More on MIT OpenCourseWare 284
lewiz writes "Over at BBC News they have an update on the MIT initiative to give away all course material for free over the Internet that we read about on Slashdot quite a while ago. The full story details how they are doing it in the hopes that other Universities will follow suit. This seems an amazing thing considering the more recent moves toward pay-per-use services but definitely a good thing and I wish them the best of luck. The only question I see is whether or not this will help in the way of "official qualifications" - what if we know a large portion of a certain course... how do we go about proving it?"
WooHoo! (Score:1)
Re:WooHoo! (Score:1, Informative)
Proving you know the material (Score:5, Insightful)
Take the class, break the curve and insist everybody else is stupid for not knowing it. At least, that's how it works here at GaTech, MIT might be different.
Re:Proving you know the material (Score:2, Insightful)
As if you do course-work, pay to get it assessed and marked.
In Britain we have The Open University, (http://www.open.ac.uk) not quite the same thing but not far off
Re:Proving you know the material (Score:1)
Re:Proving you know the material (Score:2, Insightful)
Certification (Score:5, Insightful)
This is the thing. Colleges and universities are obselete. I think Brainbench had the right idea, just have many little certifications that make up the summary of your qualifications. What is the difference if someone learns something by reading online documents or by going to hear some windbag talk about it for 50 minutes? There isn't.
I think in the next 20 years we will see the demise of higher education as we know it. As older people that have obselete ideas about degrees meaning something die off, the new generation of managers that will value skills above sheepskins will come into power. Then we will see real reform in the education and training markets.
Higher education, as it exists now, is something like an organized religion, with plenty of dogma and rabid followers and supporters. I'm sure I will be flamed by those people shortly. I went to college, I did my four years, it was really pointless.... I couldn't recommend it to anyone with the intelligence to learn things on their own.
Re:Certification (Score:1)
Problem is, with Brainbench and other testing groups online, you're not proving you KNOW the material--just that you're able to do a quick Google search.
-Sara
Re:Certification (Score:1)
And the test really can't be open,I mean, testing is kinda where the whole obscurity thing actually helps.
What we really nead is a good formal testing, that costs money, but without it, there is no real proof. It will cost money, it costs money to verify the conditions, but then again, even cheap college costs 240 dollors, a course, and you nead to take a lot of bullshit. If a test was 75 or 100 dollors, that would be fine.
Free and Open just really don't lend themselves to accurate testing unfortunatly.
Re:Certification (Score:3, Insightful)
As an employer, what difference would it make? If I can hire one guy who can get the answer in 5 minutes with a Google search, or another guy who can figure it out in a couple of days on his own, which one should I hire?
Being able to look up answers (and evaluate whether those answers are right, a tougher proposition) is a very valuable skill.
Re:Certification (Score:2)
Re:Certification (Score:1)
Re:Certification (Score:4, Insightful)
As a decent web designer and fledgling software engineer, I think there's a big difference between web design and software engineering.
Erik
Re:Certification (Score:5, Insightful)
This might be all fine and good for technology-oriented fields, but what about other disciplines? I don't want my kids taught by a teacher who can simply pass the cert. I'm not interested in having my spleen removed by the Johnny-come-lately who knows all the facts and figures but has no experience in doctor-patient relations. My attorney better have taken a few psych courses before he picks my jury.
You could well argue that it's "real world" experience, not a degree, that separates the shiny certs from the experienced [doctor|teacher|sysadmin|etc.]. But committing to a 4 year degree or similar program tells me, the customer/employer/whatever, that, at the very least, you've got the experience provided by a university and the sizable investment that suggests you'll likely stick it out.
PDHoss
Four year degrees, not colleges, are obsolete (Score:5, Insightful)
Colleges will still have a role. Many of them are adapting and offering more options to working individuals and other "part time" students. Many offer online courses. What colleges bring to the table is legitimacy. Most people still put more stock in a course from MIT than one from DeVry. If someone says "MIT", you immediately assume that they had to meet a fairly stringent academic requirement and that the lecturer or prof also had to meet a high requirement. The good schools literally have had hundreds of years to shape their good reputations, and its likely they will continue to capitalize on them.
Wrong. (Score:5, Insightful)
There normally is a HUGE difference between someone who gets a BCS degree and someone who has a stackload of certifications. If you have worked with both then you probbaly know what I am talking about. The massive glut of people with certs in the IT industry is the problem, not the solution. Anyone can buy a few books from Amazon.com, study for a month, and get a crapload of certifications. That doesn't mean they know the in depth fundamentals of computer science. What if some problem occurs on the job where they have to design a new algorithm to tackle a problem? Can an MCSD construct a skiplist in some random programming language he has never used before by the end of the day? I think not. It is the depth of education that marks the difference between a university graduate and someone who possess only certifications. Certifications are the equivalent of a vocational education - hands on training in a certain area. Without the acedemic background to be able to expand your knowledge, you will be stuch in nowheresville.
Re:Wrong. (Score:2, Insightful)
There would be certifications in algorithm design, certifications in algorithm analysis, etc... They would be the same material that is taught in the course of a normal degree, only that the person and employer could pick and choose which skill set they wanted to pay for, on a micro level.
