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Rescooped by michel verstrepen from E-Learning-Inclusivo (Mashup)
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Stanford launches first class taught completely in virtual reality

Stanford launches first class taught completely in virtual reality | gpmt | Scoop.it
Communications professor Jeremy Bailenson and first-year communications Ph.D. student Cyan DeVeaux have reimagined what education can look like using virtual reality.

Via Peter Mellow, juandoming
Peter Mellow's curator insight, December 9, 2021 7:41 PM
Link thanks to Cath Stephensen.
Rescooped by michel verstrepen from HigherEd: Disrupted or Disruptor? Your Choice.
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MOOCs – The revolution has begun, says Moody’s - University World News

MOOCs – The revolution has begun, says Moody’s - University World News | gpmt | Scoop.it

A new report by Moody’s Investors Service suggests that while MOOCs’ exploitation of expanded collaborative networks and technological innovation will benefit higher education in the United States as a whole, their long-term effect on the for-profit sector and smaller not-for-profit institutions could be damaging.

 

MOOCs – massive open online courses – have garnered considerable attention since Stanford University’s artificial intelligence course in the autumn 2011 semester attracted nearly 160,000 students. While the course’s completion rate was low (15.6%), the scale of the response excited many in the higher education community – from institutions to venture capital companies.

 

Indeed, the report notes that MOOCs represent a “pivotal development” in the evolution of higher education and have the potential to revolutionise the way a centuries-old industry has operated.

 

ONLINE EDUCATION'S MAKEOVER

Moody’s identifies six major credit effects associated with the MOOC movement, ranging from revenue opportunities and competitive pressure within all sectors to improving reputations and establishing niche markets in online higher education.

 

But, most importantly, the credit ratings company observes that MOOCs have the potential to transform the way distance learning is perceived and delivered. In particular, they will bring a “significant image upgrade for online education”.

 

It is true that since the mid-1990s, online options in higher education (as a viable alternative to the residential classroom modality) have met with mixed success.

 

On the one hand, for-profit providers have increasingly come under pressure in terms of the quality of their offerings and student indebtedness, says Moody’s.

 

On the other hand, non-profit and public institutions have been able to exploit new technologies to transform pedagogical approaches as well as curricular programming and, as such, to advance globalisation initiatives and realise various budgetary benefits.

 

But the important development associated with MOOCs is that they are able to offer exponentially larger enrolments. And, with these, the potential profits are much larger

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ELITE INSTITUTIONS

The report suggests that institutions with the strongest brand identities will experience the most positive credit impacts from the new platform, although it predicts national universities will benefit more than those with a global presence.

 

A case in point is the recent creation by two Stanford professors of Coursera, a platform of elite international universities – including Princeton, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne and the University of Toronto – that offers 124 courses across 17 categories, from software engineering to aboriginal worldviews and education.

Coursera has enrolled more than 1.3 million students onto its free courses in the five months since it was launched, and announced last week that has more than doubled – from 16 to 33 – the number of its partner universities and will offer more than 200 MOOCs.

 

New partners include the universities of Columbia, Brown and Melbourne, Hebrew University of Jerusalem and Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. While most of Coursera’s students are from the US (38.5%), significant numbers hale from Brazil (5.93%), India (5.16%), China (4.11%) and Canada (4.07%).

Similarly, funding from a consortium comprising Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and University of California – Berkeley signalled the foundation of edX, a non-profit partnership that is offering seven MOOCs this academic year.

 

In an attempt to offer secure assessments, edX recently announced that students would take proctored final exams at Pearson VUE’s test centres around the world.

 

FOR-PROFIT INSTITUTIONS

Moody’s predicts that regional colleges and universities as well as local residential institutions are less likely to fare well with the MOOC revolution.

 

They could potentially accrue some benefits, such as the facilitation of operational and pedagogical improvements by outsourcing comprehensive or generic courses. Having done so, they could then focus on developing or enhancing more marketable niche specialties.

