The School In The Web
Internet
helps share knowledge that has long been the exclusive preserve of the lucky
ones
A Kolkata girl, Dipanjana, gets up
early in the morning to pick fruits of globalisation. Of course, that is not
what she tells herself but this is exactly what she does.
She finishes breakfast quickly so
that she can follow an online course before heading out to her day job.
Dismayed by Kolkata pollution, she is keen to deepen her understanding of how
it is part of an entire planetary change. She plants herself in front of her
computer with headsets and logs on to the University of British Columbia site
to listen to a lecture on global climate change that she has been following for
weeks. She is planning to take more courses on environmental issues from the
University of Edinburgh and University of Illinois. With a few clicks of a
mouse she has been surfing the world of learning to soak it all — free. But
like all innovations, online education too has produced winners and losers.
Winners are obvious: knowledge
seekers in developing countries and disadvantaged students in the developed
world. Like Dipanjana, hundreds of thousands of students from Asia, Africa and
Latin America have been logging in to learn about everything — from physics to
philosophy, from how to write code to how to repair machines. Twelve-year- old
Khadijah Niazi, who taught herself artificial intelligence from her home
computer in Lahore, was feted in Davos. But as online education gathers steam
with many universities joining to launch Massive Open Online Courses (MOOC) —
you will hear this acronym often — opposition too is growing.
As the Web steadily covers the world
— 2.4 billion by the last count — and the cost of bandwidth falls and a variety
of devices explodes, educationists and entrepreneurs think time has come for
expanding the frontiers of knowledge. A recent British study, ‘An Avalanche is
Coming’, even suggests embracing technology could save educational
institutions.
Some of the world’s major
universities have used the Web to share with the world the knowledge that has
long been the exclusive preserve of the lucky ones. Stanford, Harvard,
Princeton and Yale have been taping the lectures of many of their celebrated
professors and broadcasting them on the Internet. A few purely online
universities emerged offering degrees, mostly in business and technology
fields, but the established ones resisted granting degrees. That reluctance,
though, is softening. Yale has introduced an online summer course where
students can complete a course and get credit if their home university accepts
it. The fee for one course credit: $3,300. The Stanford University professor
who pioneered online courses has launched a for-profit organisation, Coursera,
to bundle some 300 courses offered by 62 universities. For completing free
courses, Coursera and its instructors may offer a “Statement of
Accomplishment.” It also offers special credit for a fee that might be accepted
in some colleges. Harvard, MIT and two other universities have also set up edX
to offer 63 free courses for which students get a certificate of completion.
Massive enrolment in these courses show the excitement it has generated among
those thirsty for education.
But
the excitement is not shared by many American professors — both of top-notch
universities as well as second tier colleges. Many worry that online education
is taking away one of the most important aspects of college education — close
interaction with the professor and fellow students. (For a student sitting in
Kolkata, the problem may look different. As Dipanjana told me, taking part in
online fora with students from different countries and different backgrounds
was fun, helping her understand diversity of perspectives.) Principal losers in
this emerging trend will be poorer colleges in the US and, perhaps, elsewhere.
Administrators will be tempted to replace professors with teaching assistants
who will supplement online lectures and grade papers. Outsourcing higher
education to video lectures from top school may find new victims of
globalisation: unemployed professors.
Nayan Chanda..The author is director of publications at the Yale Center for the Study of Globalisation and editor of YaleGlobal Online- See more at: http://www.businessworld.in/news/finance/the-school-in-the-web/976698/page-1.html#sthash.0KirXTfD.dpuf
Nayan Chanda..The author is director of publications at the Yale Center for the Study of Globalisation and editor of YaleGlobal Online- See more at: http://www.businessworld.in/news/finance/the-school-in-the-web/976698/page-1.html#sthash.0KirXTfD.dpuf
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