You are thinking about certifications as they exist today, i.e. specific training and certification usually tied to a commercial product. This is why I mentioned Brainbench, they had several abstract certifications that were approaching this goal.
Re:Wrong. (Score:4, Interesting)
My $0.02
Re:Wrong. (Score:2)
The amount of cheating and copying that goes on is astounding. Moreover, the difficultly of a given course varies wildly from professor to professor.
There is simply no way to do this perfectly. In fact, I don't think that standardized tests are that much worse than evaluation by a professor. I think that it may work better for many subjects and many situations.
Re:Wrong. (Score:5, Insightful)
In the end, a college course measures that competence with several quizzes, a couple tests, maybe a project or two, and an exam.
This sums up what is causing many of the people on this thread to miss the point. A college degree is, in a sense, a certification, so what does it matter if you get your certification through a trade school, online course, or traditional university?
Unfortunately, a degree isn't proof of anything more than the person had the ability to pass his classes. He may have skipped every class, gotten ahold of the previous year's test, and crammed just enough at the last minute to do decent on the test. My job, when I'm interviewing, is to ferret out those people and show them the door.
The problem is that measuring competence is hard. Attending college, going to and participating in class, working on projects, working with professors doing cutting-edge research in your field, and getting a part-time job to help do research or teach a class, are worth far more than the sum of the parts. A degree doesn't show proof that you took advantage of all of those opportunities, but it indicates you had them, whereas you probably wouldn't for most other types of certifications. That is one of the reasons that a degree will help get you "in the door": the inteviewer can then attempt to not only measure your knowledge, ability to learn, and character, but also find out whether you took advantage of your college experience, or were just passing time.
I could go on and on about the reasons for getting a degree... For instance, my experience is that people that are self taught are extremely knowledgeable about one area, but they have holes in their knowledge and often don't realize it. They don't know what they don't know.
But, in the end, college isn't perfect for everybody. I highly recommend it if you can afford it, but it's easy to waste the experience (expecially if you're intelligent) by gliding through like you did in high school, or treating it as if the exams were the goal, and not just goalposts.
Re:Wrong. (Score:2)
The problem of the certs, is that no employer can know or specify, in advance, exactly and precisely what future problem needs to be solved. The point is to be flexible, and to be flexible involves not just book knowledge, but an apprecciation of how people currently tackle the problems of today.
Becuase the problems of tomorrow are caused by the solutions of today.
Re:Wrong. (Score:2)
Re:Wrong. (Score:2)
Re:Wrong. (Score:2)
Re:Certification (Score:4, Insightful)
I agree. There should be a way to divide fields into something called "subjects", and to become certified in each of these individual workshops ("courses"). Once a person ("student") becomes proficient in the basics of each of these "courses", he or she can move on to higher-level "courses" that provide a more in-depth explanation of the "material".
There will certainly need to be a way to evaluate these "students", so we'll assign them "grades". It would be nice to have some sort of record of this student, so we'll have a database called a "transcript" for each student.
Huzzah, a revolution in education!
In all seriousness, I think higher education deserves the respect that it gets. At the risk of sounding redundant, a certification does not equal knowledge, and a college education is much more than the sum of its parts. I've found that by going to class and making an attempt to be interested, I've become intrigued by fields that I otherwise probably would have avoided (like Statistics and Finance).
I realize college isn't for everybody (on either end of the spectrum), but to imply that a college student is in college because he is not intelligent enough to learn the material on his own is, well, wrong.
Re:Certification (Score:2)
Apologies if it wasn't more obvious, but that's what I was trying to do.
"the intelligence to learn things on their own" (Score:4, Insightful)
People can read material in books just as well as they can read them on-line. Libraries have existed for centuries. If your argument is correct, universities should ALREADY be obsolete. No one should need to go to college, because everyone can just read books and gain all the skills and knowledge he needs.
And, yes, I not only went through college, but I now work at one. I'm one of the windbags that GigsVT mentioned. Would you like me to poll the students in my class? "Okay, guys, I'll just stop coming to class, preparing lectures and readings, giving you homework, and answering your questions. Instead, I'll just wait until the quarter ends and give you the final exam."
Care to wager how many of those students would jump at the chance to avoid this old windbag?
Re:"the intelligence to learn things on their own" (Score:1)
I jumped at that chance as much as I could. Several courses I was able to only attend exams and get an A nonetheless.
Most of the other classes I took, this was impossible, due to the professor rigging up some contrived system where grade depended on attendance, such as only accepting assignments during classtime, at the end, from only those who attended the full class. There is obviously a problem if most professors must resort to such tactics to get their captive audience.
Don't get me wrong, I respect knowledge, and the knowledgable. I think it is the framework that is wrong, the whole paradigm is wrong. There are certain things that can only be learned from those with the experience to teach it, but I think the current system fails at accomplishing that.
it's a matter of peer review and accredation. (Score:2)
Re:Certification (Score:4, Funny)
Keep telling yourself that.
Erik
You are a little Myopic my friend. (Score:1)
For pretty much every other subject, higher-learning is and will remain necessary. How many self-taught mathematicians and chemists do you know? How many astronautical engineers or geneticists just read a few "Teach yourself xxxx in 24 hours?" and began doing important research?
