Members of North Seattle College's Enrollment/Registration/Admissions Team
Colleagues who collaborated with our e-Learning team (circa early 2000s)
Consider reading this narrative in the order in which it was composed, starting with Post #1.
What constitutes a "distance learning / e-learning class"? "Distance learning" and "e-learning" are somewhat distinct terms, the former including more than just "online" classes, and the latter potentially including "non-distance" classes such as the "web-enhanced" campus ones. As demonstrated through the charts presented earlier, the growing number of fully and partially online courses in the first decade of the 2000s dominated the data and eventually replaced most of the earliest categories in "distance learning." The "e-learning" term became the more popular (and accurate) descriptor for courses utilizing web-based technologies that did not necessarily involve physical distance from campus.
However, prior to 2000, North Seattle College (NSC) offered a variety of non-traditional classes that opened up learning possibilities for students beyond the usual in-the-classroom format. These early "distance learning" options primarily included: Telecourses (based on weekly televised programs), videocassette-based courses (involving the rental of videocassettes with recorded programs and lessons), and multiple-location live courses using interactive television ("ITV classes"). Another popular early "distance learning" modality was the correspondence course (based on reading a textbook with emailed assignments and communication). NSC did not widely adopt this latter "distance" format, known for its generally very low completion rate, although it was a strong component of Seattle Central College's program. NSC also offered a few courses with distinct "distance learning" categories such as "flex-time/CD ROM" Elementary Russian and "computer tutorial" Microeconomics.
The first "distance learning" class offered by North Seattle College was a telecourse in Spring Quarter 1994 entitled "History 210 -- The Pacific Century". Seventeen students enrolled in this first (and only) distance course during that "lead off" term. In the following term (Fall Quarter 1994), five telecourses were offered, increasing to eleven classes a couple quarters later (Spring Quarter 1995). Over the span of just a year, "distance learning" enrollments grew from those 17 student "seat counts" in the 1993/1994 academic year to 590 enrollments in the 22 total telecourses scheduled in total during the 1994/1995 year. Clearly, many students were finding that such "distance learning" fit their life situations or/and their learning preferences. In Spring Quarter 1997, the first online course was offered ("HEA 150 Health & Human Sexuality", taught by Trish Root, with enrollment of 14 students), and "distance learning" really took off from there!
The following series of charts shows how "distance learning" took shape during its "formative" years at North Seattle College from Spring Quarter 1993 through Spring Quarter 2000. Clicking on a chart will lead to a "pop-up" expanded view. This "unofficial" data, tracked by our distance learning operation, may not fully match up with other records because of the reasons explained in the last post, but the divergences are secondary and do not alter the observations and interpretations here.
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