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The transformation of socialized education into a free market could be accompanied by great confusion and many abuses. The most troubling problems will be fraud and inferior quality. If anyone can offer a netcourse, then the market will be flooded by netjunk: netcourses that either do not exist or are of inferior quality, or use teachers who are inexperienced or poorly educated. It will be very tempting for the unscrupulous to create a Potemken Academy, an educational facade that looks and sounds impressive but lacks substance.
The best solution to the problem of quality is for the education profession to formulate and propagate a set of voluntary netcourse quality reporting standards. This solution shifts most of the responsibility for evaluation to the netcourse provider in much the same way that financial auditing standards shift the burden of accounting to companies. The profession still needs to spot check adherence to the standards, but it would not have to undertake a huge evaluation effort. What would netcourse standards look like? We propose that if a netcourse provider adheres to the following standards, it could display a seal of quality.
Institutional information
Teacher resumes
Netcourse syllabus
Student evaluation
Netcourse audit
This information would help protect the public, particularly if institutions offering netcourses were actively encouraged to follow these standards. Their widespread utilization would greatly facilitate the compilation of reliable and standardized information about netcourses. We urge the profession to proactively adopt standards such as these. Let's avoid creating inferior offerings that degrade the netcourse idea. We need to quickly develop high-quality offerings so we can expand educational opportunities for all. | |||
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