MIT OpenCourseWare Now Online 179
peter303 writes "A sampling of MIT's OpenCourseWare selections appered online today. The courses cover a full range of departments, but only a couple apiece. The material ranges ranges from just syllabi and calendars to extensive on-line course notes and interative demos. To succeed, OpenCourseWare must also be an advantage to MIT faculty and students, as well as the outside world. I think this may be possible, because it gives a uniform appearance and access point for online material, plus tools to build these."
A little dissapointed (Score:3, Interesting)
Others have only thin offerings, such as lecture notes alone. In some cases the lecture notes are extensive, but in others they are just minimal outlines of the lecture and are not useful if you did not attend this lecture. (These could be made useful if video lectures were subsequently provided)
I'm interested to see if other course directors follow the lead of the better prepared OCW sites. I think there is great potential, but it remains to be seen exactly how OCW will fare.
Building a University online (Score:5, Insightful)
Now when do I receive my diploma in the mail for as little as $39.95 as the email stated?
Re:A little dissapointed (Score:3, Funny)
Re:A little dissapointed (Score:2)
"...
We are still in the pilot phase of MIT OCW. As we discover more about the
challenges and possibilities of MIT OCW, the Web site and its course materials
will continue to grow and evolve.
"
anyway as another poster put it...give it time.
I'm very excited about this program
Not all of it is online (Score:3, Interesting)
The required text is Writing Economics by Neugeboren and Jacobson. You do not need to buy it. A copy will be provided for you. You are expected to read this text and follow its instructions in the work you hand in for this class, even though we will not cover the text in detail in the lectures. Other texts you might want to consult are A Guide for the Young Economist by Thomson, The Practice of Econometrics: Classic and Contemporary by Berndt, Elements of Style by Strunk and White, Stata® manuals, and The MIT Undergraduate Journal of Economics.
Humpf. So where do I sign up for that?
Clarity (Score:4, Insightful)
At least they are offering some resources which might help those who have trouble communicating well in their written work.
I guess one might argue that writing well is something that you learn by writing often. You can buy books that will help you, but this is one of those courses that you won't master through acquiring new facts from your text.
Re:Not all of it is online (Score:1)
Re:Not all of it is online (Score:2)
Credit where credit is due... (Score:3, Funny)
Education is changing. (Score:3, Interesting)
The role of education in modern society, however, is under question, since the ability to look up facts instantly (rather than knowing them) can make people appear to be a lot smarter than they really are.
I have no problem with this. I'd rather people had common sense and an ability to use information, rather than just being a know-all.
If you need to hire a programmer to write a proprietary TCP/IP driver for your new device, you can hire someone who a) is expensive and a TCP/IP driver expert, or b) someone who is cheaper, very smart, can turn their hands to anything, and uses the Internet to research how TCP/IP drivers work. Most companies these days would choose person B.
And the main point?
Education is overrated, since anyone with a decent IQ and a large reference library (say.. the Internet) can work out how to do things that you once needed a degree to do.
Re:Education is changing. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Education is changing. (Score:1)
Yeah, I 'warezed' the sum total of all Human Knowledge (v8.1), and have the storage capacity to keep it all in short-term memory, but I can't find a good correlation module to make sense of it. :-(
--
Re:Education is changing. (Score:2)
/me recalls fondly the days of seeing how much info could be crammed onto a 3" by 5" index card. That was the standard ammount of info most professors allowed us to carry into a test that wasn't open-book. I probably learned as much making the card as I did doing any problem set. It forced you to decide what was really important.
Re:Education is changing. (Score:1, Interesting)
So, the Internet being what it is (vast and full of erroneous information), how does your hypothetical ignoramous know when he/she has found the correct answer?
A real puzzler, eh? Maybe that degree isn't as worthless as you surmise.
Re:Education is changing. (Score:2)
I completely believe education is desire, not location.
