Standing Out in the Crowd

Every day seems to bring new online offerings — new institutions throwing their hat into the online learning ring. So how can you stand out in this increasingly crowded environment and meet the needs of your learners? Hear from QM members on how their commitment to quality is making a difference and earning them top marks from U.S. News & World Report.

Quality is at the table, always.

While there are many different ideas on exactly how education will change in the future, there is near-unanimous agreement that change is coming. In fact, we already see it. So how can you prepare to meet the changes happening now and the ones that are coming? As QM’s Executive Director Dr. Deb Adair shares in her 2020 New Year’s message, bringing quality to the table is an important place to start.

Academic Rigor White Paper 3: Aligning Institutional Processes to Support Academic Rigor

In the third and final installment of our white paper series on academic rigor, invited author Andria F. Schwegler, Associate Professor of Psychology at Texas A&M University – Central Texas explores how institutional processes and support impact the application of academic rigor by faculty. Plus, discover what faculty can do to support academic rigor and how their behaviors, expectations, and interactions with students affect student experiences and academic performance.

Your Course is QM-Certified! Now What?

Achieving QM Certification for your course is not the end of the process — it’s just the beginning! Sharing the certification with key stakeholders, including students, is an important next step. As the QM Ohio Consortium shares, promoting QM-Certified courses helps differentiate your offerings in a crowded online environment and gets the word out to students about the quality learning experiences your institution provides.

Lessons Learned and Benefits Gained: TAMIU’s QM Certification Story

In 2011, Texas A & M International University began its quality assurance journey. Now, the University leads institutions in Texas with 144 certified courses. Along the way, the University’s team learned some important lessons about the process — lessons the University’s Director of Instructional Technology & Distance Education is now sharing to help others move their own quality assurance journeys forward.