every week this fall, we’re covering technology and education. Because Monday mornings are way more complicated than they used to be. One question we’ve gotten a lot is what all this tech means for ...
A handful of 1st and 2nd graders have been attending an online school in Alaska for three years. Meanwhile, new cyber elementary schools have opened in Ohio the past year. And Arkansas had so much ...
In March, when colleges and universities shut their campuses due to the coronavirus outbreak, many students, faculty, and administrators expected to return to campus in the fall.
Almost three in five students (59 percent) in a recent survey complained that they are doing more assignments online than they ever did in their in-person classes, and nearly as many (55 percent) ...
Jackie Halpern liked the idea of taking an online course at New York Law School. She had an interest in the subject matter, knew the professor and would be able to avoid a commute in hellish Manhattan ...
The cars lined up outside Jefferson Middle School on the first day of class today weren’t there to drop off kids. Instead, they were seeking help with the technology the district provided for learning ...
But those messages don’t quite match up with reality. If the pandemic taught us anything, it’s that “moving classes online” isn’t really possible. A class isn’t just the fact of meeting at a given ...