I submit to you a different vision of the future... eventually people who really know what they are doing with computers will no longer be a novelty. There is a generation of people behind us who were raised on computers. For them, the skills needed to become a programmer or network adminstrator may be as common as those needed to work retail today. With such a wide base of computer literacy,... perhaps those sys admin and programming jobs will not have the status (or salaries) that they do today. Regardless, despite what it takes to land a job in the field, the science of computing will continue to progress through the efforts of those in the research labs... the people doing the hard-core CS research at universities and industry.
As for your personal experience, I don't doubt your account at all... but what did you choose to study in college and do you practice in that field today?
Re:You are a little Myopic my friend. (Score:2)
Another thing is that many technical fields outside of IT and CS actually require equipment or expensive software in order for you to learn the topics. For instance, when was the last time you bought a spectrum analyzer or a logic synthesis tool like Synopsys Design Compiler?
What people seem to forget is that a college education gives you a broad background to think critically about the world. You don't have to study an area that relates to your current job. You just need a good background to help you through life.
After college, I worked for 2 years in the EE field and whenever we hired people, we only hired people with BS in EE or a BS in CS. We would not even look at a candidate with just certifications. When I went to work for the corporate arm of the company, it was very IT focused, but even then, when we were hiring, we never even called back a candidate unless they had a bachelor's degree.
I just went back to college (CMU) to get my Masters degree in Electrical Engineering. I can tell you that there is no way that I would have been able to learn what I am learning now without being at a university. I know that when I graduate, I will have more options open to me than if I stayed in my previous job. So all you people who think you can get by with certifications, please keep pushing forward on that path. That will help me get a job more easily after I graduate.
Re:Certification (Score:2)
-look at resumes for experience
-provide ways to get experience, like internships or apprenticeships
Without these in place, certification is just another money pit of memorization.
Re:Certification (Score:5, Informative)
Well, as a teacher myself (lecturer or assistant professor depending on your equivalences, on optical telecommunications), I see a few issues with this:
Re:Certification (Score:1)
My point is, mentoring isn't obselete, but the current college/university paradigm was designed centuries ago, and it shows. Classes with 500+ students only serve to highlight the weaknesses of this obselete paradigm.
Re:Certification (Score:2)
I indeed pointed out that people learned by doing, but I didn't mean that it was sufficient, merely necessary. You also have to work out the basics, both are critical if you are to master a subject.
Which is not to say that you can't have both outside of the classroom; if you know you can pull an A at the exam without attending, then by all means do so (I've been there too...)
Re:Certification (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Certification (Score:1)
How much does any of the field-specific material you learn during University really get applied on the job. Twenty percent? Maybe 25? A degree is not as much a statement about what you know as it is a statment of your capability for abstract thought and learning skills. Something far more useful than writing a gate arrangement in VHDL ever will be.
Anyone can learn technical skills, but not many people can actually learn THINKING skills... and judging from the posts I've read so far not much of slashdot can.
Re:Certification (Score:3, Insightful)
A person with a BS in CS or a similar subject (even a pure math major would be good) has twice as much chance of getting any position above "the IT tech that fixes our damn windows boxen" than someone with 5000 certs.
Re:Certification (Score:1)
I think it should be obvious to everyone here that 90% of job security comes from properly taking and giving bullshit, the other 10% is all that's allocated to actual competence.
Re:Certification (Score:2)
The thing is, that's not how it is. That's not how it should be. But it's a matter of degree (so to speak), depending on the nature of the course that you're taking. I did a computer science degree at one university, and was extremely dissatisfied with the experience. The majority of the course I did over the 'net, I saw little need for class attendance. It was something I thought I could do just as well through some certification / training school. I'm now doing another degree philosophy and art history at a different university. Whole different ballpark. I look forward to class every week now, because I know that when I go, I'm sure as hell going to learn something, I'm going to get insights from someone who knows what they're talking about (well, generally
The university format for the delivery of that kind of learning is excellent. It provides an environment in which you can discuss the meaning of what you're studying with experienced teachers and students. It provides a social aspect that is different from anything that exists in the "real world." To some people, it's not about getting "job skills", it's about getting an education. That's not the way it needs to be for everyone: from my own experience, I see little reason why CS needs to be taught in a university environment. But there's a big world of knowledge out there, and some of it is better taught face-to-face. Not the mention the fact that female art students are hot.
My government has been attacking higher education for years, cutting funding, forcing it towards becoming a service industry. In my last semester at the university I attended for CS, the university registered itself as a
Re:Certification - Well said GiggsVT (Score:2, Interesting)
A few quites from faxfn.org [faxfn.org] in the section on education [faxfn.org]
Some academics are reported saying (Durnks(sic) on the train: More naked emperors?)
It's not all the fault of the academics one says (in I teach them "How to pass your exam in marketing")
Credentialism has taken over. (See Ronald Dore's "The Diploma Disease"). But the PR machine of the vested interests will not give up that easily. Gigs VT is too optimistic saying
> "the new generation of managers that will value skills above sheepskins will come into power. Then we will see real reform in the education and training markets."
Those in power have been validated by the current system. They will ensure that the market in education remains distorted.
