May 24, 2013
by Graelyn Brashear, C-ville
Coursera, one of the most popular MOOC hosts on the Web, currently offers nine free UVA lecture series running from four to 16 weeks in a range of topics: history, philosophy, education, and a whole slew of business courses out of Darden. Each of the five courses that launched earlier this year saw between 45,000 and 85,000 eager students sign up, and while the attrition rate is steep—usually, only about 5 to 10 percent of enrollees stick it out to the end—UVA’s courses are showing strong engagement. And even with a high dropout rate, participating in the Web platform has meant hundreds of thousands of learners are getting at least a sliver of a UVA education, and as Bloomfield found out from his influx of snail mail, a lot of those people have come away with a deep appreciation for what they’ve experienced. But it’s having an effect on Grounds, too. One of the big arguments in favor of exploring online education nationwide, even if the courses aren’t widely disseminated, is that it gives instructors the ability to “flip the classroom”: Put the lectures online and make them homework in order to free up more time for discussion.
http://www.c-ville.com/when-a-mooc-is-more-than-a-mooc-how-online-learning-is-shifting-the-academic-goalposts-at-uva/
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BY CHRIS PARR, London Times Higher Ed
A US academic has proposed creating a massive open online course on Coursera that explores the effect of the company’s business model on global higher education. Bob Meister, professor of social sciences and political thought at the University of California Santa Cruz, puts forward the idea in an open letter to Coursera co-founder Daphne Koller that criticises the Mooc platform. “I would like to propose a new online course for you to make freely available through the Coursera platform. Its title is: ‘The Implications of Coursera’s For-Profit Business Model for Global Public Education,’” he says.
http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/news/coursera-should-be-subject-of-mooc-says-professor/2003920.article
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By Joan Axelrod-Contrada, Boston Globe
Called “hybrid,” “blended,” or “low-residency,” these programs aim to offer the best of both worlds: the flexibility of Internet learning with the face-to-face interaction of the college campus. Adults come together from near and far for networking and intensive learning during short-term residencies that range from one weekend a month to twice-a-year visits of two weeks. Students sometimes stay in college dorms, sometimes in hotels. Many universities in New England and across the country offer such programs, providing working adults with more flexibility than night school and more social interaction than online learning. The approach has its own challenges, often requiring students to leave work and families for a week or more, master the technology of online learning, and carve out time for schoolwork from busy lives.
http://www.bostonglobe.com/business/2013/05/18/hybrid-degree-programs-can-provide-best-both-worlds/C4HzPctO25DshB2BIQUqyK/story.html
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May 23, 2013
By Robert Nolin, Karen Yi and Scott Travis, Sun Sentinel
If you’re a student, established professional or business owner, an initiative recently approved by the Florida Legislature may change how you pursue a college degree, advance your career or locate your company. All you need is a computer, time and the desire to learn. The University of Florida, the state’s top-ranked public college, soon will offer 20-25 bachelor’s degree programs fully online, at a cost cheaper than on-campus classes. It’s the first such program offered by a Florida public university and if successful could expand to others. As of the spring term, which starts in January, it means you need never set foot in Gainesville to earn a coveted UF diploma.
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/broward/fl-florida-online-education-20130519,0,7345928.story
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By Amy Clancy, KIRO TV
More than half of recent college graduates in Washington state enter the stiff job market more than $20,000 in debt. But now, many universities are launching online courses, some even for free. Starting this fall, the University of Washington in Seattle will offer a degree in early childhood education and family studies, completely online. When the announcement was made, the UW touted its “low cost” of $7,000 a year.
http://www.kirotv.com/news/news/will-internet-put-universities-out-business/nXt9n/
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by Ki Mae Heussner, GigaOM
On the heels of faculty backlashes to massive open online courses, three universities have pulled out of an online learning program with education company 2U. Last fall, the company, which has partnered with several leading universities for online masters degree programs that feature small classes and live instruction, announced a new for-credit online program for undergraduates called Semester Online. But three of the 10 schools that had originally committed to the program have since backed out. Last month, Duke revealed that it was withdrawing from the program after a faculty vote against the program. And, according to Inside Higher Ed, Vanderbilt and University of Rochester have also pulled out as of Friday, with Wake Forest sitting on the fence.
