Globalization, Online Education and the Role of the Internet

Online coupon booking for nights out, online chat rooms to socialise, online newspapers to keep up to date, online dating to happen on lovers, online concerts to watch music, online shopping for weekly groceries, online universities for online education …I could go on.

Considering that the Internet is a fairly new introduction to modern life, it is amazing to see how much it hlike that which developed in such little time. The Internet has gone from living a new and exciting commodity to an essential tool of 21st Century Life.

We are able to update the Internet instantly. Unlike print, the Internet is fluid, information is not bound into physical print never to happen changed. This is why online newspapers keep proved so popular with readers. They are able to check the news for developments every few minutes, always being rewarded with another snippet of information or a new breaking news headline.

The Internet has proved itself to be a potent factor in the spreading of globalisation. Hundreds of countries, states and islands share the same bank of information, dipping their heads into the giant pool of the Internet and receiving the same electric shocks.

Scottish boys can race cars with kids from California and Italians can flirt with Brazilians on i-life. At the same time teenagers in New Zealand are listening to obscure Chinese musicians via My Space. All through the amazing medium of the Internet! It is even possible to attend university courses on the Internet near reading lectures and listening to podcasts online in an educational revolution. Imagine no new classroom lectures!

Of course it has been a matter of debate about whether or not this kind of globalisation testament choice be a force for beneficial or a force that brings something more damaging.

Many people believe that the Internet will help eradicate any faculty of national culture and identity whilst some people argue that this would be a good outcome.

It is useless to try to stem the tide of progression and to discharge so would be to hamper science and the nature of humanity itself. It still remains to be seen what the effect of the Internet will have because it is still growing and developing, a technology that develops society whilst being simultaneously developing by society.

As I was saying before, companies are tapping into the market with online universities. Universities are partnering up with innovative businesses to create tailor-made online courses aimed at people who thirst for to gain more qualifications however whom may have been in the world of work for a long time already. This not only has the effect of enabling individuals to potentially earn more than before but it contributes to countries as a whole by offering the of age population further education.

This is just one part of how the Internet is developing communities for the better.

Sarah Maple writes about adult education and home learning

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