Difference between revisions of "MOOC's"
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A MOOC is a Massive, Open, Online Course. | A MOOC is a Massive, Open, Online Course. | ||
− | * MOOC's can have 400,000 - 500,000 students. | + | * MOOC's are ''massive'', they can have 400,000 - 500,000 students. |
− | * | + | * ''Open'' usually means all you have to do to register is to provide your email address; and usually, there were no prerequisites. |
− | |||
** Students usually register with a vendor, who forms partnerships with universities, so no FTE is generated. | ** Students usually register with a vendor, who forms partnerships with universities, so no FTE is generated. | ||
** But, more MOOC vendors are creating partnerships with universities to offer some type of [http://www.moocs.co/Credits_for_MOOCS__News.html verified certificate] to students, that students have to pay for. | ** But, more MOOC vendors are creating partnerships with universities to offer some type of [http://www.moocs.co/Credits_for_MOOCS__News.html verified certificate] to students, that students have to pay for. | ||
+ | * MOOC's have only been offered ''online''-you must have access to the internet to take a course. | ||
===How did MOOC's get started?=== | ===How did MOOC's get started?=== |
Revision as of 16:40, 28 January 2015
Contents
What is a MOOC?
A MOOC is a Massive, Open, Online Course.
- MOOC's are massive, they can have 400,000 - 500,000 students.
- Open usually means all you have to do to register is to provide your email address; and usually, there were no prerequisites.
- Students usually register with a vendor, who forms partnerships with universities, so no FTE is generated.
- But, more MOOC vendors are creating partnerships with universities to offer some type of verified certificate to students, that students have to pay for.
- MOOC's have only been offered online-you must have access to the internet to take a course.
How did MOOC's get started?
According to an article from the Washington post: How did it start?
Coursera, a for-profit company started in 2011, by two Stanford University computer science professors, partnered with a number of big-name schools — including Princeton University and the University of Virginia — to offer free, no-credit courses online.