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COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (Aug. 10, 2005) — Fewer cars in the parking lot
doesn’t necessarily mean fewer students in the classrooms.
Tennessee Tech University’s 2005 summer enrollment — at 2,955
– was up compared to last year’s total of 2,871, but a significant
percentage of students who signed up for summer classes this year took
them at off-campus locations or commuted virtually in an online classroom
format, eliminating the need for daily trips to campus.
“For summer 2005, 26 percent of the instructional activity was
at off-campus sites, and 9 percent was in the Regents Online Degree Program,”
said Glenn James, TTU’s director of Institutional Research.
“Therefore, approximately one-third of all TTU’s instructional
activity in summer 2005 was in off-campus or online instruction,”
he continued.
That statistic didn’t come as a surprise to Susan Elkins, dean
of Interdisciplinary Studies and Extended Education. “The convenience
and flexibility of taking a course online or at a satellite location makes
it much easier to attend for people who otherwise wouldn’t be able,”
she said.
Of the 2,955 enrolled at TTU this summer, 1,769 of them were undergraduate
students and 1,186 were graduate students, compared to last year’s
number of 1,832 undergraduate students and 1,039 graduate students.
TTU’s summer term is divided into a first session and a second session,
each offering their own distinct courses, and a full session that offers
classes that span both.
--Tracey LeFevre
This information posted 12 August 2005
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