http://gigaom.com/2013/05/17/moocs-arent-the-only-kind-of-online-course-stirring-debate-on-college-campuses/
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May 22, 2013
by Peter McGraw and Joel Warner, Huffington Post
Massive open online courses, or MOOCs, are garnering lots of attention these days. Some see large-scale, web-based classes as the new frontier for colleges and universities, a great leap forward that could revolutionize higher education. Duke University professor of psychology and behavioral economics Dan Ariely and his colleagues at the Center for Advanced Hindsight, on the other hand, see MOOCs as the perfect way to test Dan’s academic funny bone. Will the jokes that work in a traditional college classroom work in a class of say, several thousand online students? We threw similar questions at the thousands of students subjected to the jokes each week. Using the five-point scale, we asked them how funny and how offensive they found each of Dan’s wisecracks. We also asked them to predict Dan’s own ratings: how funny did their teacher consider each of his own jokes?
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/peter-mcgraw-and-joel-warner/a-professor-walks-into-a-_b_3283684.html
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by Bailey McCann, civsource
A new report from Connected Tennessee, a local broadband consortium in partnership with the East Tennessee Educational Technology Association, shows that online education is important at all levels of schooling even K-12. According to the report, students that become comfortable with technology early on, learn better and are better prepared for jobs of the future. Online learning is also helping minorities in Tennessee get ahead. Data in the report shows that half of the minority population in Tennessee goes online for e-learning, that number is significantly higher than caucasians in the state. Hard to reach populations like rural residents are also getting online, 39% of rural residents in the state go online for coursework or work related activities.
http://civsourceonline.com/2013/05/16/tennessee-education-report-shows-online-learning-essential-for-k-12/
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by Sami Edge, Daily Emerald
Classes can be a serious strain on both your calendar and your wallet. Are they educational? Yes. Necessary? Yes. Expensive? Absolutely. Time consuming? Without a doubt. As technology improves and more courses are offered online, students are increasingly turning to web-based courses to alleviate the time constraints imposed by the traditional university structure. For out-of-state students, the benefits are seemingly twofold: not only do online courses save transit time — sometimes, they’re also half price. At the University of Oregon, online courses follow one of two fiscal models: tuition based, or self-supporting. In accordance with the Oregon University System, tuition-based online classes differentiate in price according to residency status and credit load and are managed through individual UO departments. Self-supporting courses, however, are offered through a department in conjunction with the office of Academic Extension and follow a set fee determined by Academic Extension. This results in a set price, regardless of residency status.
http://dailyemerald.com/2013/05/16/online-courses-offer-economic-incentive-to-out-of-state-students/
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May 21, 2013
by JON MARCUS, Times Higher Education (THE)
A merged model: San José State has been experimenting with combining classroom and online education, and it cites impressive improvements in the proportion of students who advance to the next level. It is also at the centre of one of the biggest debates in US higher education, thanks to an experiment that is combining conventional and online learning. As administrators and politicians push to provide online courses that they say will take the pressure off underfunded and oversubscribed conventional ones, some academics – including philosophy scholars at San José State – are pushing back. In some disciplines, the professors say in an open letter, online courses are turning faculty members into glorified teaching assistants. In the California State Senate, a bill has been introduced that would open the door for students who cannot get into entry-level courses to sit the same subjects provided by online players (including for-profit companies) approved by a committee of academics.
