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Enrique Dans

On the effects of technology and innovation on people, companies and society (writing in Spanish at since 2003)

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The fine line between face-to-face and virtual teaching

6 min readNov 8, 2016

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On October 20 IE Business School we’ve been working on for some time: , conceptualized and created with the help of and designed to create a fully immersive educational experience that pushes the boundary between online education and the classroom learning experience (see references to the presentation in or , among ).

Since 2000, I have been watching how online education has become much more than simply a replacement resource, more than just a way to provide education to those who, for whatever reason, cannot commit to being in a classroom in a particular place.

The formula we decided to use leveraged our teaching staff’s work, with no assistants, tutors or substitutes of any kind, based on relatively small groups (despite the clear economic benefits that teaching to tens of thousands students at a time could offer), and direct, constant interaction through forums and other participation schemes.

We soon appreciated the superiority of this approach: the best discussions were no longer taking place in classrooms, but online. As a professor, using a case study in an online session was the best way to feel fully prepared for a classroom session.

Enrique Dans
Enrique Dans

Published in Enrique Dans

On the effects of technology and innovation on people, companies and society (writing in Spanish at since 2003)

Enrique Dans
Enrique Dans

Written by Enrique Dans

Professor of Innovation at IE Business School and blogger (in English here and in Spanish at )

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