But I would love to be wrong. The MIT news is the best I have heard on this subject for years and years.
Minimum standards (Score:2)
See, the problem is not that you can't learn things on your own. Anyone can get the textbook and read the material and understand a class as well as, if not better than, what they'd get listening to lectures.
But you claimed that universities are obsolete. Not a chance.
By requiring you to take, say, Calculus I and pass the class, you've established that you have a miniumum skill in that area. An employer can hire you and expect some degree of flexibility -- not just "Well, you can do the current two month project we're working on just fine". There are no "gaps" in your education in that area that seemed uninteresting at the time...but that you'll need down the road.
I know a couple of extremely intelligent *and* (here's the kicker) knowledgeable people that didn't attend college or went for only a short period of time.
The thing is, They're probably more talented straight coders than anyone in my CS classes, because they were dedicated and interested, and learned all the material inside out. However, if you then asked them to work some more-than-basic math in, they'd be out of their depth. They know a very narrow field very well, but don't know things outside that area.
Sure, an employer *could* run out and find someone else to do the math, but ensuring a certain degree of interchangeability and basic standards in all your employees has a rather significant value in and of itself.
That being said, I strongly feel that, of the engineering programs (traditional engineering -- not software engineering, which is still relatively "young"), many colleges are quite inflexible. Your schedule is laid out well in advance, giving you little leeway to specialize in the areas that you are interested in.
Re:Certification (Score:2)
i've had several different IT jobs in the last several years -- programmer, help desk, sysadmin, project manager, etc. in my personal experience, my 4-year college degree was immensely valuable, and helped me out on a daily basis.
one small thing, tho. my degree's in creative writing.
everyone who asks me about college, i tell them the same thing (regardless of what discipline they're interested in): get a liberal education, it's better preparation for almost any kind of job you might have. the more high-quality content there is on the web (hopefully some other universities will follow MIT's lead here), the more people will be able to learn all the IT specific skills they need from that. personally, i learned most of what i know in my spare time setting stuff up on a linux box at home. i took a couple of night classes to learn java and sql.
the other thing you should think about is that undergraduate education is not central to higher education today. hasn't ever been, afaict. it is primarily a nuisance to the faculty that is tolerated b/c it is a decent supplement to grant funding. so if universities can find a way to get rid of undergraduates but keep some of the funding they now get to support them, it could be a really big advantage for them.
-esme
Re:Certification (Score:3, Interesting)
With ever growing public libraries, availability of online texts, open source communities, and initiatives like OpenCourseWare, universities are no longer exclusive bastions of secret hidden knowledge, but they are and will continue to be excellent places to systematically learn broad topics through integrated curriculums offered within immersive environment where students can focus on learning (and often maturing).
More importantly than acting as a measurement of qualifications, a four year degree (and other programs) *should* provide a guided and integrated educational experience that can accelerate learning faster than the trial and error method of self teaching. A residential educational experience can also provide hands-on laboratory, tutorial, and seminar training experiences that are impossible through any other means.
Unfortunately, the nature of the university system is such that many schools are missing the point. MIT seems to get it - their strength is not in course notes and materials. Anyone with the proper motivation and ability can teach themselves well enough from notes and books to apply practical knowledge and pass qualifying exams. But a properly run institutional education can help students to learn specific topics faster and more completely, and with a better understanding of how the pieces fit together as a whole.
Re:Certification (Score:2)
Re:Certification (Score:2)
Well...we've kinda done this already... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Well...we've kinda done this already... (Score:2)
Re:Well...we've kinda done this already... (Score:2)
The wine tasting course, while pretty cool, was just wierd to see coming from the Canadian education system. Here Hotel Administration is limited to colleges, which are certificate granting schools (as opposed to universities which are degree granting schools).
Excellent stuff (Score:2)
Simon
Hopefully... (Score:1)
why? (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:why? (Score:3, Informative)
academic/knowledge (Score:2, Insightful)
This courses have no academic value ( yet ). They are useful if you want to know more about some specific area, or to help you with your professional career.
Improving Higher Learning (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Improving Higher Learning (Score:2)
Indeed.
Personally I feel prospective students will also see a benefit. I think if I'd been able to see all the course materials of the degree I took - before I applied - I may not have ended up wasting three years.
Priceless... (Score:2)
Certification Exams: $2,500
4-Year degree from a college: $60,000.
Understanding advanced coursework at MIT: Priceless.
Proving it. (Score:1)
That is a problem, but.
Ever seen the progress of a university student with photographic memory or in a course that's beneath his capabilities? Or one in a course he did before.
It's prety fast. The secret is that you don't have to atend all the classes. Just do all the homework and coursework and exams.
This means you could forinstance take on 4 years of university at once and compleat an entyre degree in 12 months if you spent the last 4 year going throgh the online matterial by yourself. (With the silabus and reading list as a guide).
It will still be expensive but you could concivebly get by with 1/4 to 1/3 of the normal cost for a degree.
Three simple steps (Score:5, Funny)
Step 2: Take the exams.
Step 3: Receive a piece of paper with "degree" written on it.
The purpose of this piece of paper is to demonstrate that you've learned a large portion of a certain course. Use it wisely, my son.
