Distance Learning

Have you ever dreamed of earning a degree without setting foot in a classroom? Are you self-motivated and a whiz on the Internet but lack the time needed to enroll in an on-campus program? If so, a distance learning program in nursing or allied health may be right for you.

One of the major benefits of distance learning is that it enables students to participate in quality learning, anytime, anywhere. In addition, an online learning experience is more interactive. The multimedia regularly used in distance learning programs engages and connects with students in new and unique ways, and it can often be a more effective teaching tool than traditional educational methods.

 

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Distance Learning Articles

Ever Upward

An innovative online college offers as unusual solution to the nursing shortage: helping minority medical technicians, LPNs and others move up to RN careers.

Opening Doors

By adding more flexibility, convenience and support services to their programs, nursing schools are taking bold steps to make it easier for minority nurses to go back to school

Pilar De La Cruz, RN, BSN, MSN: "If I could do it, so can you."
Earn Your e-Degree

Distance learning programs in allied health

DAHC Summer/Fall 2004
From RN to CRNA

A severe shortage of nurse anesthetists plus a growing need for culturally and linguistically competent anesthesia care make this advanced practice specialty an ideal career for minority nurses.

From RN to CRNA
Baccalaureate Nursing in Rural Oklahoma: Strategies for Success

In a unique collaborative project, two universities in Indian Country join forces to make quality BSN education more accessible to culturally diverse students.

ECU@SOSU nursing students Karen Holiday, Dana Danderson, Sabrina Durant and Brandie Gray
Minority Nurse Educators in Cyberspace: A Progress Report

Now entering its third year, an innovative federally funded program designed to increase nursing students’ access to ethnically diverse faculty is a steadily growing success

Majoring in Minority Health

Not so long ago, topics like minority health disparities and serving the needs of diverse patient populations were rarely taught in nursing classrooms. Today, a growing number of nursing schools are not only incorporating minority health into their curricula, they’re building whole degree programs around it.

Majoring in Minority Health

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