Posts Tagged ‘Online Learning’

Thursday, June 10, 2010 // Posted in People Are Talking

Applicants that are hesitant about 100 percent online learning get opportunity to try out a course first

SPRINGFIELD, MO (Jun. 9, 2010)−Rockbridge Seminary, a fully online seminary that allows students to learn while serving in a ministry role, today announced Seminary Test Drive, a program that targets potential students who are ready to begin their seminary education, but are hesitant about 100 percent online learning. The new program allows a student to register for any course on the schedule and pay only one-half of the regular tuition fees, as long as the student agrees to enroll for the next term, if they are satisfied with their online learning experience.

“We developed the Seminary Test Drive program because we understand that not everyone is ready to jump in and fully commit to e-learning,” explains President Daryl Eldridge. “Through this new program we hope to address those concerns and help these students realize the many benefits and rewards associated with online learning.”

Eldridge says that in his conversations with prospective seminary students he hears questions like: “Will I feel part of a learning community or feel isolated and alone?” “Will I learn as well as I would in a traditional classroom?” “When I need help, will I have the support I need?”

Confident that most Test Drive students will be satisfied with the e-learning experience, Eldridge invites potential seminary students to apply for the Test Drive program. A limited number of Test Drive applicants are selected for the program each 8-week term.

About Rockbridge Seminary

Rockbridge Seminary is a degree-granting institution of higher learning that exists to develop servant leaders for Christian ministry through learning experiences that allow them to study and practice without leaving their ministry field.

The learning experiences provided by Rockbridge Seminary are delivered fully online, based on a curriculum that is designed around the biblical purposes of the church, and guided by ministry competencies.

Rick Warren, Saddleback Church’s senior pastor, calls Rockbridge Seminary the “future of global seminary education.” For additional information, visit www.rockbridgeseminary.org.

About E-Learning

According to a recent study conducted by the Babson Survey Research Group and The Sloan Consortium, online learning continues to grow “at rates far in excess of the total higher education student population.” The study found that “more than one in four higher education students now take at least one course online.” The majority of chief academic officers surveyed in the study affirm that learning outcomes for online learning compared to face-to-face learning is equivalent or superior. For additional information, visit www.sloan-c.org/publications/survey/learning_on_demand_sr2010.

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Saturday, May 22, 2010 // Posted in Learning Tips and Upgrades

For persons ready to start seminary but still hesitant about taking courses 100% online, Rockbridge Seminary offers a Test Drive program.

Rockbridge Test Drive students:

  1. Take advantage of a “fast track” application process
  2. Choose any course in the current term
  3. Pay ½ tuition for the test drive course
  4. Agree to take a second course the next term if satisfied with the online learning experience

A limited number of applicants are accepted to the Rockbridge Test Drive program each 8-week term. Only persons applying to the Master of Divinity or Master of Ministry Leadership degree programs are considered.Admissions guidelines apply.

Interested in becoming a Test Drive student?

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Wednesday, January 13, 2010 // Posted in Learning Tips and Upgrades

Rockbridge Seminary does many things differently from traditional seminary. Cutting a new path for fully online seminary education doesn’t stop at the learning model and method.

Students write their own scholarships at Rockbridge. Literally, they write blog postings and emails telling others about their experience and Rockbridge and the people who read that writing become students. When that happens the student making the referral gets $250 in tuition credit added to their account.

We’ve got some really complicated rules about how this must happen. Are you ready to read the fine print? Here it is:

Refer a friend or ministry colleague to Rockbridge Seminary. After he or she completes the first course, you’ll receive $250 tuition credit in your account. There is NO LIMIT to the number of referrals you can make. Four referrals pays for a class!

They just have to put your name in the “Referred by a RS student” blank on their application form.

One of our students has created his own seminary scholarship in a really big way.