Why prove it? (Score:1)
Re:Why prove it? (Score:1)
In my computer programming class, we have considered making a drinking game of the teacher's crashed programs. One drink every time his program crashes during a class demonstration, and another when I explain the problem and correction, despite my inability to read the code on the TV from the far back seat.
Those taking a course will readily get fed up with the material. I would go mad if not for the various programs I work on after the assignments (a "proxy jumping" telnet client, a UDP instant messenger, and a shoot-the-living-crap out of osama program).
Programming should be fun, and it should be self taught or communily taught. When students learn more than the teacher(or knew more before taking the class) no good can come if it. I am a sophomore in high school, and I respect 2 of the teachers I've had so far. Just 2.
It is federal law that the school cannot sell us coke during lunch. Have they nothing better to do!?
Private school is even worse, a smaller student body equates to a smaller course selection.
Self teaching won't get you a high school diploma, and for some classes(automotive mechanics for example) the experiance of the teacher is just as important as what you learn by reading ahead as the person in front of you gets busted for marijuana possession.
I assume that I'm stuck in HS for the duration. Does anyone have a recommendation for what I should do next? I am already profficient in C++, Java, VB(blech!), and RPL. Will a college degree get me a higher salary than "certifications" will? Is it possible to skip the BS courses (geography and phys-ed won't help me understand electrical engineering) and still be certified as an electrical engineer? Is it possible to earn a living through shareware or royalties from patents?
Re:Why prove it? (Score:2)
It doesn't matter what you know or how good you are, chances are there is someone just as qualified as you interviewing for the same position who also has a college degree and certs. When the ass fell out of the market, I was working as a network security engineer for a co-lo facility, and frankly, I'm pertty damn good at my job. I never finished college though, and I always scoffed at certifications and training classes. ("Bah, don't waste $5000 sending me to Checkpoint class, bossman, I can learn the features of the new version on my own")
When it came time to start looking for a new job after being laid off, I interviewed for like 10 jobs. In every single case, they had hundreds of resumes to choose from. Now, I'm pretty good at what I do, but out of hundreds of resumes, chances are good that someone else is just as qualified AND has the papers.
Thus, I am back in school, getting a degree in something else entirely. (chem) College may seem like a big waste of time to you right now...it did to me when *I* was your age.
However, the ability to tolerate the bullshit in order to reach your goal (the degree) is a skill that you WILL find useful. Not to mention, you find something you enjoy just as much if not more than hacking out code. (a chemist who can code his own applications and support his own network is worth a ton in the research field right now)
No props to Phillip Greenspun? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:No props to Phillip Greenspun? (Score:2)
Re:No props to Phillip Greenspun? (Score:2)
If anything, they are reinforcing the cachet of the MIT diploma by effectively stating, "our course materials are only a small part of the picture."
Interesting move, and probably a challenge to Ivy League schools and other prestigious educational institutions to prove that their tuition pays for more than lectures and handouts.
Excellent (Score:1)
This is pretty frikkin' cool. It's good to see that there's still a small amount of people prepared to make something available for free, and something that's actually worth reading.
Qualifications? No, thanks (Score:2, Interesting)
During my entire life, I have had to pass exams and more exams, written, oral, practical, whatever; I know where to go if I need qualifications, but, for once, I think this is a wonderful opportunity to learn what we would like to know, unspoilt by grades, notes, or whatever the devil thinks next!
Re:Qualifications? No, thanks (Score:2)
No Discussion Forums (Score:3, Insightful)
I worked at Royal Roads University [royalroads.ca], a small Canadian university with a focus on distance postgraduate degrees. It was common knowledge there that the real value in an education is interaction with your peers and professor. As a result, a lot of their education delivery theory focused around discussion groups.
MIT isn't really giving much of anything away. The valuable part of a university education is discussion with your peers and feedback from your professor. All you're getting on this website is a library of multimedia textbooks.
However this could be very valuable to other, much more modest institutions who can't afford to produce their own multimedia textbooks. To take this poverty to its logical extreme is to create entirely peer-driven classes -- no professor, everything marked by your classmates. Which is a much more exciting idea than just watching reproductive biology lectures naked.
Degrees and Such (Score:5, Insightful)
Ok, you are a 22 years old and a Linux god. You know Php, CGI, et al ad naueseam. You got a semi decent project on source forge. Where are your big bucks?
Well a company looks at it this way. A degree shows that you took the time and completed something. Whether it is in CS or underwater basketweaving. And you might not know fuck all about anything but you showed a little discipline.
AND college really can teach you some much needed social skills to survive in the real world. I do not care how good you are at what you do, if you piss of the customers cause you are l33t and they ain't, your out the door. And this also means that the Think Geek cap and Spawn t-shirt are not appropriate apparel for all occasions.
Online courseware is great, and I am one of those people who can pick up things easily from a book. But you know what? Regular classes are great too, you make friends,contacts, meet girls, get out the house.
All my practical knowledge in this industry I picked up on my own. IS was just starting to hit Unis so the courses were not all the good. I took a lotta business classes which have come in handy.
I like to see someone with a degree and mad skills. Good combination. Degrees are not that hard, and unis can come cheap here in the us. And if you got the skils you can get a job to pay for the school are do it yourself.
