Older adult students are drawn to distance education because of the need
to balance career, family, and continuing education responsibilities
conveniently, effectively, and efficiently. When contemporary
technologies are integrated into the educational environment, the lack
of familiarity with these tools creates barriers to learning. With
teacher shortages in certain fields, distance education may address this
crisis. This book offers recommendations for implementing online
teaching training for nontraditional students. They must have clear
paths of communication available especially when social inclusion is
limited by the online format; learning new pedagogy is secondary until a
level of technology competency has been reached; the adult students will
commit to learning when the goals and objectives are applicable and
practical to their personal and professional needs; these nontraditional
adult students have competing priorities and struggle with balancing
family responsibilities, job obligations, and commitment to the program;
this is only exacerbated by the state, university, and program
assessment demands required. The book targets teacher educators and
educational researchers.