Universities join online education revolution - The Sauce
Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Capital Campus

Universities join online education revolution

online classes

Dozens of British universities began offering free online courses on Wednesday through a collective portal, joining a global trend started in the United States that opens higher education to the masses.

They are initially offering 20 courses including causes of war from King’s College London, studio production from Queen’s University Belfast and introductory particle physics from the University of Edinburgh.

Pre-registration opened on Tuesday and in one day 20,000 people from 158 different countries signed up — even though the portal site will not be completed for several months.

Until then it will run in beta phase, without all the finishing touches, so organisers can see how it works.

The scheme brings British universities in line with many of their rivals in the United States, where so-called massive open online courses (MOOCs) are hugely popular.

Karen O’Brien, Vice Principal at King’s College London, said she was “delighted” that King’s was taking part.

“It offers an opportunity to open up some of our most innovative and popular courses to a global audience and allows learners to study flexibly anytime, anywhere,” she told AFP.

Other top universities, including Oxford, Cambridge or Imperial College, are taking a wait-and-see approach.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

Cambridge said it already produced recorded lectures that were available online, and closed online courses for the benefits of its own students.

“At present we have no plans to produce such courses for university-level material though we are watching developments elsewhere with interest,” it said in a statement.

Simon Nelson, chief executive of the project, FutureLearn, said he hoped they would eventually come onboard.

“I’m very hopeful that when they and other potential partners see the quality of what we’ve developed in such a short space of time then it may encourage them to think of joining,” he told AFP.

“If not, then I’m delighted with the quality of the institutions that we’ve got.”

He said the decision to adopt a standard platform allowed the universities to focus on the quality of their courses, which run between six and ten weeks and involve videos, text and discussions over social media.

FutureLearn is a unit of the Open University, which has been providing distance learning courses for the last 40 years.

Source: AFP

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Some More Sauce...

Entertainment

News of the arrest of popular disc jockey Joe Mfalme in connection with the fatal assault of a senior police officer has taken the...

Entertainment

It is the eve of a new tiding for Director Trevor, as he gets hot in the heels spearheading his now rebranded news channel,...

Da Squeeze

Is there possibly one thing that Lisa Christoffersen cannot do? Seems unlikely. Having defied odds and beat stage 4 cancer 18 years ago, her...

Da Squeeze

Kenyan rap bigwig Khaligraph Jones is utterly disappointed after his much-hyped Instagram Live session with American rap star Rick Ross failed to happen. The...

Entertainment

Wizkid has requested people stop referring to him as an Afrobeats artist. The Nigerian singer – whose real name is Ayodeji Ibrahim Balogun –...

Da Squeeze

The devil works hard, but Brian Chira’s friends, acquaintances and fans work harder! Within hours of launching, the departed TikToker’s funeral fundraiser has amassed...

Entertainment

Shakira thinks she “probably” won’t find love like she had with Gerard Piqué again. The 47-year-old singer split from the former soccer star –...

Entertainment

Catherine, Princess of Wales has announced she is undergoing “preventative” chemotherapy for cancer. The 42-year-old royal – who is married to Prince William and...