Massive Open Online Courses Are Multiplying at a Rapid Pace - NYTimes.com

abernard102@gmail.com 2012-11-05

Summary:

The paint is barely dry, yet edX, the nonprofit start-up from Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has 370,000 students this fall in its first official courses. That’s nothing. Coursera, founded just last January, has reached more than 1.7 million — growing 'faster than Facebook,' boasts Andrew Ng, on leave from Stanford to run his for-profit MOOC provider. 'This has caught all of us by surprise,' says David Stavens, who formed a company called Udacity with Sebastian Thrun and Michael Sokolsky after more than 150,000 signed up for Dr. Thrun’s 'Introduction to Artificial Intelligence' last fall, starting the revolution that has higher education gasping. A year ago, he marvels, 'we were three guys in Sebastian’s living room and now we have 40 employees full time.' 'I like to call this the year of disruption,' says Anant Agarwal, president of edX, 'and the year is not over yet.' MOOCs have been around for a few years as collaborative techie learning events, but this is the year everyone wants in. Elite universities are partnering with Coursera at a furious pace. It now offers courses from 33 of the biggest names in postsecondary education, including Princeton, Brown, Columbia and Duke. In September, Google unleashed a MOOC-building online tool, and Stanford unveiled Class2Go with two courses.  Because anyone with an Internet connection can enroll, faculty can’t possibly respond to students individually. So the course design — how material is presented and the interactivity — counts for a lot. As do fellow students. Classmates may lean on one another in study groups organized in their towns, in online forums or, the prickly part, for grading work.  The evolving form knits together education, entertainment (think gaming) and social networking. Unlike its antecedent, open courseware — usually written materials or videotapes of lectures that make you feel as if you’re spying on a class from the back of the room — the MOOC is a full course made with you in mind.  The medium is still the lecture. Thanks to Khan Academy’s free archive of snappy instructional videos, MOOC makers have gotten the memo on the benefit of brevity: 8 to 12 minutes is typical. Then — this is key — videos pause perhaps twice for a quiz to make sure you understand the material or, in computer programming, to let you write code. Feedback is electronic. Teaching assistants may monitor discussion boards. There may be homework and a final exam..."

Link:

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/04/education/edlife/massive-open-online-courses-are-multiplying-at-a-rapid-pace.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0

From feeds:

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

Tags:

oa.new oa.comment oa.crowd oa.oer oa.quality oa.students oa.education oa.khan_academy oa.udacity oa.edx oa.moocs oa.cousera oa.courseware

Date tagged:

11/05/2012, 12:57

Date published:

11/05/2012, 07:57