Who can Learn Online, And How?
Event Type: Online/web-based
Topics: Information Literacy, Instruction, Internet and Web, Other
Contact: Anya Kamenetz
Date, Location
Tue, 06/19/2012 - 9:30am - 10:30am
About the Event
The selection of free online higher learning experiences--as distinguished from merely raw learning materials, like MIT's Open Courseware --- has expanded greatly in the past six months. Udemy, Coursera, the Minerva Project, Udacity, and edx all offer courses created by faculty at top universities in the Massively Open Online Course (MOOC) format, each with some combination of video lectures, exercises, a social component (chat rooms, wikis, Facebook groups) and even a form of certification for your learning. And many of them are offering these courses for free.
Much of the conversation around this new wave of education startups has focused on what they mean for the incumbent institutions, from for-profit online universities to the traditional Ivy League. But what about what they mean for learners? Who is currently succeeding in open learning contexts? What are the missing pieces of the ecosystem--from discovery, to peer support, to mentoring, to assessment--that will allow the most severely underserved learners to succeed in this new learning environment?
Cost: no charge
To Register:
Registration link:cyber.law.harvard.edu/events/luncheon/2012/06/kamenetz#RSVP
Event Website
http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/events/luncheon/2012/06/kamenetzSubmitted by: Leora Troper on Thu, 06/07/2012 - 11:01am Contact the person who posted this item.
