by National Public Radio
As Stanford, Harvard and other top American universities digitize more courses for free public consumption, will students one day be able to get an actual degree online from these institutions without having to pay for it? John Hennessy, president of Stanford University, says his school “can see moving in that direction.” Currently, Stanford offersonline courses on subjects such as cryptography and human-computer interaction — all free, but without credit. (Students do get a “certificate of completion” signed by the instructor for successfully completing the coursework.) One major challenge to offering actual credit, according to Hennessy, will be how to assess the performance of a degree-seeking student in an online course. “The requirement to assess student performance is significantly higher than it is if you’re offering students the opportunity to be exposed to a course and do their own assessment,” Hennessy tells All Things Considered’s Robert Siegel. “And that’s going to demand, at least for the foreseeable future, significantly more effort on behalf of faculty and support staff in order to ensure that students have really mastered the material.”
Share on Facebook