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Elite Colleges Transform Online Higher Education

Massive Open Online Courses

TERENCE CHEA   08/05/12 05:33 PM ET  AP

SAN FRANCISCO — When the Massachusetts Institute of Technology offered its first free online course this spring, Ashwith Rego jumped at the chance to learn from some of the world's leading researchers – without leaving his home in India.

"I never imagined that I would be taught by professors from MIT, let alone for free," said the 24-year-old engineer who works in Bangalore.

From Harvard to Stanford, a growing number of elite universities are throwing open their digital doors to the masses. They're offering their most popular courses online for no charge, allowing anyone with an Internet connection to learn from world-renowned scholars and scientists.

Many colleges have offered Web-based courses for years, but the participation of top-tier research universities marks a major milestone in the expansion of digital learning.

The proliferation of so-called massive open online courses, or MOOCs, has the potential to transform higher education at a time when colleges and universities are grappling with shrinking budgets, rising costs and protests over soaring tuition and student debt.

Supporters say these online courses can lower teaching costs, improve learning online and on campus, and significantly expand access to higher education, which could fuel technological innovation and economic growth.

"It holds the potential for serving many, many hundreds of thousands of students in a way we simply cannot today," said Molly Corbett Broad, president of the American Council on Education.

Last month, a dozen major research universities announced they would begin offering courses on the online learning platform Coursera, joining Stanford and Princeton universities and the universities of Pennsylvania and Virginia.

The University of California, Berkeley said it would start making online courses available this fall through edX, a competing Web portal launched in May by Harvard University and MIT with $60 million in funding from the two schools.

"I believe it will ultimately revolutionize education," said UC Berkeley Chancellor Robert Birgeneau.

So far students can't earn college credit for the courses, but that hasn't dampened demand.

EdX officials say 154,000 students from more than 160 countries registered for MIT's first online course, "Circuits and Electronics," this past spring. Only about 7,100 students passed the course, but that's still a lot more than can fit in a lecture hall.

More than 120 universities have expressed interest in joining the consortium, said edX President Anant Agarwal, who heads MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory.

"Our goal is to reinvent education," said Agarwal, who created the first MITx course. "It will dramatically improve the quality, efficiency and scale of learning worldwide and on our campuses."

So far, the new online courses are attracting mostly older workers who want to upgrade their skills and knowledge, but may not have the time or money to attend classes on campus.

The new generation of online courses features interactive technology, open admissions, high-caliber curriculum and the ability to teach tens of thousands of students at once. The universities say the online courses are as rigorous as their campus counterparts.

Some schools, including the University of Washington and University of Helsinki, say they will offer college credit for Coursera courses.

If more schools follow suit, the online teaching could allow more students to attend college and graduate faster, experts say.

Besides potential cost savings, the new generation of online classes can change how students learn on campus by relieving professors of lecturing duties and freeing up more time for research and discussion with students.

"It's going to transform the work of professors," said William Tierney, a higher education expert at the University of Southern California.

But many questions remain. Are the courses rigorous enough to justify college credit? How do schools prevent cheating? Can colleges keep charging students thousands of dollars for courses they can take free online?

Some educators say these cyber courses can't replace the academic community and learning experience of a traditional campus education.

But others warn that MOOCs have the potential to undermine the finances of colleges and universities – much like how free Web content has upended newspapers, magazines and other media industries.

If students can get high-quality academic material for free, colleges and universities will be pressed to demonstrate the education value they offer beyond lectures and exams.

"I don't think you can just dismiss this," Tierney said. "People think that what happened to the newspaper industry is not going to happen to academia."

Once up and running, most courses can almost run by themselves. They typically feature short video lectures followed by quizzes that test students on the concepts they just learned. Most math and science exams can graded by computer, while students in humanities courses evaluate each other's writing assignments.

The courses run on set schedules ranging from several weeks to several months, so that students can form discussion groups and help each other with homework assignments.

"There was a tremendously vibrant online community of fellow students," said George Skelly, a Boston attorney who took the MIT electronics class this spring. "It was as if I had a thousand teaching assistants available to me instantaneously."

This year several competing online platforms have emerged and attracted elite universities eager to develop their digital learning programs.

Coursera was founded by Andrew Ng and Daphne Koller, two Stanford professors who started the platform after they taught an online computer science course that attracted more than 100,000 students last fall.

This fall Coursera will offer 116 courses from 16 universities in disciplines such as medicine, philosophy and artificial intelligence. So far about 900,000 students have enrolled.

The Mountain View-based startup has raised $16 million from Silicon Valley venture capital firms as well as $3.7 million from the California Institute of Technology and University of Pennsylvania.

While Coursera is a for-profit venture, the company remains committed to keeping the courses free, Ng said.

"If a poor kid in India cannot take the class, I think that would just be a tragedy," Ng said. "If a place like Princeton could teach millions of students, I think the world would be a better place."

Coursera is exploring ways to generate revenue, including charging students for certificates and charging employers who want to identify top students.

Faced with a shortage of engineering talent, many tech companies have already asked for introductions to students who successfully completed his online course, Ng said. Some students told him they landed new jobs after showing employers their Coursera certificates.

The Georgia Institute of Technology plans to offer five Coursera courses this fall, said Richard DeMillo, a computer science professor who heads the Center for 21st Century Universities.

