SUNY Online (known as Open SUNY before 2019[1]) is an online program of the State University of New York.

History of SUNY Online

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SUNY Learning Network (before 2013)

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In 2005, the State University of New York announced the nations' first online bachelor degree in electrical engineering with a grant from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.[2]

SUNY Learning Network (SLN) was an initiative that made online learning at the 64 SUNY schools accessible. The SUNY Learning Network provided course design instruction and support from the SUNY Center for Online Teaching Excellence (COTE) as well as learning management system hosting and support with helpdesk and application services.

Open SUNY (2013–2019)

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In 2013, Nancy Zimpher, 12th Chancellor for the State University of New York, announced the launch of Open SUNY, shifting services and support of SLN under the name Open SUNY. This announcement expanded online course and degree offerings across the SUNY System. It also involved a partnership with Coursera.[3] At its launch in 2014, Open SUNY included 10 online bachelor’s degree programs in high-demand fields. Since its launch, Open SUNY degree and course offerings swelled to nearly 500 degree programs and certificates and 20,000 online courses. Open SUNY has three degree designations: Open SUNY and Open SUNY+. According to the Open SUNY, an Open SUNY+ degree is one that offers the following:

  • "Personal Concierge
  • HelpDesk and Tutoring
  • Experiential Learning.
  • Industry-Leading Teaching Practices
  • High-Need Areas[4]

SUNY Online (2019–present)

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In 2019, Kristina M. Johnson, SUNY's 13th Chancellor, at her second State of the University address, announced her vision for the university system with the launch of SUNY Online. [5]

The announcement, according to Johnson, would expand the online offerings and deliver specialized program pathways for non-traditional students who wish to either pursue or finish a degree online. SUNY Online worked with campuses to offer program pathways in high-demand fields. The innovative idea not only laid out a specialized program pathways for adult and graduate students but for the first time SUNY System provided system-level support for students with the SUNY Online Success Coach. The first series of program pathways offered by SUNY Online includes:

  • Business and Accounting
  • Crime Analysis and Security Studies
  • Digital Security
  • Engineering
  • Healthcare Management
  • Psychology

SUNY Online students work with SUNY Online admissions coaches to apply, but all SUNY Online degrees are delivered and conferred by SUNY campuses. SUNY Online pathways allow students to complete a 4-year degree or pursue grad school in stages. Students can enter with some credits, no credits, or a degree already in hand. While SUNY Online students pursue a SUNY Online degree, their Success Coach stays with them through the transfer process, until graduation, and as they move on to grad school.

Not only did SUNY Online commit to program pathways for adult learners, but the announcement initiated a merger with Open SUNY. Open SUNY began the process of merging with SUNY Online in the summer of 2020, prior to the departure of Kristina M. Johnson, who left SUNY to become the president of Ohio State University.

Open SUNY played an important role during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic when Governor Andrew Cuomo announced all State University of New York campuses would go remote for the remainder of the spring 2020 semester.[6] During the pandemic, SUNY Online offered coaching support, expanded helpdesk services to SUNY campuses, drop-in hours for students and faculty who required technical assistance, and COVID-19 resources on its COVID-19 response page.

References

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  1. ^ "Online Degrees and Courses from the State University of New York". explore.suny.edu. Retrieved 2021-08-11.
  2. ^ Associated Press, The (2005-07-05). "Metro Briefing | New York: SUNY To Offer Major Online Degree". The New York Times. Retrieved 2024-11-28.
  3. ^ Lewin, Tamar (2013-05-30). "Universities Team With Online Course Provider".
  4. ^ "Online Degrees from the State University of New York". open.suny.edu. Retrieved 2020-12-17.
  5. ^ "1-31-19 Vision for SUNY in 2019 SOTUS - SUNY". www.suny.edu. Retrieved 2020-12-17.
  6. ^ "3-11-20 COVID19 Distance Learning - SUNY". www.suny.edu. Retrieved 2020-12-17.
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