Georgia Tech and Udacity Partner for Online M.S. in Computer Science
Georgia Tech and Udacity — the online courseware project led by Sebastian Thrun — have announced a plan to offer an accredited M.S. Computer Science program online. The two organizations are also working with AT&T. This is the first time a major university has made an actual degree available solely through the MOOC format. Getting a degree in this manner is going to be much cheaper than a traditional degree: "... students also will pay a fraction of the cost of traditional on-campus master’s programs; total tuition for the program is initially expected to be below $7,000." U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan said, "Massive open online courses (MOOCs) have quickly become one of the most significant catalysts of innovation in higher education. As parents know all too well, America urgently needs new ideas about how to make higher education accessible and affordable. This new collaboration between Georgia Tech, AT&T and Udacity, and the application of the MOOC concept to advanced-degree programs, will further the national debate — pushing from conversations about technology to new models of instruction and new linkages between higher education and employers." Georgia Tech is looking at the big picture: "At present, around 160,000 master’s degrees are bestowed in the United States every year in computer science and related subject disciplines; the worldwide market is almost certainly much larger, perhaps even an order of magnitude larger."
I actually had to go to school and meet people and have sex with girls. Now you can just do it from your mom's basement? you kids have it so much better these days,
For all those Silicon Valley Tech companies that can't get "qualified" people, might I suggest they use their billions and pay for us unqualified Americans?
It'll be a tax write-off and great PR - "We understand that there's a problem with STEM education in this country and we're going to help. We need qualified people, so we're going to be good corporate citizens."
They won't do it though because they are all full of shit. There is no shortage and they'd rather of H1-Bs.
They'd rather spend their money on lobbying Congress, legal fees for getting around laws, etc... than actually solving the "problem" - which doesn't exist, anyway.
It is all well and good when you want to learn something over the net. But if you start giving degrees over the net, the system will be gamed almost instantly. Already in traditional universities, there is cheating going on. There are people in India with advanced degrees willing to do your homework for you for ridiculously low prices. Now they will do your entire coursework for you on a turn key basis. Send in a cheque, and they do all the work and you get the degree.
sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
I wonder whether Universities will eventually become administrative hubs for online courses, with on-site work mostly limited to research level students. On one hand this would be great for affordability, but on the other the brighter undergrads who would have picked up much more than the course from the research students will be limited to the syllabus
Does any reputable university even offer a BS in computer science at present? For a field you would think would be at the cutting edge, I've found in the past that there are very few (reputable, not some Devry shit), if any, CS degree programs online.
The cow says "Moo." The dog says "Woof." The Timothy says "Thanks, valued customer. We appreciate your input."
For those who wish to pursue the online MSCS, but who do not already have a BSCS, I wonder if this program will offer the requisite undergraduate CS classes.
I have a BSEE and MSECE from Georgia Tech and wouldn't mind doing something like this if I could get the undergrad part online as well. It's a long drive from here to Atlanta.
This is an incredibly short sighted view of why these institutions are interested in this.
Georgia Tech:
The CS department has consistently been at the forefront of improving the educational process. They started the Threads curricula which was praised a few years back for looking at computer science as a holistic process rather that just a technical effort. This extends that push towards providing a full educational experience to the most people possible. It is currently very difficult for a working professional to take the time to participate in an on campus degree program unless they are lucky enough to live in the same city.
Udacity:
This is a great opportunity to legitimize the online course offerings they already give. As well as giving them an opportunity to expand this offering if this pilot is successful.
AT&T:
Already spends a lot of money in tuition assistance and lost productivity for it's employees to go back to school for their masters. If they can reduce the cost and lost time, that's a win/win for them. Not to mention the publicity.
But to take cheap digs at a school for it's geographic location, as well as the other ad hominem attacks against the other participants, doesn't really show any insight into the program they are creating.
PS. I am an alumnus in CS from GA Tech.
but IT needs more hands on classes / more of a apprenticeship system. As CS is not IT and at some schools CS missis the mark in giving you skills to do even coding work.
at least the new PPACA law will force them to offer benefits or pay the fine.
That should hurt some of the staffing firms that as abuse IT works.
what about coursework in more of a lab setting then or an trade school / apprenticeship setting where it's a lot harder to cheat like that.
But that is what you get with theroy based classes and filler classes like art history where whats the point to put more then the min when you spend most of time on the core classes.
But that is why they say they can't find any one as HR passes over people with real skills and all they get is the paper people. Who only have paper skills or are good at test cramming.
The college system should become an badges system.
Having employees to go back to school. Under the system as it is now eats up a lot of time as the college time tables as not really setup for stuff like that and tech / trades schools can be better off not being tied down / forced to fit into the older college system.