And before you come down on me. I got a GED at 20, started college at 23, finished at 28. Cause even though I got pretty good jobs with my skills, as soon as I got that paper, it opened many more doors.
So the online thing is great to a point. But you gotta have the real world behind it.
And at 32 years old I wish I could back do the uni earlier, and give my younger self a swift kick in the ass. Oh and buy some Microsoft stock
Puto
Re:Degrees and Such (Score:2)
The thing that kills me: Ok, College completion shows discipline, and that you took the time to complete something. Why then, pray tell, do the people that have gone the military route have such a hard time breaking into the work ranks after their service is up? Surely we can all agree military service is harder than going to college. Also, discipline is an obvious requirement.
And yet, I today have many friends out of work that are highly qualified former military that cannot get work simply because they don't have that piece of paper. Sad isn't it.
Re:Degrees and Such (Score:2)
Re:Degrees and Such (Score:2)
I beg to differ, having done both. Joining the U.S. military is the easiest thing on earth, as long as you meet the physical and mental requirements. Boot camp beats the crap out of you but it's over soon enough. After that your life is handed to you on a platter. It might not be the life you prefer but all the major decisions are made for you.
Military training is somewhat valuable. It's mostly just a start, and a real job in the real world is going to require further school.
Incidently, at least half of the new people reporting to my unit these days are college drop-outs.
Re:Degrees and Such (Score:2)
McGill too (Score:2, Funny)
The point is? (Score:2, Informative)
The reason is I am now a postgraduate student and no books exists that cover the kind of recent research material that we need to learn. Instead we use research articles, and they are always published on the net nowadays.
For the pregraduate studies the dilema is the same, except you have to buy the books at the local bookstore. You can still end up with knowledge without proof.
So how to prove what you know?
Just remember to enroll for the exam!
Oh! so universities are not free in your country?
Well, that is a completely different issue.
OpenEDU? (Score:5, Interesting)
Why can't a professor just video tape the damn lesson and catalogue the class participation? After a few years, I'd assume that there would be a complete class as well as the entire set of questions/clarification that could possibly be asked.
I also had a prof that made his own book. It'd be real cool if the gov't could create an "open" text book initiative. Books could be freely available online, while other profs could use them, modify them as long as the new version was also freely available.
Once the material was created, I don't see why there couldn't be an "open university" to be used freely by everyone. Obviously, there'd need to be testing centers created, but that is another topic.
College is too expensive. It doesn't have to be.
Re:OpenEDU? (Score:2)
Re:OpenEDU? (Score:2)
Why can't the prof videotape the lectures? Because virtually all subjects evolve. If the prof is worth his/her salary, next year's lectures will be different than this year's. If they aren't, well, then this is why a degree from MIT costs more than one from Podunk U.
Re:OpenEDU? (Score:2)
Because then we'd all be still programming in Algol or Snobol or Cobol or ***ol.
Re:OpenEDU? (Score:4, Informative)
Did you go to a private school? At the community college in California where I teach, the cost is $11 per unit. If you transfer to a Cal State or UC after that, you're still only paying a tiny percentage of the cost of your own education -- the taxpayers pay the rest.
BTW, what about lab courses? What about the gymnasium? The library? Research? All that stuff costs money too.
Why can't a professor just video tape the damn lesson and catalogue the class participation? After a few years, I'd assume that there would be a complete class as well as the entire set of questions/clarification that could possibly be asked.
This makes sense if you had a lot of really horrible teachers who used lecturing as a method of instruction. Lecturing is a ridiculous custom left over from the middle ages, when books were so expensive that students couldn't afford their own copies, so the profs read them out loud, and the students transcribed them.
The big problem with lecturing is that it's passive. To make the classroom experience worthwhile, you need something active, like students discussing stuff with each other, doing worksheets and getting help from the teacher, etc. None of this would work in a passive medium like video.
I also had a prof that made his own book. It'd be real cool if the gov't could create an "open" text book initiative. Books could be freely available online, while other profs could use them, modify them as long as the new version was also freely available.
I can't imagine why the government should get involved in this, but for free textbooks, see my sig. Is your prof's book available for free online? If so, I'd like to catalog it on my site.
OpenEdu? No! (Score:4, Informative)
First, it takes time to plan out lectures to the extent that they are even worth recording for future generations of students. And time is one resource which most professors do not have. The way academia works today, most professors at major universities are largely occupied by their research activities. Teaching -- especially at the undergraduate level, and most especially at the lower level undergraduate level -- is typically viewed as a nuisance, or at best, a distratction from research. It is quite rare to find a set of lectures worth recording; more often than not, the lectures were prepared in a big hurry the night before or the morning of the lecture. The vast majority of lectures are simply not worth recording in any form.
That said, excellent class materials DO occasionally become available, though typically in print form (as you alluded to). Faculty teaching commonplace courses (for instance, Quantum Mechanics or Statistical Mechanics in physics) whose subject material does not vary much, will often go back to their old notes, polish them up a bit, and have another go at it in a few years. After a few iterations of this process, excellent course notes are often developed. In many cases, those notes find their way into one of those famous textbooks which you have grown to love (or hate!). A great example is the classic "Spacetime Physics" on special relativity, which included questions from actual students taking the first version of the class, along with authoritative answers from John Wheeler, who is one of the world's foremost thinkers on relativity theory, and also one of the best physics teachers who has ever lived.
