ONLINE LEARNING
MOOCs
(massive open online courses ) click
with Indians
The
three top US-based MOOCs — Coursera, Udacity and EdX — now have a huge
percentage of Indian students. The biggest of these Coursera — it has 4.3
million students from across the world — says it is ‘astounded and humbled’
by the interest shown by Indians.
Sankalp
Garud, 17, has taken a course in mathematical thinking at Stanford,
calculus at UPenn, social psychology at Wesleyan and mechanics at MIT. All
while staying put in Ghatkopar.
In Delhi, media manager Tituraj Kashyap is learning
about the history of photojournalism from the star professors at University
of London and is topping it with a songwriting course from the Boston-based
Berklee College of Music. Techie Anand Sathe’s academic basket includes
eight courses ranging from machine learning to the theory of irrational
behavior (the latter — taught by Dan Ariely from Duke University — is one
of the most popular MOOCs).
They are a rapidly growing number of Indians opting
for MOOCs — massive open online courses that have made global classrooms a
reality. For Indians, who have a thirst for premium, western education,
MOOCs make perfect sense. If you can’t make it to the Ivies, why not bring
Ivy-level learning to you, and that too for free.
The three top US-based MOOCs — Coursera, Udacity
and EdX — now have a huge percentage of Indian students. The biggest of
these Coursera — it has 4.3 million students from across the world — says
it is ‘astounded and humbled’ by the interest shown by Indians.
“Our students in India represent the largest
percentage of Coursera students outside of the US, roughly 10%. In the past
6 months, Coursera has seen a 139% increase in India student enrollment,”
says Stanford professor Daphne Koller who, along with her other computer
science colleague Andrew Y NG, set up Coursera. EdX, a non-profit created
by Harvard and MIT, has pegged its Indian participation at 13% and Udacity
says that India is one of its “top geographic drivers of traffic”. Hardly
surprising then that IIT Bombay is set to join the group of institutions
that are partnering with EdX.
MOOCs are seemingly easy to do — you sign up for a
course which could stretch over 12 to 15 weeks and dedicate a certain
number of hours of study time per week entirely at your convenience. The
‘workload’ could be lectures, reading assignments, quizzes, tests, demo
videos and so on. At Coursera you could if you wish ask for a certificate
(called Signature Track) or even a web-supervised exam — these are charged
and make for an important part of Coursera’s revenues.
A lot of students juggle multiple courses. These
serial MOOCers often start with a course, take introductory classes and
then drop out or move on to other subjects. This flexibility is also MOOC’s
biggest disadvantage. The fact that the course is free, designed for ease
and does not have to end in a degree means that you need supreme levels of
self discipline to complete a course. “The focus on self-learning means you
have to devote enough time to not only watch lectures/read papers but also
do background reading as needed,” says Sathe. Quite a few MOOC addicts
agree that the quality of MOOCs can fluctuate wildly from excellent to
mediocre.
Big MOOCs like Coursera have an eclectic mix of
courses — ranging from programming to Beethoven’s piano music — that could
appeal to techies, students, or hobbyists. Udacity, on the other hand,
sticks to more serious, career-centric stuff.
“We have chosen to focus on computer science,
programming, mathematics, engineering, design, sciences, and
entrepreneurship as we have strong relationships with industry in these
fields and our goal is not to just advance our students’ education, but
also their career opportunities,” says Clarissa Shen, VP of strategic
business and marketing at Udacity.
For a lot of driven Indian youngsters like Garud,
MOOCs are a big part of resume building (he has taken both a Signature
Track and a supervised exam for around $150) and, of course, a means to
supplement school learning. He has managed to crack calculus at levels way
beyond his classmates thanks to MOOC. “Maths lessons in school tend to be
so boring,” says Garud who is doing his bit for the MOOC wave by creating
free, fun math videos for school children in his locality.
Dispassionate observers point out that MOOCs work
best for broad-based subjects. “If breadth is what you desire, these
courses work fine. Depth is not something you are going to get given the
lack of interactivity and the compressed format. So ‘Introduction to Mayan
mathematics’ might work well but ‘An in-depth look at the role of sodium in
the human’ would likely fail,” says Sathe.
It is unlikely MOOCs will ever even partially
replace classroom education. As Koller says, they can at best bolster the
existing systems. “In India, where meeting capacity over the next few years
means building and staffing new 1,500 universities, we see Coursera playing
a new role in increasing institutional capacity by augmenting in-class
teaching with online content,” she says.
BLACKBOARD TO KEYBOARD
Traditional online courses charge tuition,
carry credit and limit enrollment to ensure interaction with instructors.
MOOCs, on the other hand, are usually free, credit-less and, well, massive
Course design — how material is presented and the
interactivity — counts for a lot in MOOCs. As do fellow students.
Classmates may lean on one another in study groups organized in their
towns, or over online forums
The medium is still the lecture. Khan Academy’s
snappy instructional videos have shown the way so MOOC makers understand
the benefit of brevity: eight to 12 minutes is typical. Feedback is
electronic. There may be homework and a final exam
Cheating is a reality. Professors often complain of
groups submitting identical homework
Assignments that can’t be scored by an automated
grader are pushing MOOC providers to get creative, especially in courses
that involve writing and analysis. Coursera uses peer grading
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