Effective Date: July 1, 2021
For courses and programs offered via distance education in which students may be eligible to use Title IV funds (federal financial aid), the Department of Education (ED) requires that institutions like the University of Colorado Boulder are able to confirm and document that there is regular and substantive interaction between students and their instructors.
This page aims to help faculty and staff understand this requirement and associated regulations, apprise them of the difference between distance and correspondence education, and offer guidance and suggestions for creating and offering opportunities for regular and substantive interaction in the digital classroom.
Distance Education
Distance education is, according to the ED, education that uses one or more technologies to deliver instruction to students who are physically separated from the instructor and to support regular and substantive interaction between the students and the instructor, either synchronously or asynchronously.
Not all education that takes place in a digital environment (e.g., online) is considered distance education—the level of interaction and who initiates the interaction matter greatly. An important distinction is, according to the ED, that a course or program that can be described as “self-paced” is considered to be correspondence education, regardless of the technology used.
For the university and our students, it is important to know the difference between “distance” and “correspondence” modalities when creating or delivering courses and programs. The core feature that distinguishes a distance course from a correspondence course is the presence of regular and substantive interaction.
While CU Boulder is recognized by our accreditor as an institution that offers/delivers correspondence courses and programs, those courses and programs are not Title IV aid eligible. If the university is found to have given aid to students for what is actually a correspondence course, sanctions could be imposed by the ED including fines and the requirement to repay the misused federal financial aid.