There are several major implicit assumptions in your statement which I should address. Imagine, for instance, that Feynman, when writing his famed lectures, decided to make then "open". What we would have today, in addition to the original, pristine edition, would be a proliferation of umpteen different versions with comments, additions, and substractions made by other folks. Now, this may come as a shock to you, but the world of ideas is not a democracy. Some ideas are better than others; some thinkers better than others. I submit that Feynman's original version would be vastly superior to almost any modified one; hence, the proliferation of "open" texts, when the best texts by the world's foremost thinkers are already available, would do little good other than to confuse and obfuscate the beginning student. You need to critically examine your assumption that open source dogma is applicable to every conceivable circumstance.
Another huge fact you are missing out on, is that all those great textbooks by the world's greatest thinkers are already at your disposal for free (as in beer). All you need to do is go down to your public library, and check them out! Feynman, Knuth, Plato, Samuelson and others are at your fingertips. If your library does not have a book, just request it through interlibrary loan. This is, in fact, the best of all possible worlds. You really don't want to have to sort through umpteen diluted and distorted "open" versions of those texts.
As someone who grew up during a time when internet access was not commonly available, I find it amusing and alarming that many younger students seem to think they can find anything they wish on the web. Simple point of fact is, those of us who have sat down with the best texts, bugged our profs with questions, did the labs, and thought about things, came through with a much better understanding of basic sciences than those who scanned the web for some writeup by lord-knows-who at Buttfuck U. Again, the world of ideas is not a democracy.
Which brings me to another major assumption in your statement : that one can simply acquire the knowledge one needs by passively sitting back and watching a video or reading a book. In fact, the biggest factor in learning is doing. Working out homeworks. Doing labs. Asking questions in lecture and in sections. This is a really key fact that most beginning students really miss out on; even in introductory courses, there are many challenging concepts which most students fail to absorb. (For instance, how many of you who have taken a basic physic class can explain how a top precesses? Or PRECISELY how the twin paradox works?) Watching another student ask the same questionm may help to some extent, but you will then miss out on another crucial part of learning, which is learning how to ask the right questions. When you boil it all down, learning is essentially an active, participatory experience; you will learn much, much more by becoming actively engaged, rather than just sitting back on your couch and watching a video or reading a book. And you simply cannot do that without lecturers, labs, teaching assistants, and so on. That is why learning at all levels (kindergarten and up) is inevitably so expensive, if done properly.
Bob
education is people interaction (Score:3, Insightful)
so what... (Score:3, Interesting)
Do they give away things they consider real IP?
For example.... a student (hhh@mit.edu) of theirs came up with a lameass protocol for VoIP (sort of since its over real ethernet packets, not IP packets). That was sold off to a company call NBX corp and their ip rights included lots of cool things like gnu zip and gnu tar from what I've heard of the license agreement. These were later were bought by 3com and all included in a product you can buy today for way too much money.
Now that 3com is selling me gnuzip, how do I get source or is it some special deal with MIT so they don't have to provide that even though strings shows "You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License" and other worthless nonsense.
Did I mention that 3com was one of the few IT companies that supported the DMCA?
curiosity and the taxpayer (Score:2, Insightful)
And another thing... In intro to grad-stats this semester I've been told that locking down/encrypting course-notes etc will be the wave of the future, this from a state school. Heaven forbid that Joe-taxpayer actually be able to learn on their own! YOU pay taxes that support ME going to school. Shouldn't you have access to all the information generated by your tax-dollars?
Information vs. Education (Score:5, Insightful)
All through elementary school and high school, we are offered a myriad of courses in order to give us broad fundamental skills and to expose us to as much of an variety as possible.
But, beyond basic skills and experience, school teaches us how to deal with other people, how to intellectually relate to and cooperate with others, how to ask and answer questions.
College or university is no different. Now, you choose what you want to study, but you do is in an environment that focusses on honing your academic skills to the standards of true academia.
Course materials are a great information resource, nothing more. I think people in the technology industries tend to lose sight of this more than in other fields because so much detailed information is required in understanding all the different technologies out there. (Ironically, that is how people who have read all the manuals who mistake information for education.) Few people will read information sources just for the hell of it. That's where teachers come in: they provide focus and enthusiasm. Nothing is better for getting through a really boring course that a great professor. The teacher motivates, guides, and assesses: a very important job.
But ultimately--and I think this is what they believe at MIT and why they're not too concerned about giving the material away for free--degrees are about learning how to apply the fundamental academic skills to the chosen material, and obtaining one is about interacting in an academic environment.
But, in the real world, if all a person needs is certification for administering an Apache web server, then give them a certification course (information). If they need to understand an Apache web server, give them an university course (education).
Open Degree Programs (Score:5, Insightful)
The benefits of this is that one is not limited to the quality of classes at your local U, if the CS dept is better at MIT, or a particular class is better at Yale, on can take the course there (virtually).