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Tuesday, December 22, 2009 // Posted in People Are Talking

I was praying for a long time regarding a seminary. I did not want to leave ministry because I was learning in that context and I also had a family to support. After much searching and prayer – I came across Rockbridge Seminary. It was a huge answer to my prayer. My wife and I knew that this was the right school for me (us). I can still be in ministry; learning and supporting my family. I also did not to take time away from the family as I went to a classroom for lectures and learning. I usually did my seminary work after the family went to bed and after I spent quality time with them. There were times when I did have research and work to do during the day and did not spend with the family, but most of it was done without sacrificing time with my wife and children. In fact, my oldest son continue reading…

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Friday, December 4, 2009 // Posted in Learning Tips and Upgrades

Are you thinking about going to seminary? Rockbridge Seminary is waiving the Application fee for the month of December. Apply now to begin your first seminary course in January 2010.

While it is a big commitment time wise to go to seminary, it doesn’t have to mean moving or leaving your current ministry. Learn where you serve, while you serve by going to seminary online. Rockbridge has no residential requirements, but you’ll be more connected to your faculty and fellow students than at a residential campus.

I interacted more in this setting than at an actual classroom. Rockbridge’s learner-focused approach really struck a chord with me.
-Moni Keo, Senior Pastor and RS student
Greenleaf Church (Fullerton, CA)

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Wednesday, November 4, 2009 // Posted in People Are Talking

The Fourth Movement I see in Leadership Development is HI-TECH, HI-TOUCH APPROACH.

Because we live in a Hi-tech society many organizations are now capitalizing on technology and providing their leadership development content online.  But if you simply put courses online and expect people to work their way through the content and “be trained” you will be disappointed.  The Hi-tech approach is not enough on it’s own…it must be combined with a Hi Touch element.  This means providing the content online but ensuring the learner then engages with a coach or mentor to debrief their learning experience.

Using this approach you can provide training any time, any place at any pace.  For example, I am currently acting as a mentor for a Rockbridge Seminary student.  This week he will…Continue Reading

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Friday, August 28, 2009 // Posted in People Are Talking

Obviously, before going back to school I wasn’t sitting around with an excess of free time, looking around for something to fill it. Instead, I was sensing in my heart that there was so much more God wanted to teach me, and in particular wanted my life to be less about me and more about others. I was involved in a lot of little things, all seemingly disconnected, without having much of an impact in any one area.

So I needed to get a better handle on why I am here, get training on how to be a better leader, and get a deeper understanding of God’s mission in this world. Together, those pointed me to considering seminary. Practically speaking, my job, marriage, four young kids, and a desire to stay active in the church and community where I’m located [put] some extreme restrictions on what that education would have to look like. Continue reading…

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Thursday, August 13, 2009 // Posted in Learning Tips and Upgrades

black-shirtAre you thinking about going to seminary, know someone who is, or someone who should be?
Rockbridge Seminary is waiving tuition for all new students who begin studies in the September term.

Experience Rockbridge for just the $25 application fee and the cost of books (about $40) with no commitment or tuition cost.

  • Take part in the life changing course: Developing the Focused Life
  • Connect with students and faculty from all over the world
  • Experience high quality online learning- this is not a distance ed course!

The application deadline for the September term is August 24.

Apply now to take advantage of this $1,000 savings in tuition.

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Thursday, March 19, 2009 // Posted in People Are Talking

There was never a good time for Terri Baer to go to seminary.

Baer and her husband, Bill, were missionaries for more than 25 years in Chile, but their ministry together began when they married during college.

After graduating, Terri and Bill moved to Fort Worth, Texas, for Bill to attend seminary while Terri supported them teaching school.

Though she had been called to ministry two years earlier and felt the need to receive more training in ministry, Baer could not imagine how it would have been possible for her to start seminary along with her husband.

“My husband was pastoring a small country church,” Baer said. “We commuted every day, we didn’t have much money, and it just wasn’t a good time for us both to study.”

During their time in Texas, however, the Lord did make it clear to Terri and Bill that he wanted them to serve as international missionaries. They were appointed in October of 1978 and spent more than 20 years ministering to the people of Chile. Between maintaining their ministry and raising a family, including home schooling their children, seminary never seemed like a viable option for Baer.