These smaller to middle-ranking institutions, however, could lose market share if they fail to broaden their brand recognition or do not expand their geographic draw of students.

 

The higher education sector most likely to lose in the face of the growing availability of MOOCs is the for-profit sector. In particular, these providers will need to compete more vigorously in areas of the greatest subject matter overlap with the non-profit and public sector, especially in terms of enhanced student services and positive outcomes.

 

IMPLICATIONS

But, what does all this mean? The most profound change will undoubtedly be the shifting of costs away from students as long as MOOC providers succeed in keeping courses free – or for minimal fees, if various revenue options like certification are exploited.

 

In the same way, it remains to be seen whether – or how long it will be until – MOOC credits are integrated into traditional institutional degree programmes.

 

In the end, elite institutions are positioned to capitalise most effectively on the MOOC platform, by increasing their global presence and deriving greater credit benefits from new markets.

 

Those institutions with limited brand identities, however, will have to compete more intensively to retain – or develop – a competitive edge.


Via susangautsch
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Rescooped by michel verstrepen from HigherEd: Disrupted or Disruptor? Your Choice.
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Stanford Professors Launch Coursera With $16M From Kleiner Perkins and NEA

Stanford Professors Launch Coursera With $16M From Kleiner Perkins and NEA | gpmt | Scoop.it
There seems to be something in the water at Stanford University that's making faculty members leave their more-than-perfectly-good jobs and go online.

 

Stanford computer science professors Daphne Koller and Andrew Ng are on leave to launch Coursera, which will offer university classes for free online, in partnership with top schools.

 

Compared to Udacity, a similar start-up from former Stanford professor Sebastian Thrun that’s creating its own classes, Coursera helps support its university partners in creating their own courses, which are listed under each school’s brand.
Some might doubt that universities would want to share their prized content for free online with a start-up, but Coursera has already signed up Princeton, Stanford, the University of Michigan and the University of Pennsylvania as partners, with a set of classes launching April 23.

 

Koller and Ng are particularly committed to developing pedagogy for this new medium, and have built their own course software and student forums. They describe their philosophy as similar to that of Salman Khan and the Khan Academy, where students are encouraged to take the time to master material at their own pace.

 

Coursera students help other students — in the fall, the median response time to a question asked on the class forum was 22 minutes — and the system will also learn from the students.


For instance, 2,000 of the 20,000 or so students in Ng’s online class had the exact same wrong solution on one problem set, he said. That’s an opportunity to recognize what’s happening, and to teach those students in that moment.

 

Koller and Ng have also conceived of an ambitious plan to grade humanities classes with thousands of students enrolled.

 

Coursera’s content is naturally heavy on computer science — where problem sets are fairly straightforward to grade — but it will also offer poetry, sociology, and medical courses. These classes will be graded crowdsourcing style, with peer assessment and review. Figuring out how to grade masses of assignments on a subjective scale is a machine learning problem, Ng said.

 


Via susangautsch
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Rescooped by michel verstrepen from Pédagogie & Technologie
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Mooc : la recette des chercheurs de Stanford et du MIT pour favoriser la persistance

Mooc : la recette des chercheurs de Stanford et du MIT pour favoriser la persistance | gpmt | Scoop.it
REPÉRÉ DANS LA PRESSE AMÉRICAINE. Pour inciter les élèves de Mooc à aller au bout des cours, des chercheurs de Stanford et du MIT ont proposé à un public cible un exercice d

Via Bruno De Lièvre
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Rescooped by michel verstrepen from Innovation in Digital Higher Ed
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‘Ivy League Spring’ debated: is free, online education financially viable?

‘Ivy League Spring’ debated: is free, online education financially viable? | gpmt | Scoop.it
The Udacity of hope: new online programs offer free courses to hundreds of thousands of students, while the business model still gets worked out.

Via Mark Smithers, Keith Hampson PhD
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