The things that local schools will provide: computer/web access, standard software and help for that software, places to collaborate with other students, get cheap beer and pizza, take classes that require in person interaction, places to take proctored tests, etc.
Overall, moving a good part of education online will help free us from the geographical bounds that currently make it tough for kids from San Diego (or Capetown) to get an MIT education, while allowing the best teachers to teach the best students from around the world.
Of course, how to pay & get paid for all this is another issue, and the one currently holding back alot of technology use in education.
Some of the other problems:
Faculty often don't get paid for taking the time to put their materials online. Some schools have a team that does this for the faculty, but many other schools expect them to learn to make their web pages themselves.
(The irony is that while the don't get paid to type and format their lectures in html and draw their diagrams in illustrator or gimp, they _do_ get paid to spend man-decades of their teaching career scrawling on blackboards! One of the things that drives me nuts about the "traditional" in class experience is sitting around or trying to keep up while a prof. scratches away at a black board or white board when this information could be so much better displayed in a nice, readable font on a projected website!)
The effectiveness of classes is often partly judged by how many students show up. We had a prof. who teaches an 7am ecology class take all his very good online materials down because he got marked down on reviews for having so few students show up.
Of course the problems with monitoring testing & providing hands on technology help for students who lack tech skills, the 'digital divide'.
Fair use of copywritten materials.
In any event, it's a great first step by MIT. Hopefully the politics and economics of online education will catch up with the technology someday.
Link http://web.mit.edu/ocw/ (Score:2)
I'm neck deep in LMS (Score:2)
What the people whose employments are threatened by open course stuff say is that MIT is doing this to force their faculty to create new stuff. Bullocks!
I personally do not care where it comes from, or why it's being distributed for free, but, if the quality is high, it will cause some change to the field.
PS - If you're looking for an Open Source prokect that's up this alley, look into textweaver.
Tell the politicians to support internet learning. (Score:2, Interesting)
I have just emailed my Member of Parliament suggesting that our government encourage universities here to do the same at MIT.
To be effective the universities should be given credit that leads to increases in funding.
I hope others will contact their MP's too. A good way is Fax Your MP [faxyourmp.com]
nifty (Score:2)
This is very cool for those of us that just want "the knowing."
Excellent Idea (Score:3, Insightful)
Take a Lesson from Firefly (Score:2)
"Online Superstars" (Score:2, Insightful)
Right now every teacher for every class delivers lectures. In the future (10-20 years), this will be the exception. Here's what we'll see:
This is analogous to what's happened in the music industry. Live band performances are the exception, not the rule. Live bands were killed by the invention of records, CD's, and video. (Most) Live courses are going to be killed by the internet. There's simply no need for 1000's of professors to do "covers" of the material one professor (or a good team of educators) can create and distribute online.
FYI - here's how a new (and very good!) online course is produced and automated:
Note that I use "is produced" rather than "will be produced in the future" up above, because it's already happening.
You heard it here first, ladies and gentlemen.
OpenCourseWare is in *beta* (Score:2, Insightful)
I've had the pleasure and opportunity to be involved in the Web development side of MIT OpenCourseWare (OCW), and just from coding up all the sample exams, lecture notes, handouts and problem sets I've learned an amazing amount without even intending to. Today, for instance, I'm delving into the world of Linguistics and the intricacies of Tagalog and Athabaskan Slave-Hare.
It is not just the usual course syllabus and general course information going up on these sites.
It is important to keep in mind that Sept. 30th is the "public beta" of the pilot site for the MIT OCW project. We are making our first batch of course sites available to the world, while we continue to work out the kinks and bugs in anticipation for the full launch a year from now.
For someone who is self-taught in Web development and research (like many others here), MIT OCW is not just a valuable tool for teachers and people already knowledgeable of the subject matter on the site, it's an incredible resource for everyone who has access to it -- from the very basic programming skills taught in "Introduction to Computers and Engineering Problem Solving," to the complex mathematics of nonlinear dynamics and chaos theory.
Definitely check out the site [mit.edu] on Sept. 30 and let us know what you think. Your feedback will help us as we continue to improve.
Re:Shocking news. (Score:1)
You should have been searching "Fuck FSF" (1,990 results) if you want to compare the result with "Fuck Microsoft".
Some interesting figures:
http://www.google.com/search?q=Fuck+Windows
Fu
http://www.google.com/search?q=Fuck+UNIX
Fuck Unix: 41,900 results
well - if you have that much of time searching something marketable for microsoft, you better write a better resume and send it to microsoft.
You pay for legitimacy, and it will get cheaper (Score:2)
Now what you are paying for to actually receive an MIT degree is the legitimacy that the school bestows upon you by recognizing you as a full graduate. That means you met the entrance standards and exit standards. People reading courses online meet neither standard - they are not screened upon entry and no one knows if they have read the entire course.
The market is reacting to high prices in education. More schools will offermore content online which will partially erase the distance gap for most poor students. "Being there" will always be better, but going the online route open up options for many who couldn't be there no matter what.
Of course for many students, they will simply need to get over the prestige factor of going away to spend four years at one of the few best schools. As this experience becomes out of reach for a growing number of students, the stigma of online education will drop.
Re:Rort (Score:1)
Re:Have they Thought... (Score:2)