http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/news/can-san-jos-show-us-academy-the-way/2003779.article
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by Lorenzo Perez, U Virginia
U.Va.’s decision last summer to enter into a partnership with Coursera, which also offers an online platform for courses offered by Stanford University, Princeton University and other leading institutions, marked an effort to expand the reach of its academic offerings to a global audience eager to sample free, noncredit versions of the course offered on Grounds. Attrition in online participation in MOOCs is common. Of the 72,781 students who initially enrolled for Green’s online course, for example, only 9,140 remained active after 10 weeks. The thousands who remained, however, spanned the globe.
http://news.virginia.edu/content/class-2013-uva-faculty-students-give-online-education-mostly-positive-grade
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by the Deccan Herald
The first free, open, online platform for courses from multiple UK universities and other leading organisations has announced a further five partners today, including the University of Glasgow, University of Strathclyde and the British Museum. The new partners are joining FutureLearn, which was launched in December 2012 and includes several universities as well as the British Library and the British Council. Each is committed to providing engaging and entertaining courses through the online site. The University of Glasgow will initially offer two courses that are drawn from the broad base of its world class academic provision. Strathclyde will initially be offering two or more courses over the first six months of the FutureLearn programme.
http://www.deccanherald.com/content/332573/free-online-courses-multiple-uk.html
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May 20, 2013
by Georgia Tech College of Computing
The Georgia Institute of Technology College of Computing announced today that it will offer the first professional Online Master of Science degree in computer science (OMS CS) that can be earned completely through the “massive online” format. The degree will be provided in collaboration with online education leader Udacity Inc. and AT&T. All OMS CS course content will be delivered via the massive open online course (MOOC) format, with enhanced support services for students enrolled in the degree program. Those students also will pay a fraction of the cost of traditional on-campus master’s programs; total tuition for the program is initially expected to be below $7,000. A pilot program, partly supported by a generous gift from AT&T, will begin in the next academic year. Initial enrollment will be limited to a few hundred students recruited from AT&T and Georgia Tech corporate affiliates. Enrollment is expected to expand gradually over the next three years.
http://www.cc.gatech.edu/news/georgia-tech-announces-massive-online-masters-degree-computer-science
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by Online Education
Today, one in every 88 American children is on the autism spectrum. Autism affects more than 2 million people in the U.S. and tens of millions worldwide. But it hasn’t always been this way. Statistics show a tenfold increase in autism in the past 40 years, and prevalence rates are increasing 10%-17% each year. With autism on the rise, many schools struggle to meet the needs of autistic students. Often, autistic adults do not take the next step to go on to college or meaningful employment, even though they may be incredibly gifted. Letting students fall behind should not be an option. If traditional classrooms struggle to effectively educate autistic students, what can online education offer autistic learners? Tech tools and virtual learning environments present an opportunity to better serve autistic students with flexibility and resources that are well suited to guide them in learning. The more educators learn about working with autistic students, the better equipped teachers and students will be for success.
http://www.onlineeducation.net/2013/04/05/autism-and-online-learning-a-guide-for-teachers
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By Associated Press
The blurring between traditional universities and the new “Massive Open Online Courses” reached new levels Tuesday when Georgia Tech announced it will offer what it termed a first-of-its-kind computer science degree taught entirely over an open online platform. Georgia Tech will charge about $7,000 for the master’s degree, even though the courses that lead to the degree are available to anyone for free through Udacity, a MOOC platform currently offering 26 courses taught by partners including Georgia Tech. But while students can take MOOCs for free, only accredited universities like Georgia Tech can award credit and degrees for such coursework. Georgia Tech is betting that students will happily pay $7,000 for such a credential, given that the cost of the on-campus computer science master’s, or even the current online version of that degree, runs about three times higher than that for Georgia students, and between six and seven times higher for out-of-state and international students.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/in-blurring-of-online-courses-traditional-georgia-tech-to-offer-full-open-online-masters/2013/05/14/6fed6eb2-bcea-11e2-b537-ab47f0325f7c_story.html
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May 19, 2013
By Steve Kolowich, Chronicle of Higher Ed
Yale announced on Wednesday that it would soon offer MOOCs through Coursera, the Silicon Valley-based company. Yale plans to offer four courses beginning in January, focusing on constitutional law, financial markets, morality, and Roman architecture. The move was a long time coming. Yale, which in 2007 became among the first institutions to make its course content available free on the Web with its Open Yale Courses lecture series, has taken a distinctly deliberate approach to MOOCs. Last fall it convened a faculty committee to recommend a broad online agenda that would encompass MOOCs as well as other forms of online teaching.
