I don’t know if it’s because it’s summertime or just the luck of the draw, but my junior year classes seem to be demanding less of me. Not that I’m not learning a great deal from them. In fact, my Coursera Mathematical Philosophy course started with a bang this week by demolishing Zeno’s Paradox through […]
Motivation on MOOC Classes
A few weeks back, I finally got around to printing out certificates for the MOOC courses I’ve completed so far. I remembered having done this when I found this stack of certificates in a pile of papers on the couch in my office, now dog-eared and crinkled from having other stuff piled on top of […]
MOOC Research
One of the things I most enjoy about this project is the opportunity it provides to talk to journalists and researchers thinking about and writing about all of the intriguing changes currently underway in higher education and technology-based learning. And one of those researchers contacted me last week to see if Degree of Freedom readers […]
Interview with Ethan Solomon on Computer Sciences MOOCs
Because I’m majoring in philosophy for my One Year BA program, I’ve not had the chance to enroll in any of the computer sciences courses that have anchored the contemporary MOOC project since it got kicked off at Standard University with technology classes that are still some of the most popular courses on the Internet. […]
MOOCs and Engineering
I guess it shouldn’t be surprising that the world of MOOCs seems so bound up with the world of engineering and technology, especially computer science. After all, the first online classes that went massive to the tune of 100,000+ participants were computer science courses from Stanford, with the teachers of those courses going on to found […]
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