Re:Education is changing. (Score:2)
Education is not overrated, IMO. Education is not about memorizing facts and figures, it's about learning how to learn. You have to do that on your own in college, they just say 'learn this'. Then you have to figure out how to learn it and reproduce what the teacher wants on the homework and eventuatly a test.
Also, 'being smart' is possiably one of the hardest things to determine about a person. If you can detect intelligence then you are a might gifted person. Most of the time it's very hard to tell if someone is faking it. Some people just don't come off as being really smart, but will solve anything you tell them to. Interviewing someone for 'smarts' is really hard.
Some people don't work well under extreme pressure, some do. Those that do tend to be percieved as 'smarter' during the normal interviewing process. While a much smarter person that gets flustered in a position like that may be percieved as being less capable, even if under normal working conditions they can perform much better.
Also, it's nice to have people that don't totatly rely on the internet (or any book) for knowledge. If you are always checking the internet for the 'right' way to do something, then what about when you are in a meeting with a client and you can't access the internet. Just BS it and pray?
Re:Education is changing. (Score:2, Insightful)
I would hire the guy who holds up to pressure 99 times out of 100. The last thing I need is somebody who craps out when a deadline is approaching and a last minute bug is discovered.
I knew a guy in college who did great in his classes but just seemed to be dumb as a lump. After taking a few exams with him I realized what it is. He is just extremely fastidious. He takes every minute that the professor will give him to go over the exam. The problem is that in real life you don't have the time to go over things 10 times. You have to get it right the first time or as damn close as you can.
Re:Education is changing. (Score:1)
Most companies these days would advertise for someone with 20 years experience writing TCP/IP drivers in Java in a Novell Netware environment.
Re:Education is changing. (Score:1)
A well-designed online training option (which this is not purporting to be) will allow a student to work at his/her own pace, receive individual attention from the instructor (via email often but sometimes via telephone), and take advantage of all the information the internet has to offer.
It's tough for a reason. (Score:3, Insightful)
Horseshit.
Everybody learns at different speeds and learn faster with different methods
True. And if I want to hire someone who can assimilate information and use it fast enough to do the work I need to do, then I will probably want to hire someone who could learn and do fast enough to get through a degree program.
Re:It's tough for a reason. (Score:1)
That might be the worst argument I have ever heard. Don't you have anything better than that? All a degree program proves is how much money you have. Once you get into the real world you will realize that a college degree is necessary but after your first job no one cares where you got it from. Just wait - you'll see.
I've seen (Score:2)
A degree program proves how you managed to make it through a degree program. The lack thereof shows a lack of ability to muster all of the components of completion, ie. resources, determination, intelligence, the ability to stick with and attain a goal.
Higher education is like an obstacle course. If you want to, you can say that it trains you to get through obstacle courses. Or you can decide that if you need someone with some stamina, some ability and the desire to finish something, you might want to go looking at those who've completed an obstacle course, rather than those who could've given enough time, or a ride to the obstacle course, or long-term, low-intensity obstacle course training.
Re:It's tough for a reason. (Score:2)
Re:Education is changing. (Score:5, Insightful)
Memorizing the Constitution is fine, but it aint going to get you a job. Knowing how to think logically and knowing when you don't know something is the key to being successful in most careers.
Re:Education is changing. (Score:2)
Let me know when you're done.
Re:Education is changing. (Score:2)
But these are bundled with the people who make asinine statements like the original poster's "education is overrated." Liberal arts, humanities, social science, and so on might be overrated, but hardcore programs in the sciences, with the intense focus on calculus and physics required, are not even considered by people who say such things. They hear "education" and they think "MBA", and the face on that is generally some boss who has no technical inclination (let alone, understanding of number theory or quantuum mechanics!)
To the OP's credit, though, I must say that whether your differential calc is self-taught or you've done it in a university, you still will have largely taught it to yourself. Sure, you get some of the knowledge from lectures, but the bulk of the learning comes from doing problem sets in books, and researching various sources of information, including, yes, the Internet.
