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Learn for free online
BBC ^

Posted on 09/22/2002 2:56:58 AM PDT by freedom9

People will soon be given access to knowledge from one of the world's foremost technology institutes for free over the internet, as BBC World ClickOnline's Ian Hardy reports.

Like almost every organisation in the US, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology spent the late 1990s struggling with the question of how to take advantage of the internet.

Many other colleges launched online degree courses aimed at anyone with a modem and a big wallet. But MIT has taken a completely different direction with a project called OpenCourseWare (OCW) that could stop the trend of commercialising online education dead in its tracks.

The first group of courses are set to be published on the internet on 30 September, including subjects like anthropology, biology, chemistry and computer science. Education revolution

"I genuinely think there was an 'a-ha' moment when they said our mission was actually to enhance education," said Anne Margulies, Executive Director of OCW.

"Our hope and aspiration is that by setting an example, other universities will also put their valued materials on the internet Professor Dick Yue, MIT

"Why don't we, instead of trying to sell our knowledge over the internet, just give it away." Over the next 10 years, MIT will move all its existing coursework on to the internet.

There will be no online degrees for sale, however. Instead, it will offer thousands of pages of information, available to anyone around the globe at no cost, as well as hours and hours of streaming video lectures, seminars and experiments.

This is just the tip of the iceberg. MIT wants to start nothing short of a global revolution in education. "Our hope and aspiration is that by setting an example, other universities will also put their valued materials on the internet and thereby make a truly profound and fundamental impact on learning and education worldwide," said MIT's Professor Dick Yue.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: mit
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To: savedbygrace
Thanks, Bookmarked
21 posted on 09/22/2002 4:18:05 PM PDT by freedom9
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To: Born in a Rage
MIT is a non-profit corporation that solicits (there's the letter from them on my kitchen table) money from people like me to ostensibly to serve the greater good - not to aggrandize MIT, its faculty, or administration. The fact that MIT gets it and so many other universities do not is disturbing. Guess I should write a bigger check this year!
22 posted on 09/22/2002 4:46:57 PM PDT by eno_
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To: freedom9
bump
23 posted on 09/22/2002 4:56:43 PM PDT by VOA
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To: eno_
why can't you, at state universities, sit for exams for about the cost of proctoring
and grading the exam plus a bit to cover the cost of the online course bandwidth?


Aside from the concerns about impostors showing up for test, lack of interpersonal classroom
interaction, etc...
there are two other reasons:
1. The teachers/faculty like their current salaries, no matter how much they b-tch
2. The administration, from the campus up and wide (include the physical plant
folks as well) all the way up to near the office of the governor...hey, they don't
want to let go of the power and prestige.

Besides, you need a big local student body to fill up the football stadia and the
basketball arenas!!!
(I'm not anti-sport...just saying that a real educational revolution will
shake the world as we know it. If it is allowed to happen.)
24 posted on 09/22/2002 5:02:09 PM PDT by VOA
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To: freedom9
MIT's Professor Dick Yue

I wonder if people break out laughing when ever this fellow is introduced.
25 posted on 09/22/2002 5:04:25 PM PDT by VOA
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To: GummyIII
I haven't read this yet..just skimmed over it. I thought you might know some kids who might be interested. :)
26 posted on 09/22/2002 6:21:48 PM PDT by Freedom2specul8
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To: Lion's Cub
Also, since there would be no interaction between student and professor, no "homework", no feedback for correction, no term paper assignments, etc.,

??????? Really? My dd is taking two classes online this semester (part of Florida's state university system).

There is plenty of interaction with the professor (as this is dd's first semester, she had no idea that one does not challenge the teacher -- so far the prof has corrected several quizzes and reworded two labs).

In both classes, the teachers are available at their offices on campus, by telephone, or by internet. Plenty of feedback (including a warning from the teacher that she wants Office XP used, not Office 97, so she took 2 points off a test. That upset my 14-yo who is not used to getting less than 100).

The meteorology class has a term paper requirement, along with an oral defense of it. And both classes met the first day to have instructors and students get to know one another; both will have final exams on campus.

My dh also took classes from OSU (OK)-- tests were administered by a proctor the school agreed upon. Off-campus classes are nothing new -- what is new is the lack of cost: seems to go with lack of academic credit, unless the student can take a CLEP exam.

27 posted on 09/22/2002 9:39:53 PM PDT by womanvet
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To: womanvet
You are talking about regular on-line classes, for which a student registers and pays a fee. What MIT is going to do is put the course materials on line for free for anyone to study or read at their leisure. IOW, it's like giving away text books--there is no fee, no registration, no testing, etc. You're not "taking a class"; you just get free access to a library of the course material.
28 posted on 09/23/2002 4:34:37 AM PDT by Lion's Cub
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To: ~Kim4VRWC's~
Thanks, Kim! I have a whole Center for Engineering, Biotech program, and Computer Information Systems program that is interested!
29 posted on 09/23/2002 8:39:53 AM PDT by GummyIII
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To: freedom9
To MIT...Having just learned of this website I don't really have any "feedback" yet, but I do have praise.
Congratulations to MIT! I do intend to visit often.
"Why don't we, instead of trying to sell our knowledge over the internet, just give it away."
Hear, hear!
30 posted on 10/12/2002 5:42:04 AM PDT by philman_36
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