The Daily Circuit

Is the future of college online?

10:20 AM, May 9, 2012

LISTEN

We shop, bank and make friends online, so why not go to college online too? The University of Phoenix has been offering online bachelor's degrees for years at a steep price, but now some of the big-name schools, including Stanford and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, are offering their classes online for free.

How will online universities change the way we learn, and can we really expect them to replace a traditional college experience?

Kanyi Maqubela, Collaborative Fund entrepreneur in residence, will join The Daily Circuit to discuss the future of online learning.

"There is research that suggests that in-person learning is more effective and I'm not sure what to think about that," he said. "The truth is that the research done on online learning happened when Gmail was in its infancy... The world is changing and our resources are going to have to adapt to that. Our culture is being led by our technology for the first time in a while."

Andrew Ng , computer science professor at Stanford and co-founder of Coursera, will also join the discussion. Coursera is offering the free classes online.

More from Newsweek:

"Coursera grew out of an experiment Ng and [Daphne] Koller carried out last fall, when each made a class available at no cost online. Ng's class in machine learning drew more than 100,000 enrolled students, 13,000 of whom completed the course. The huge interest convinced Ng and Koller they were onto something. Others agreed, including two of the best venture-capital firms in the valley, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, and New Enterprise Associates, which have invested $16 million combined in Coursera.

Coursera doesn't pay its professors, and it has yet to dream up a way to generate revenue, though as Ng says, 'If you're changing the lives of millions of people, there will be a way to make money from that at some point.' One possibility involves charging companies for helping them find qualified job applicants.

comments powered by Disqus
Listen Now

MPR News Radio

Hourly Newscast
On Air Morning Edition®

The Daily Circuit Blog

Politics & Government:

Three perspectives on bridging the marriage opinion gap

Now that Gov. Mark Dayton has signed the same-sex marriage bill into law, we asked the participants on this week’s Roundtable for advice on how to bridge gaps between Minnesotans who support same-sex marriage and those who oppose it. Jim Wallis, author of “On God’s Side,” thinks we are on the cusp of a nationwide Read more

Arts & Culture:

Temple Grandin helps explain the autistic brain and inspire those who have one

Kerri Miller offers a look inside the thoughts of an autism pioneer. Read more