As long as there are people with BS's and MS's working for $50K/year, the OP does have a point.
While I agree with your sentiment, I must say you chose a poor example. Are you by chance struggling with upper calc right now yourself?
Re:Education is changing. (Score:2)
And I can say (without a touch of false modesty [g]) that I am very good at this stuff; multi-variable calc, linear algebra, and diff.eq. weren't exactly easy, but I didn't struggle that much -- because I had good teachers, I went to class, I asked questions in class, and I studied the material. Without that experience, there's no way in hell I would have understood either math or CS at a deep level; I might have picked up some books and taught myself much of it, but it wouldn't be the same.
And that's why I'm doing well as a CS grad student, and why I'm a damn good programmer on the job as well. Being a really good programmer requires knowledge that the vast majority of people simply cannot get out of school -- and if they don't go to school, they'll never know they're missing it.
Only two Comp Sci & Eng courses... (Score:1)
One of them is a lab and the other seems to haved little to do with Computer Science - something about transportation planning.
I would have expected the Comp Sci department to be at the forefront in this experiment in online course materials.
Re:Only two Comp Sci & Eng courses... (Score:1)
And if you don't think that finding minima is a huge part of computer science then you're not a computer scientist.
Re:Only two Comp Sci & Eng courses... (Score:1)
An opportunity.. (Score:2)
Taking the same things remotely / autonomously sounds impossible.
When they put the courseware for St. Clair County Community College online, it might me a bit more accessible to us commoners.
Quite the opposite (Score:4, Insightful)
I somewhat agree (Score:2)
I agree (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I agree (Score:2)
Re:I agree (Score:1)
Re:I somewhat agree (Score:3, Informative)
When I was there as an undergraduate, I didn't think the curiculum was at a level above the rest, and I attributed most of MIT's reputation to the student selection process. I have come to realize that the background I got as an undergraduate was on a par with what most people get in a Masters program. You can pack more into a four year program if the students are all at a relatively high level.
There is no reason why many institutions can't make it possible for their top students and faculty to keep pace and match these programs. The motivated individual could make this happen on their own. Technical material in particular are not as dependant on social maturity to succeed can be mastered by young geniuses if it is available.
Re:Quite the opposite (Score:2)
One of the nice things with for example the math classes is that you can take the basic
I should also point out that in addition to just the basic math classes there are roughly 150 additional courses(undergraduate and graduate combined) offered every year by just the math department with topics ranging from introductory courses in microlocal analysis to things like supersymmetric quantum field theories, cryptography/-analysis, wavelets, computational molecular biology, Stochastic Processes, Lie algebra, etc.. (yes there is lots of overlap between departmental topics)
There's also 3 dozen more departments to choose from all with rather extensive course offerings. Just the summary listing in the course catalog with a one or two sentence description for every course takes about 350 pages.
People going to mit tend to be little above average also. I've met few different students who are triple gold medalists in international math olympiads. Having looked at the questions and not really understanding where to even start with the problems I felt kind of dumb.. If you feel like being an mit math major take a look at this [win.tue.nl]
Re:Quite the opposite (Score:1)
That said, I have had several long discussions about education with several friends, all of whom have been to different schools of varying different "degrees", from Ivy League to Local Midwest No-Name. The 3 biggest differences that I see between MIT and others is the quality of faculty, students, and resources.
Faculty speaks for itself. Professors are doing full time research related to the class that they are teaching and usually only teaching one class. Most professors are also experts in their repective fields, and have scores of undergrad and grad assistants to enable them to develop some great course notes/problem sets/tests (usually).
The quality of MIT's resources outshines those of almost any other university, especially in the EECS arena. What other university has equivalents to LCS (think W3), the AI lab (think Stallman), the Media Lab (think wearable-computing and other wacky antics), and RLE (think radar), just to name a few.
