Online-Education Start-Up Teams With Top-Ranked Universities to Offer Free Courses

abernard102@gmail.com 2012-08-20

Summary:

“Last fall, two Stanford computer-science professors helped create an online course-hosting platform that opened some of the university’s classes to the entire world. Hundreds of thousands of students enrolled free of charge. Their start-up company, which grew out of that effort, now seeks to give millions a taste of top-quality education by expanding its platform to other elite universities. Coursera, the online-education outfit founded by Stanford professors Andrew Ng and Daphne Koller, will grow its course platform through official partnerships with three more top-tier institutions, the company announced today. Princeton University, the University of Pennsylvania, the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, and Stanford will use Coursera’s technology to offer a mix of classes including computer science, business, and literature. The young company already serves seven courses, and about 30 more will be rolled out later this week and through the summer. The courses are offered free to anyone online, though students cannot earn university credit. Ms. Koller said Coursera will leave the choice to award unofficial credentials like certificates of accomplishment up to its partner institutions. And students cannot interact with the professors directly—for feedback, they can use an online forum to ask and rank questions, where popular submissions rise to the top. Quizzes embedded in the course videos test students’ understanding of the material as they go along. Ms. Koller said that in addition to opening courses to the entire world, Coursera’s platform could allow professors to build a better face-to-face experience by “flipping” their classrooms. Under this model, interactive classroom instruction replaces the traditional lecture, which is presented in other formats for students to absorb outside of class. Ms. Koller pointed to her own experience using the flipped classroom to explain why students would choose to pay top dollar to attend institutions like Stanford and Penn instead of simply getting their education free using Coursera’s platform. She said one of her classes has long been recorded and televised, partly because of Stanford’s need to support students who take courses through a continuing-education program at the university. Attendance would typically drop to about 30 percent of enrollment by the third or fourth week, she said. When she moved to the flipped classroom model about three years ago, she threw out the lecturing. Instead, she used the classroom time to talk about common problems popping up in quizzes, offer group problem-solving exercises, and invite guest lecturers. She made attendance optional, recorded the sessions, and didn’t cover any material that was required for the exams. Though her colleagues cautioned that attendance would plummet even further, Ms. Koller said attendance hovered around 70 percent of enrollment—about double what she had before she flipped her classroom.  A colleague in biochemistry tried the same thing and got similar results, Ms. Koller added... Other emerging providers of huge open online courses, such as Udacity and MITx, have so far limited their offerings to computer-science courses because the assignments can be automatically graded by computers, making it easier to teach hundreds of thousands of students at once. Coursera, meanwhile, plans to power classes in computer science, as well as courses in the humanities—though the company is still developing plans for the humanities classes. Ms. Koller said those courses could use a peer-assessment model in which some of the grading gets outsourced to students, who would use rubrics as guides to judge their peers’ work... To keep growing, Coursera will pull from a rich venture-capital investment provided by two prominent firms. Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and New Enterprise Associates have invested $16-million in the company. The influx of cash will allow the company’s founders to focus on growing the platform instead of worrying right away about how to turn thousands of visitors into a reliable revenue stream. Ms. Koller and Mr. Ng were reluctant to discuss the company’s business model because they said they’re considering a range of options...”

Link:

http://chronicle.com/blogs/wiredcampus/online-education-start-up-teams-with-top-ranked-universities-to-offer-free-courses/36048

Updated:

08/16/2012, 06:08

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » abernard102@gmail.com

Tags:

oa.new oa.business_models oa.comment oa.ssh oa.cs oa.crowd oa.oer oa.students oa.princeton.u oa.sustainability oa.funders oa.stanford.u oa.mitx oa.coursera oa.udacity oa.u.penn oa.u.michigan oa.literature oa.stem oa.economics_of

Authors:

abernard

Date tagged:

08/20/2012, 18:15

Date published:

04/18/2012, 16:59