"We're in the middle of a potentially groundbreaking experiment," DeMillo said. "Really big things could come out of it."

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08:06 AM on 08/13/2012
If this is true, then the URL is not listed to get enrolled, why?
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Moravecglobal
04:09 PM on 08/10/2012
University of California wates taxes. University of California is not to hurt to heal, but serious questions remain. Cal. Chancellor Birgeneau, Provost George W Breslauer: recruit affluent born abroad foreign and affluent out of state applicants who displace Californians; pay ex-politician $300,000 for lectures; double instate tuition - Cal. is the most expensive public university, more expensive than Harvard; spend tens of millions (prominent East Coast university accomplishes same 0 cost) for OE consultants but stop analysis of inefficiencies in Chancellor, Provost operations; Cal. tuition to return on investment falls below top 10.
Breslauer, Birgeneau would like to blame the politicians, since they stopped giving them every dollar demanded, & the state legislators do share some responsibility for the financial crisis. But not in the sense B and B mean. Every year Birgeneau ($450,000) and Provost Breslauer ($306,000) would request a budget increase, the timid UC Regents would agree to it, and the Calif. Senate, Assembly would provide.
.Faculty & staff raised issues however, when they failed to see relevant action taken, they stopped. Finally, the Provost and Chancellor engaged expensive OE consultants to tell them what they should have known or been able to find out from their bright, engaged faculty, staff.

Chancellor, Provost leadership is badly damaging Cal. Good people are loosing their jobs. You never want a crisis to go to waste. Increasing Cal’s budget is no solution. Birgeneau’s resignation is welcome. Honorably retire clueless Provost George W Breslauer. Opinions to UC Board of Regents marsha.kelman@ucop.edu
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Num1Christy
Progressive Ohioan
07:52 AM on 08/08/2012
My husband has been building and developing adult education courses online through our State government for 6 years now. If e-learning can work for a generation of individuals who haven't grown up on the computer, I don't see why online education shouldn't have unlimited expand-ability for a generation of individuals who have.
10:29 AM on 08/07/2012
Teaching online is not new. In 2006-07, the U.S. Department of Education reported that 97% of public community colleges and 88% of public universities offered courses online. The Sloane Foundation reports that more than 1/3 of students have taken an online course, and the number is growing. Colleges began offering online courses in the early 1990's, as soon as the cost for computers and Internet connections became affordable to students, who take the courses from their home or workplace, and to colleges.

Offering free, non-credit, online courses to 120,000 students is new. But 79 percent of community colleges limit the number of students who can enroll in a course to 30 students due to the high level of student-to-teacher and student-to-student interaction that takes place. Technology makes it easy to e-mail a question or post an idea on an online discussion board. Faculty and administrators who are concerned about course quality and student learning (and faculty burn out) demand that colleges put these limitations in place. Colleges also take pains to ensure students can access online student services, such as tutoring, career counseling, orientation, technical support, and library services.

It is important to distinguish between "traditional" online courses, for which students earn credit toward their college degrees, and MOOCs which are essentially continuing education courses, for which students do not receive credit, but take to learn more about a subject for their own personal enrichment. Christine Mullins, Instructional Technology Council
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Stacy M
09:11 PM on 08/06/2012
I've been taking classes from Udacity an Coursera in my spare time and i can tell you:those classes are GOOD.
Really I learned more about computer science from Udacity's CS 101 then I did when I took a C++ class at UCLA. (I got an A- there so I wasn't slacking off)
Yes the possibility for cheating is there. But the format is great.
Basically a really good in person class will beat an good on-line class. But the average generic mass-produced college class like I had at UCLA is no match for a good on-line course.
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Darius Molark
de gustibus non est disputandum
07:56 PM on 08/06/2012
This is just as absolutely fabulous as it is important. If this marks a real trend, then I think we will be online toward a better world. Most do not agree with my philosophy that all education should be free, it is such an appalling, offensive, utopian idea. But I do think we will not be able to hold back from this natural course of online education - we'll just have to figure out how to liberate the journals from ProQuest, next. Kidding aside, the trend began years ago mainly with MIT and Stanford. It's a good trend capable of changing the world. Imagine learning about Heidegger, Dasein and phenomenology online, sharing ideas in real time with like-minded others. That is too rich. More than jet ski richness!
07:31 PM on 08/06/2012
If this interests you, check out "Dying Breed: The True Story of How the Internet Killed My Career as a Newspaper Reporter" http://authoralexburk.blogspot.com/
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TisKishnsing
Brutal logic, unexpected honesty
09:58 AM on 08/07/2012
its true. newspaper reporters jobs are dying away so fast.
eventually the same will happen to school and university buildings. they'll become ghost-laden empty haunted buildings where people will go in and never come back.
06:00 PM on 08/06/2012
This will devalue the degrees from the actual schools.
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Num1Christy
Progressive Ohioan
07:48 AM on 08/08/2012
The Ohio State University offers some online courses, are they not an "actual school"? Don't be narrow minded.
03:57 PM on 08/06/2012
This is a move in the right direction for my generation that has chosen student loans. It's great to see these kinds of shifts happening so fast!
Chase
11:50 AM on 08/06/2012
Really great resource for people who have the drive and desire to make use of this.
I know personally that people in India, China, and South Korea have so much regards for Universities like MIT and Berkeley that they would jump at this opportunity in places like Bangalore, and Beijing. I hope that students here in America do too.