The student population, however, is the single biggest factor that sets MIT apart from the rest. I did well in high school, figuring that I was probably the smartest kid in school (ego alert!). Then I go to MIT, and I am mediocre, surrounded by people who know more, have done more, and are much smarter that I can ever be. This sort of experience is eye-openingly humbling and incredibly wonderful, to be surrounded by people who are at the same level as you and can think on the same tracks, without you having to go and explain what it means for two computers to "talk to each other". I believe that just being around the MIT population for 5 years did more for me than anything else there.
Re:Quite the opposite (Score:2)
Well, duh! Math is math is math. It's based in fact. You can't change it. It's not like they can decide to teach Lagrange multipliers in one school, and Bazooka Joe multipliers in another. However, there are majors other than Course 18.
It's the professors themselves who have a profound impact at MIT. Where else can you take a Biology 101 course taught by Eric Lander [mit.edu] (of the Human Genome Project)? Or how about having Sussman [mit.edu] teach your intro CS class? How about an Acoustics class taught by the guy who founded the Bose speaker corporation? And those wankers whining about the Big Dig in another thread today? Perhaps they could learn a few things in one of the classes I took, taught by one of the Big Dig masterminds, Fred Salvucci [mit.edu].
Yeesh.
Re:Quite the opposite (Score:2)
Yup. Sussman (along with Hal Abelson and others) taught 6.001 (Intro to CS) when I took it in the spring of 1998. He also taught it for several years before that, and one year after. I believe they have taken a break from teaching it now. Eric Lander is teaching 7.012 (Intro to Biology) right now, and has taught one intro bio course each year for the 5 years I've been around, and a lot longer than that from what alums tell me.
3 CC courses 1 MIT course (Score:2)
Not really... (Score:2)
Another reason this is cool (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Another reason this is cool (Score:1)
Re:Another reason this is cool (Score:2)
Re:Another reason this is cool (Score:1)
Their model-railway club, surely?
(ref: some hacker-history book...)
Re:Another reason this is cool (Score:2, Funny)
I agree. In the case of MIT, I bet most people attend that school because of their research reputation. I did the same for the school I went to, I selected it based on its research reputation, and as an undergrad (e.g. second class citizen); that's probably the biggest mistake I could have made.
High schoolers; don't make the same mistake I've made. Select your University based on the popularity its football team and the quality of its cheerleaders squad. In hindsight, even if you're not interested in football; this rationale makes a lot of sense.
Not new, but special (Score:4, Informative)
But MIT is doing two things that are real steps forward. First, they're settings standards: instructors are expected to post certain kinds of information in a standard format. Existing course web sites are just online alternatives to photocopied class handouts, and it's up the individual instructors exactly what they bother to put online and how they present it.
But what's really staggering is MIT's attitude towards public use of this material. Most course web sites are created specifically for the students taking the course -- public access is an accidental side effect, and probably wouldn't happen at all if University web sites secured their networks properly. They'd probably be taken down or hidden behind a firewall if public access started taxing the servers. Which is completely different from what MIT is doing: investing in servers and bandwidth for no other purpose than to enable public access to their content.
First impressions about one of the courses... (Score:5, Interesting)
Hope this doesn't replace the tradition of..... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Hope this doesn't replace the tradition of..... (Score:1)
MIT Degree Not Promised... (Score:5, Insightful)
The Copyright Law (partly) gets in the way of putting all the course materials online. The other problem is sheer volume. It's going to take awhile before they figure out how to get all the stuff up there. Some subjects will work better than others. Math will probably do well, history will probably be not so good because of percentage of copyrighted stuff used in history courses versus math courses.
It will get better and richer as they figure it out. It'll definitely be a good resource but it'll never be an MIT (TM) education.
Re:MIT Degree Not Promised... (Score:2)
I don't think that *most* of the lectures would contain copyrighted material. Sure there would be a lot of external reading that would need to be done but I don't see why the lectures themselves could not be posted online.
Just as the other courses have done, list the required external readings and let the Internet readers find that material for themselves, it's not terribly hard.