http://chronicle.com/blogs/wiredcampus/yale-joins-the-mooc-club-coursera-looks-to-translate-existing-courses/43849
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by Coursera
Want to learn a few tips on how to learn the material in your classes more effectively? Read below to learn about the principles behind Mastery Learning, written by our Course Operations MOOC Pedagogy Specialist, Relly Brandman.
What is Mastery Learning?
“The instruction is the same as in the conventional class (usually with the same teacher)…The average student under mastery learning was about one standard deviation above the average of the control class (the average mastery learning student was above 84% of the students in the control class).1”
http://blog.coursera.org/post/50352075945/5-tips-learn-more-effectively-in-class-with-mastery
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John Hechinger and Michael McDonald, Bloomberg News
Professors across the U.S. are criticizing a rush to offer free online college courses, challenging a movement designed to spread knowledge and reduce higher-education costs. Amherst College faculty voted last month against joining an initiative led by Harvard University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The provost at American University issued a moratorium this month on such massive open online courses, or MOOCs. At San Jose State University, the philosophy department refused to use a free Web course from a Harvard professor. As college costs soar, professors are concerned that MOOCs may primarily become a way for universities to reduce expenses. Even at Harvard, some faculty members said at a meeting last week that the movement could damage higher education by leading institutions to cut face-to-face instruction.
http://www.sfgate.com/business/bloomberg/article/Harvard-for-Free-Meets-Resistance-as-U-S-4517796.php
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May 18, 2013
by Edsurge
Udacity’s Sebastian Thrun wrote on his blog that this kind of program is just why he started Udacity: “I grew up in Germany, a country that offers excellent education. Yet when I started my Master’s degree in computer science, I found myself among 1,200 other Master’s students with just five professors. Needless to say, I ended up mostly educating myself through books that were available at a nearby research institute. Today is my opportunity to give back.” Anyone will be able to take the Udacity courses for free but only those enrolled through Georgia Tech will earn credits toward its Masters’ degree. A pilot program will begin “in the next academic year” with a few hundred students recruited from AT&T and Georgia Tech corporate affiliates.
https://www.edsurge.com/n/2013-05-14-georgia-tech-udacity-to-offer-master-s-degree
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By Margaret Andrews, Inside Higher Ed
In this corner: MOOC enthusiasts, envisioning how these large, online courses will increase access to higher education, reduce costs, and reinvigorate teaching and learning. In the other corner: MOOC critics, anticipating how MOOCs will eliminate meaningful interaction between faculty and students, reduce the quality of learning, and decimate the professorship. You’ve probably heard by now that Amherst declined to participate in edX and that San Jose State faculty pushed back on plans for another MOOC in their midst. Recently, there is (seemingly) more press about the potential future impact of these large online courses.
http://www.insidehighered.com/blogs/stratedgy/both-sides
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by Andrew McGettigan, the Guardian
The British Museum, British Council, British Library and 21 UK universities have now joined what they hope is a higher education revolution – giving the public access to the world’s top institutions and their best academics. They have entered into partnership with FutureLearn, a company owned by Open University that will be launched in September as the UK’s “first free, open, online platform” for higher-level short courses. It aims to be the home-grown rival to similar platforms emanating from the US such as Coursera, Udacity and the not-for-profit edX. Such platforms offer “Moocs” – massive, open, online courses: a free or low-cost alternative to traditional higher education that, say the evangelists, will roll out elite education across the world.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2013/may/12/moocs-scourge-saviour-higher-education
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