College Knowledge Via the World Wide Web

Published: 10 February 2001 y., Saturday
Sites catering to college-bound high schoolers are linking potential candidates with study guides, financial aid programs, scholarship awards and athletic opportunities to make the transition from high school to university fast, efficient and economical. Today's high school students are more Web-savvy than ever. Students consider the Web to be the second most important resources available to them -- second only to their guidance counselors, according to a study cited by Campus Pipeline Inc., a Salt Lake City, Utah-based vendor of enterprise software to about 65 colleges and universities. The survey was conducted by the Arts & Sciences Group, a private consulting group. And teenagers are increasingly using the Internet to assimilate and share information, as well as evaluate products to make informed purchase decisions. According to Jupiter Research, 47 million teens and kids will be online by 2005, as a result the growing integration of the Internet into the educational curriculum will be a contuing catalyst for online adoption. No doubt, evaluating data in the college selection process is part of this estimation. More and more college applications are being completed online. Further, as Web sites set up by individual colleges and universities expand, there are complimentary locations that exist exclusively to assist students with their pre-college needs and concerns.
Šaltinis: internetnews.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

On the establishment of a new Tallinn-based university

Three Tallinn higher educational institutions considering merger more »

Teachers to get raise in September

The Cabinet of Ministers today directed the Ministry for Finance to allocate LVL 2.88 million from the national budget to increase teacher salaries as of Sept. 1. more »

Saudis to replace 2,000 expat teachers this year

The Ministry of Education has decided to terminate the services of 2,000 expatriate teachers at the beginning of the new school year and replace them with Saudi nationals. more »

Ask MyRichUncle to Pay for School

The rising cost of college tuition has many parents wondering how they will pay more »

Britain supports Latvian language training program

A cooperation agreement was signed with the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) at the British Embassy in Riga today for a donation of GBP 50,000 to the National Latvian Language Training Program. more »

College Knowledge Via the World Wide Web

Student-oriented Web sites are making the grade. more »

UNICEF report

Latvian youth, according to a report by UNICEF's Innocenti Research Centre in Italy, are increasingly viewing education as a key to a better future. more »

Hugher pensions every year

Estonian Parliament on Dec. 13 passed a state pension insurance bill that foresees indexation of pensions more »

Latvian students on par with Americans in math, science

Eighth-grade students in Latvia's native-language schools performed about as well as American students in a recent study of mathematics and science achievement. more »

The business of education

Training choices and e-learning more »