Part of being interested in History is research, it would actually make the readers of the online material more involved in what they are supposed to be doing anyway.
just my worthless
The software behind the site? (Score:2, Interesting)
At my school [utdallas.edu] we have a system that I assume we purhased called WebCT, and, frankly, it sucks. In fact for a supposedly technology driven school, we have some crappy resources. A bunch of sun workstations and 6 dollar copies of Windows XP, whoopteedo. I digress.
However, in my rhetoric class we handle all document management (turning in papers, journal entries, teachers notes, etc) via an online service [utexas.edu] provided by the University of Texas Austin. Aside from some really hokey things (strands of learning? that sounds rather new age) it is an interesting way to turn in papers and recieve feedback. It is pretty raw, but it has potential.
It is supposedly going to be open sourced (it is a php/mysql thing, I know because I saw the standard mysql overload page on it one day). Any other schools have systems like this? UTDallas does not, but then again, UTDallas sucks.
Re:The software behind the site? (Score:2)
What I gather from reading some of the intro material is that MIT plans to release the content-creation framework; see goals; goal #2:
"2. Create an efficient, standards-based model that other universities may emulate to publish their own course materials."
My reading of the roadmap leads me to believe that the current incarnation relies on "manually coded HTML", with "standalone course sites", and this approach is expected to change dramatically in the coming years (Or until they decide it was a mistake to go online with it, due to the slashdot effect
http://ocw.mit.edu/global/about-ocw.html
Re:The software behind the site? (Score:1)
The wireless network is cool, yes. I have seen plenty of new Dells, so the newer systems in the labs do not really do anything for me. I went to check the Mac labs and some fucktard said the macs were broke, then a nicer student worker said they were not authenticating properly (or some such) and the fucktard said (in a most condenscending voice) "NO, they are inherently broke, they are macs". Well I am not mac zealot, but fuck him for treating me like an idiot.
Hrm what else? The web-based mail sucks fucking donkey balls. Campus Pipeline is a bullshit system. I should never be barraged with fucking banner ads when I try to check my school email, so I do it by pine, but would rather have mutt. The online job center uses erecruiting.com which is some fucking way to do things when you are surrounded with a couple of thousand CS students who need real world examples for future employers, probably willing to work for free on a project like, oh, web-based departmental applications...
The campus newspaper sucks, they need a system like cofax to publish the newspaper online [cofax.org]. The UTD website looks like ass, and they need someone with half a brain to design a decent logo for the school. I guess thats really subjective, though. The LRO idea is cool, but man alive does WebCT suck.
I am sure you were being nice, and I really appreciate the reply (and sorry to go on a longwinded cussing rant), but I have an endless number of issues with UTD. However, since you are
the purpose of open course wear isn't for dist. ed (Score:5, Informative)
Public Place (Score:2)
So when do the good materials come out (Score:2)
On a sidenote, hope joystick101.org [joystick101.org] gets put back up, I've got a few ideas burning that are being wasted on kuro5hin.
The key is interacctive collaboration with the aud (Score:1)
I wonder whether this is good (Score:5, Insightful)
I think there may be too much of a tendency by professors to reuse educational materials. This may lead to a degree of standardization and uniformity of the educational experience that could harm progress. A diversity of approaches to problems results from a diversity of different experiences. That oddball approach some professor is teaching at a small university may just be the basis for the next important breakthrough, or at least make the school's graduates fill some important niche in science and engineering not as well filled by others.
It's like languages, cultures, genetics, and ecology: we really do lose something important when global communications carry a few dominant paradigms (or organisms) everywhere. Monocultures of the mind may be more risky and costly than monocultures of plants.
Re:I wonder whether this is good (Score:2)
You've never sat in a room with a bunch of University faculty members and tried to get them to agree on curriculum, have you?
I have. It's ugly. Questions like "Should we say the word 'polymorhphism' in course X?" lead to endless religious wars and whoever brought it up eventually goes back to their office and hides.