Then several years ago Terri and Bill returned to the U.S. for an extended amount of time, and Baer started to think more seriously about receiving more training. At the same time, Baer heard from her senior pastor about a new seminary, Rockbridge, that offered an online program for a Master of Ministry Leadership degree. When she heard from another friend about the same program, Baer decided to explore more, and soon applied to Rockbridge.

After many years, God provided a way for Baer to go to seminary. But any long-term program Baer pursued had to accommodate her still-busy schedule. Terri and Bill worked as personnel consultants for their mission agency and traveled often throughout the country.

“I was looking for something that I knew I could finish and was practical,” Baer said. “It would have been very difficult for me to do a traditional seminary program where I had to go to class and had to be tied down to one place.”

Because Rockbridge offered all its courses online, Baer found she could easily keep up with her assignments by taking her books and materials with her when she traveled and connecting to the Internet from her hotel rooms in the evening. Baer also had the freedom to travel out-of-state to take care of her aging parents because of the flexibility her online coursework allowed.

Baer began her studies at Rockbridge with a desire to grow as a servant leader and deepen her knowledge of scripture so that she could better share with the people groups God had called her to in South America. However, Baer found that she could also apply what she was learning at Rockbridge to her current ministry in the U.S.

“Rockbridge was very current,” Baer said. “We had been out of the U.S. for a number of years and coming back you always have this reverse culture shock. I wanted to know the current practices and thinking in ministry and Rockbridge was very much on the cutting edge.”

Being on the cutting edge also means using the latest tools in technology, and Baer admitted that having to start seminary while learning how to keep up her computer skills was a challenge.

“I think at the time of life I was studying for my degree, it was very helpful to me to take one course at a time, to be able to focus and get the most out of that course,” Baer said.

Asking her husband and Rockbridge’s “tech guy” many questions also helped Baer to focus on her studies without getting distracted by computer challenges.

“It was a pilgrimage for me,” Baer said. “I started [Rockbridge] scared because I was very technologically challenged. I had times when I thought, ‘Can I even do this?’ I’m going to be 55 [this year]. I’m not a member of the ‘technology generation’ but, you know, it’s not about that. It’s about honoring God and growing in his image, letting him expand our horizons and doing new things in our life.

“It doesn’t matter how old we are or what we have or haven’t done. Even if I were not a missionary and even if I weren’t married to an ‘official minister,’ the training that I received would have been very beneficial, because we’re all called to minister.”

Baer’s ministry focused again on South America when she and Bill moved to Paraguay after graduation to begin their work as strategy coordinators for the city of and region surrounding Asuncion. Their work includes evangelism, discipleship, and training of national leaders as they work with them to start a church planting movement among their people group.

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Wednesday, January 14, 2009 // Posted in Learning Tips and Upgrades

Providing Rockbridge Seminary students with learning tips, ministry resources, and course upgrade news 

I’m guessing you didn’t apply to Rockbridge Seminary just to make a statement … about how cutting edge and future thinking you are. You simply found the best pathway to complete your seminary education based on your circumstances. Whatever your motivation, Rockbridge Seminary’s online learning format was probably a factor, if not the deciding one.

Whether you know it or not, that makes you a learning pioneer and part of a national conversation.

Kaplan University, also fully online, recently released two videos, “Your Time” and “Desks,” as part of a new national campaign inviting conversation about America’s educational system. The campaign is so provocative; it was the focus of an article in The New York Times.

Peter Smith, Senior Vice President of Academic Strategies and Development for Kaplan Higher Education, passionately describes in “Letter to the President-Elect” how the number of qualified workers needs to DOUBLE if current workforce needs are to be met.

This conversation is not unrelated to seminary education. Global Kingdom needs over the next 5-7 years require many more servant leaders to be trained for ministry than traditional seminaries can handle.

I believe you are part of the solution. Lead on, learning pioneers!

Here’s Kaplan’s “Your Time” commercial. What do you think?

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What People Are Saying...

“I wasn’t prepared for the personal growth and application in my life that has come about because of these classes”

Kim, Worship Leader, Florida