Some professors say that online courses would be beneficial to students and that technology should be integrated into the learning environment. For students who live busy lives, have jobs, are part of student government, Greek organizations, and use advanced technologies in their daily lives, online courses would better suit their learning style since they would not have time for regular classroom lessons. Some students may also choose to take general education courses online as a way to complete the requirements for their degree and take regular classroom courses that are more difficult and designed for their major. According to research conducted by the Community College Research Center at Columbia University's Teachers College, "Students interviewed for the study said they preferred taking one type of online course: the easy ones." (Fain, Paul. “Online Courses Are Second Choice for Community College Students in Some Subject Areas.” Online Courses Are Second Choice for Community College Students in Some Subject Areas, Inside Higher Ed, April 26, 2013 .) Additionally, students who were interviewed told the researchers, "For the more difficult courses, they felt stronger guidance from the instructors was needed." (Fain, Paul. “Online Courses Are Second Choice for Community College Students in Some Subject Areas.” Online Courses Are Second Choice for Community College Students in Some Subject Areas, Inside Higher Ed, April 26, 2013 .) According to the Center for Digital Education's article, "What College Students Really Think About Online Courses," students want quality academic options that match their learning style. The article states: “In addition to offering quality courses, universities should offer choices that match students' learning styles and schedules. Online options help students who have busy schedules due to their student schedule
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