That aside, a University lecturer is (should be?) more than a reader. Everyone brings their own flavour to a course. I've never been able to use anyone else's lecture notes for a course. It just doesn't feel right--it's not yours.
Re:I wonder whether this is good (Score:1)
This kind of "mad genius professor" model of innovation isn't really borne out by the facts.
Open Courseware is just a great initiative. In my view any standardisation that does occur will be more than offset by the increase in quality of people's material, and the overall contribution to the field that open source/courseware encourages.
Danny
Re:I wonder whether this is good (Score:2)
I think there may be too much of a tendency by professors to reuse educational materials. This may lead to a degree of standardization and uniformity of the educational experience that could harm progress.
With OpenCourseWare MIT is boldly forcing universities to realize that higher education is not about educational *materials* but rather about the educational *experience*. Universities are *very* competitive these days and if professors choose to uncritically recycle MIT course materials without at least adding any personal insight, hands-on labs, and offering advice and office hours, then their university's reputation will quickly suffer.
You're right that too many profs overly recycle their material but I think this initiative will actually decrease such reliance on educational materials as a crutch by making students and educators realize there's much more to an education than reading notes (the best profs and schools already do). Not to mention the social and real-life aspects offered by a residential experience...
Good iniciative, but... (Score:2, Funny)
<br>
Ive found that many universities put online material for students, obviously THEIR student, but anyway is on the net, and many persons, included me, use this material in order to get ideas for classes, exercises, exams, etc. <br>
Ive read some MIT courses material (from opencourseware), and it seems great, but not to much... coming from MIT...
Re:Funny? (Score:2)
". Preview next time.
Of course, this is no reason to moderate it funny. Oh well, karma isn't that important anymore anyways.
To be pedantic... (Score:1)
Re:To be pedantic... (Score:1)
Great... (Score:2, Insightful)
It's delightful to know that people still want to make sure that knowledge will remain free.
Course information online isn't new., but... (Score:2)
The difference was that access was password protected. The University viewed the material as property and expected people to pay for the classes to have access to it. If you wern't in the class, you didn't get to look at the material. After all, if you can get the material for free, why would you pay for a distance education class?
"Back in the day" all sorts of university course and research information was available online - but then universities started taking most of it down. The information being online is unremarkable - that it's available for free is the unique part.
I've already sent links to my students (Score:4, Interesting)
Yes, it's a nit. I'm flagging it anyway. (Score:2)
Apparently not from the English department, though...
Re:Yes, it's a nit. I'm flagging it anyway. (Score:1)
http://www.dictionary.com/search?q=apiece [dictionary.com]
Re:Yes, it's a nit. I'm flagging it anyway. (Score:2)
What was your point again?
Interesting, but (Score:2)
Some journals are available on-line, and public libraries often have access to databases for fee-based articles, but pulling the articles togetehr will often be difficult. Compounding this is the use of case studies, which are cash cows for schools such as Harvard. What would be real helpful is the availability of inexpensive ecucational access (with limited d/ls per month to keep non-ed users out) to anyone so they could get the 50 or articles/cases they need.
Th etrade off is the potential loss of sales to traditional users (which can be as much as $20/student/qtr per class at BSchool) who get cases and articles online for less vs the addin sales potential as on-line use increases.
At least MIT is pushing in the right direction.
I like it (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I like it (Score:2)
I worked at an MIT lab for 3 years, and for a few months, they offered a linear algebra course on site at the lab. It was strange because first they showed a video of Strang lecturing, but then he personally went up to the front of the lab class and asked if there were any questions. Interesting that he didn't do the lectures himself there, even though he was there.
But he's a cool lecturer (I only attended 1-2 sessions before I went back to school). so, you should definitely take advantage of Strang's lectures, especially if it blows away your Bates prof.
But you can also take advantage of the opportunity to go to class and try to clarify concepts that Strang's lecture may not have fully explained. You'd certainly be getting a much better education than just going to your own class, if you took it seriously.
