BBC News - Massive open online courses - threat or opportunity?

abernard102@gmail.com 2013-07-03

Summary:

"When the internet hits an industry the result is usually pretty dramatic ... Now it is the turn of higher education, and not even the cleverest professors can say for sure how this is going to play out.  Right now this change is focused on the Mooc - shorthand for massive open online courses.  Essentially these are packaged up pieces of learning that last a few weeks, are often put together by a top professor at a top university, and are available to anyone with a computer. Enrolment is unlimited, there are no entry requirements, and they are completely free.  Mooc providers will tell you proudly that their product is not an alternative to going to university, it is an alternative to not going to university.

One of the big players in the Mooc world is Coursera, set up by Andrew Ng and Daphne Koller, two computer science professors at Stanford University in the United States ...  About two years ago Prof Ng decided to put lectures from his Machine Learning course online, with spectacular results: 'I put one of my courses online and it reached an audience of 100,000 students,' he says. 'To put that number into context, I used to teach 400 students a year at Stanford, that means that to reach a comparable sized audience I would have had to teach at Stanford for 250 years.'   It was then he realised the scalability that the internet can give education.  'I think Moocs have a huge potential. The technology that allows one professor to teach not just one student, but 100,000 really changes the economics of higher education,' Prof Ng says.  'Once you've created the course content it costs almost nothing to sign up another student. What that means is we can afford to connect everyone in the world to a great education.'  But not everyone agrees with this rosy assessment ... In California state-run universities are experimenting with Moocs in their undergraduate programmes ... However, university staff are not happy and see this as the beginning of cost-cutting and reduction in quality for publicly funded universities.  Professors in the philosophy department at San Jose State University have refused to teach a Mooc on justice developed by Harvard Professor Michael Sandel and have written him a scathing open letter in which they said they do not want to enable what they see as a push to 'replace professors, dismantle departments, and provide a diminished education for students in public universities' ... In Britain we lag behind the US, despite the fact that the UK pioneered distance learning with the Open University (OU) - now celebrating 40 years since its first graduations.  Now the OU is leading a consortium of 21 other universities as well as big cultural players like the British Museum and the British Council to form Futurelearn, which will begin providing Moocs in the autumn. Although they do not pretend to be able to replicate the full 'campus experience', Futurelearn's CEO Simon Nelson says they intend to use the power of social media to connect course participants.  'This is much more than simply pumping out videos,' he says. 'And this isn't just a redistribution of traditional education. This is about trying to use a connected environment of the web to try to re-invent learning in some way.'  Moocs allow education to begin harnessing the power of big data. Students can get a precise fix on their progress, as can their teachers, if they have one. And professors can see what works and adapt their courses accordingly.  At the moment the big players in the Mooc world are in the US and they include some of the world's most prestigious universities - on the east coast Harvard and MIT, and on the west coast Stanford.  In contrast, in the UK Oxford and Cambridge Universities are holding back from joining in ..."

Link:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-23069542

From feeds:

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

Tags:

oa.new oa.comment oa.usa oa.universities oa.uk oa.education oa.mit oa.harvard.u oa.debates oa.colleges oa.coursera oa.moocs oa.open_university oa.futurelearn oa.u.california oa.hei oa.courseware oa.u.cambridge oa.u.oxford

Date tagged:

07/03/2013, 08:10

Date published:

07/03/2013, 04:10