Philippine school retails online learning

By Joel D. Pinaroc, ZDNet Asia
Monday, February 09, 2009 03:46 PM

PHILIPPINES--A local IT school has introduced a novel way of providing online education, offering its courses via a prepaid, retail scheme.

CAL Philippines, an affiliate of Informatics Singapore, said online technologies have been "revolutionizing education and training for the past years".

"Industry analysts estimate that Web-based training is the fastest growing segment within the U.S. training industry, displacing other traditional training methods such as instructor-led and text-based learning," said Grisel Garcia, marketing and PR officer of CAL, in an e-mail interview with ZDNet Asia.

In the Philippines, she noted, e-learning is emerging as an "alternative mode of training".

"In situations and locations where traditional classroom becomes prohibitive or limited, e-learning can be adopted as a strategy for training," Garcia said.

Pointing to CAL's e-learning scheme, she added: "[It's] more economical than regular instructor-led programs. Expenses related to classroom-based learning for the company, such as travel and housing cost, are greatly reduced."

Retail learning scheme
The Philippine school now offers prepaid cards that correspond to a specific number of days students can access the course of their choice.

A student can immediately enroll after purchasing a prepaid card available in denominations of 300 pesos (US$6.4), 500 pesos (US$10.6) and 2,500 pesos (US$53), to access the courses online for 15 days, 30 days and six months, respectively, Garcia said.

CAL currently offers some 1,000 online courses licensed from U.S.-based online learning provider MindLeaders, which programs are used by companies and universities in the United States for their own online learning initiatives. These include California Tech, Virginia Tech, Princeton, and the University of Texas.

In the Philippines, CAL offers customized e-learning programs that are targeted at corporations, government offices, schools and individuals, Garcia said. "We are also looking at a potentially huge OFWs (overseas fFilipino workers) market," she said.

Upon finishing the course and passing at least 70 percent of the assessments exams, students can download and print an official certificate of completion, she added.

Joel D. Pinaroc is a freelance IT writer based in the Philippines.


WORTHWHILE?

-2

2 votes
Blog

Talkback 1 comments

Philippine school retails online learning
Totally impractical. Why would I pay for something that I can get from the Internet for free?
Posted by anonymous on Friday, April 03 2009 11:34 PM


Tech Jobs Now!

Search for your ideal tech job:

Hands-on programming: Extract plain text from documents with Syncfusion's components

Web Development

Justin James recently tried Syncfusion's Essential DocIO and Essential PDF to help him extract text from documents he downloaded from the Internet. Here's the code he wrote to get the plain text.


Read more »



Will technology divide us further?

Blog thumbnail

So I finally watched 2012 over the weekend, but the film left me feeling extremely agitated.

The possibility that the world may meet its watery end in three years didn't..... by Eileen Yu

Read more »

Tags

  1. advertisement
  2. blog
  3. facebook
  4. google inc.
  5. internet
  6. internet advertising
  7. microsoft corp.
  8. network
  9. revenue
  10. search
  11. social networking
  12. software
  13. u.s.
  14. web
  15. web 2.0
  16. web browser
  17. web browsers
  18. web services
  19. web sites
  20. yahoo! inc.