Re:I like it (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I like it --- Strang -- streaming is bagbiting (Score:2, Funny)
Makes me wish . . . (Score:1)
instead of 30
Already some overlap from ArsDigita University (Score:1)
The Birth of a New Spam Product (Score:2)
Classroom doesn't work online... (Score:2)
However, classroom learning *does not* really translate well online. Online coursework, if it's serious at all, requires a whole different approach- including several different kinds of interactivity. For MIT to offer *real* online coursework, it would require designing it specifically for that purpose, and probably producing it entirely separately. The reality is two separate universities- cyberspace and meatspace.
That said, this is still pretty neat.
The format is RealAudio (Score:1)
It seems that the lecture videos format (at least for Linear Algebra, which I checked) is Realplayer's [mit.edu]. Anyone knows whether it'll be provided in a friendlier format as well?
Re:The format is RealAudio (Score:1)
Higher Education Online (Score:1, Informative)
Regardless, among the few institutions really puting what they have out there for anyone to benefit, Columbia University [columbia.edu] so far has the most to offer. Few schools come close to Columbia's Interactive department as far as content beyond an online syllabus. MIT seems to be in the right track, until they start making access to the general public impossible. I don't think it should be free (as it isn't at CI or Harvard), but at least reachable. Some other schools simply block access and give no options to outsiders/non-students.
From a purely business perspective, as some one else already pointed out, making content available to outsiders gives University recruiters a great "businesscard".
Its so easy to do ! (Score:1)
MIT has done the simple (administratively complex) task of putting all this together and putting it online at one central place.
UC Irvine [uci.edu] has a similar effort [uci.edu]; all UCI courses *have* to have a website with most of the course material online. I hope they see this MIT effort and take it to the next level of making it completely open and useful for the whole world.
Does Microsoft's Defense Team Write This Stuff? (Score:1, Offtopic)
This sounds like Microsoft's commonly-touted line: "We didn't drive them out of business. Their incompetence drove them out of business." Is he teaching software engineering or business? He should stick to the former, because he's either inept or well-paid when it comes to the latter.
--pedantic (Score:1)
Every 'java' is replaced by:
http://ocw.mit.edu/6/6.170/f01/tools/index.html [mit.edu]
adds a little TM symbol to every 'java'.
Results in pages that read like Scientology Fan Fiction [somethingawful.com]
We have this idea at Cornell, kinda (Score:1)
If MIT's page set turns out nice, is fast, and provides me another source of information in even greater detail than just HowStuffWorks.com then I think this is a great thing for all us non-MIT world members.
In terms of MIT students and faculty, these pages provide employeers a glimpse of what the course offerings really cover, hopefully conveying the idea to potential employeers of students that they truely did get a good background in the material they may claim to on their resumes'.
5.61 (Score:1)
Increased quality of educational plagerism (Score:1)
Re:Increased quality of educational plagerism (Score:1)
Great start, lets take the next steps. (Score:2)
Now the next steps.
1. Start publishing textbooks online. The only people who make money off of textbooks anyway are the publishers and bookstores. Why not make the material freely available? Textbooks published by professors at public universities should be made available with an open copyright. Textbooks have become very expensive and limit a student's access to material. I used to try to read at least one other textbook in addition to the one that was assigned in class.
2. Start publishing papers online. This is the same situation. A professor writes a paper that is published in the IEEE Transactions on XXXXXX. The information is now copyrighted and I have to pay to read it. This limits a student's access to the material.
Freeing up this material and making it available electronically would have a strong effect on education and research.
Something Nobody has Mentioned Yet (Score:2)
Uh... yeah... right... (Score:3, Insightful)
The idea behind applied sciences is that it's real-world preparation, and in the real world, you're allowed to look at books if you don't know how to do something.
*Everything* should be more extensive (Score:1)
Re:Mathematics should have been more extensive. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:not much difference (Score:2)