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The IntraLearn XE Helps 2003 UMass Online Revenue
Grow 40% and Enrollments Grow 33%
Students Cite Satisfaction with Convenience, High Caliber Professors
and Programs
November
6, 2003 -- UMassOnline, the University of Massachusetts
web-based learning division, today announced that online education
program revenues and enrollments grew 40 percent and 33 percent,
respectively, in 2003.
Revenues from the combined online programs at the University exceeded
$11 million, up from $7.8 million in 2002, while enrollments reached
13,375, up from 10,039 in 2002. More than 90 percent of the revenues
are retained by the UMass campuses to support education and research
programs.
UMassOnline
attributes its rapid growth to the continued addition of new online
programs that serve community needs, high levels of online student
satisfaction, and UMassOnlines increasing recognition as a
leader in the national distance learning market due to factors such
as winning several national distance learning awards.
Distance
learning is critical to the future of UMass and all of higher education,
UMass interim President Jack M. Wilson said. Without it, we
cannot adequately serve students who live far from our campuses
or whose work and family lives make traditional higher education
an unattainable goal. Also, at a time when we are expected to do
more with less state funding, UMassOnline is mobilizing our five
campuses to create entrepreneurial revenue-generating online programs,
multi-campus collaborations, innovative faculty training, increased
national visibility and significant cost savings for the University.
Institutions
that deliver only traditional programs write off large and important
segments of the population, such as working professionals, who need
and want to advance their educations, says David Gray, UMassOnline
CEO. At a large, multi-campus university like ours, online
education also lets students draw upon the resources of whichever
UMass campus that can best address their objectives, regardless
of where they live.
"A
bricks and mortar (university program) wont work for me
this works, says Joan Deal, a Virginia cardiovascular nurse
and mother of three who is matriculated in the UMass Amherst Isenberg
School Online MBA program. For me (what works is) the faculty
and the tremendous flexibility.
This
year, the Sloan Consortium and the United States Distance Learning
Association recognized UMassOnline with awards, the 2003 Award for
Effective Practices in Student Satisfaction and the 2003 Excellence
In Distance Teaching Award, respectively.
In
2003, UMassOnline launched new online programs including:
Master of Education in Instructional Design (UMass Boston)
MS (Nursing)/MPH Dual Degree Program (UMass Amherst)
Post Master's Nurse Practitioner Certificate (UMass Boston)
Bachelor of Business Administration (UMass Amherst)
Basics in Exercise and Nutrition for Health and Human
Performance Certificate of Completion (UMass Amherst)
Online Certificate of Business Studies (UMass Amherst)
Today,
UMassOnline offers 37 graduate and undergraduate programs online
including more than 300 courses through the continuing
education departments at UMass Amherst, Boston, Dartmouth and Lowell.
About
UMassOnline:
UMassOnline delivers high quality online educational programs from
University of Massachusetts Amherst, Boston, Dartmouth and Lowell.
Academic programs are fully accredited by the relevant accrediting
bodies such as the New England Association of Schools and Colleges
(NEASC) and degrees are granted by the sponsoring campus. To learn
more about UMassOnline, visit www.UMassOnline.net.
Contact:
Leslie Granese
UMassOnline
(617) 287-7111
lgranese@umassonline.net
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