Slashdot Mirror


Free Online Video Education from Top Universities

pkrumins writes "Over the past few years, some of the world's top universities have started offering free video recordings of their lectures. Being a student, I have enjoyed them and collected them in my bookmarks — until recently I talked to few people, and they did not know about it! So I decided to create a blog about free video education online. I am mostly focusing on physics, mathematics and computer science video lectures."

10 of 43 comments (clear)

  1. Missing In-Class Learning by neonprimetime · · Score: 4, Informative

    At the Big 10 University I went to ... we had online videos of the classes available ... but they were mainly designed for off-campus students (not on-campus students). Yet, I noticed in the classes that did have the online videos ... that the in-class attendance was much lower ... and students were missing out on the in-class interaction cause they chose to skip and just watch the vids. I for one, tried those online vids, and didn't like them. I get much more out of the class when I can interact and stop to interrupt the prof if I have a question.

    1. Re:Missing In-Class Learning by AuMatar · · Score: 4, Informative

      AMusingly enough, the interrupt the prof part is why I hated lectures- due to questions they always crawled at the speed of the slowest learner. If you were smarter than average (and even in college I was) so much of the time was taken up explaning the same point I got 5 minutes ago that I wanted to smash something. Especially in low level courses where the people who didn't belong in the program weren't weeded out yet. Questions should be for forums/usenet/office hours after class, not during lecture.

      --
      I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
  2. Why a blog? by Otter · · Score: 5, Insightful
    This is a very useful resource, but I don't understand why a blog format is a reasonable way to present it! Why not just update a vanilla web page?

    The Berkeley CS61 lectures are available as free podcasts on iTMS, by the way.

  3. Not the full experience.. by Rob+T+Firefly · · Score: 2, Funny

    For the full college course experience, one could watch these while suffering a hangover, playing Solitaire, holding three or four different conversations via text message or IM, and doodling on the desk.

  4. Neuroscience/Consciousness lectures by FleaPlus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Christof Koch, a neuroscientist at Caltech, has some online lecture videos from a course he teaches each year on the neural basis of consciousness. They're pretty neat, and give a nice overview of visual neuroscience. There's lots of fun stuff about how splitting the brain splits consciousness, experiments which probe at our inner "zombie agents," and so forth.

  5. awesome by drDugan · · Score: 4, Interesting

    my kids are 6 and 8 now. I wish I had access to top univeristy lectures when I was in high school. it would have kept me from being bored out of my head by the drivel spoon fed in public school.

    I expect that the mass, nearly-free communication from the Internet will significantly shift our assumptions about education and the ages at which people get different levels of training.

    Right now, people are kept out of the professional workplace as long as possible and it has been increasing over time (subtle pressures to reduce competition from young people mostly drives this). more degrees, etc mean you are 22-25 ish before you are treated as "acceptible" in the professional workplace. This is completely ABSURD biologically, where one can compete as an adult (strictly biologically) at about age 16-18. Most primiltive humans had "adluthood" rituals even younger.

    With widely available content, advanced degrees will mean less - I mean if you can walk into an engineering firm at age 17 and have taken and understood all the MIT classes on structural engineering - OF COURSE they will hire you in a second. They would pay you less maybe than a EE major, but who cares, the 17 yo will do it in a second. This is mirrored in current higher education and funding too. Most professors are more multidisciplinary (belonging to mutliple depts.) and funding is becoming more collaborative (like the NIH roadmap). THe result is lower importance on specific disciplines.

    For my own kids, the world will change so much by the time they will be ready for college, I'm not really thinking the same rules will apply to them when they get to be 17 or 18.

    We'll see....

  6. Re:Human Physiology? by vishbar · · Score: 4, Funny

    I can give you links to some very comprehensive Human Anatomy demonstrations...

    They're not exactly in a laboratory environment, though.

    --
    Ride the skies
  7. Re:Interesting concept by AuMatar · · Score: 2, Informative

    Too bad Wikiversity is basicly dead. THe board took a look at a vote where over 2/3 supported creating it, then said "No online courses". Not just no accredited courses (which would be pretty impossible), but no teaching or courses at all. This was followed by the entire movement being co-opted by a bunch of people wanting to turn it into a place for researchers to congregate. Combined with a small subset of wikibookians who just want to see it die because it might take contributors from wikibooks. Right now it has no chance of ever launching- the board doesn't really want it, and has basicly buried it.

    They're similarly gutting Wikibooks- Jimbo just came in one day and said anything that isn't a textbook for a college or high school course had to go. All the guides, how-tos, and anything that wasn't in the strictest sense academic. Both resources are being horribly mismanaged by the wikimedia board.

    --
    I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
  8. Re:Only applies to those who care. by Deflatamouse! · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I partially disagree with you. By going to lectures, I was able to spend the rest of my time reading other materials not covered in lectures or playing StarCraft. I noticed on average it took me twice the amount of time to pick up the materials from the textbooks compared to the same materials presented in the live lectures. But that's just me. Everyone have their own learning style, and for me lectures were very useful part of college.

    I agree with you the time to soak up knowledge from books was also very useful. Lectures allow me to spend less time on the materials covered and more time on materials not covered.

  9. Re:Good news kinda by All+Your+Name+Are+Be · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Well there is alot of stuff in there. It's not like slashdot could link to everything he does in one of it's post. Besides it's not a 'blog' as in 'weblog' or 'online diary' or even a homepage. it's a clearly focused website with a specific theme that aggrigates internet resources (like slashdot), it just happens to use a blog engine. Infact it seems to avoid the 'lets just talk about whatever the fuck is on our mind' danger even more than slashdot by only linking to videos.