Devry is not shit if any think just being part of the older collgle system is holding it back now if they you can say take a class in X skill from Devy and have it mean something that shows it will be nice. But right now for it to really mean some it has to be part of a 2-4 year plan with the full load of NON core classes as well.
other professionals have real trades schools that are not 2-4-6 years of pure class room. And for some stuff even 2-3 years in the class room up front is pushing it. 4 being overkill. You do not sit in the class room for 4 years learning the theory of plumbing with limited hands on / real job skills.
Homework is one thing, but many online courses are moving to require proctored examinations (either in person at a testing center or using a webcam and screen monitor). So unless you can fake your photo and all of your personal info (which the online proctors use to verify your identity), you may actually have to demonstrate some kind of skill or knowledge.
This is just priceless.
English motherfucker, do you speak it?
DeVry and ITT are shitstains right up there with University of Phoenix.
On a related note.
I've read about 1/3-2/4 of Stevens.
I would like to fill out my knowledge but don't want to read the book from front to back.
Can anyone suggest a set of video lectures which will do this?
There are plenty of worldwide services who proctor in-person exams for NBAr, medical, SAT, etc. This would require one in-person visit per course, and a fee.
I listened to a MOOC talk by an enthusiastic state-school tenured professor last year. Then a a Univeristy of Phoenix professor in the audience arose and said they had been doing these online courses for years. They have some idea of what video and chatroom techniques work and dont work and all the cheating that goes on. The Couseras of the world are re-inventing the wheel this professor claimed. Although for-profit schools are dismissed for their fnancial sleaziness, they do have a point.And wehen the venture capitalists demand their "pound of flesh" will the Courseas be any less sleazt than the existing for-profit online schools? I am hoping for "best of both worlds" result, a merger of both best experiences.
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By comparison, the Coursera course is child's play.
Yes, Udacity is not Coursera. Nonetheless, I think Georgia Tech has a lot of work ahead before their MOOC CS curriculum will be ready for prime time.
You tricked me. I actually clicked the link expecting to see Clown College ranked among computer science institutes.
Restating the obvious since nineteen aught five.
Why isn't this program free? And don't give me this BS that by charging money you'll get the "serious" students.
The issue with "free" is not about how serious the students are it is about how serious the accreditation of those students is. Frankly I would not give any worth to a degree based only on online tests and assignments taken remotely. There is no way to guarantee that the person taking the tests is the person that they say they are. To do this you need some physical verification i.e. the exam has to be held where someone can physically verify who is taking the exam and that they are following the exam rules. You also need someone to setup a new exam each time and grade the responses: this is not "free" someone has to be paid to do this as well as develop and maintain the software to run the course, regularly update the course materials to e.g. make examples more relevant etc. etc.
In essence the old adage "you get what you pay for" applies. Online degrees may be a lot cheaper and, with physical verification of students for exams and important tests, they may gain value but those that remain free will likely have very little value attached to their accreditation. That does not mean that you cannot still learn a lot from such free courses but it will mean that you will have no paper to prove that you know the material. So, in essence, they would be the high tech equivalent of reading a book.
The first human flight did not come from those who said it cannot be done.
I, for one, am happy to see a new shoot springs from the ground. I do not know what it'll grow up to become but I hope it will be something amazing.
The FAQ addresses many issues such as costs, grading, course duration and cheating. On cheating:
How will you guarantee academic honesty?
All exams are proctored using national proctoring standards. We have access to 4,500 physical proctoring facilities and are working with online proctoring institutions.
if the curricula is kept up-to-date.
-- Jimtown Kelly
1) I hope English is not your native tongue. It's my second language as well, so I can sympathize if that is in fact the case. Otherwise, you may be making GP's point for him.
2) My best friend attended DeVry. She did very well, but I can't say her education there really advanced her career. At all.
3) I worked at DeVry briefly, as a tutor / teaching assistant (I forgot the exact name of the position, but it was unlike any I had ever seen in academia). I got to see the quality of instruction firsthand, and for the most part I was very underwhelmed.
4) DeVry is a total ripoff. As someone who accumulated 200 undergraduate credits before hitting the 500 level courses, I can tell you that DeVry is a terrible, terrible deal. Truly great education can be had for a fraction of DeVry's price.
Chuuch. Preach. Tabernacle.
"Devry is not shit if any think just being part of the older collgle system is holding it back now if they you can say take a class in X skill from Devy and have it mean something that shows it will be nice. But right now for it to really mean some it has to be part of a 2-4 year plan with the full load of NON core classes as well."
Let me guess... a Devry graduate?