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Stanford To Offer Free CS and Robotics Courses

Posted by samzenpus on Wed Sep 17, 2008 09:15 PM
from the now-everyone-will-know dept.
DeviceGuru writes "Stanford University will soon begin offering a series of 10 free, online computer science and electrical engineering courses. Initial courses will provide an introduction to computer science and an introduction to field of robotics, among other topics. The courses, offered under the auspices of Stanford Engineering Everywhere (SEE), are nearly identical to standard courses offered to registered Stanford students and will comprise downloadable video lectures, handouts, assignments, exams, and transcripts. And get this: all the courses' materials are being released under the Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license."
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  • Hmm.... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by russotto (537200) on Wednesday September 17 2008, @09:27PM (#25049205) Journal

    Does this mean one can now pad one's resume with "Studied at Stanford" or some such verbiage, without (much) guilt? Not an issue for me but for those newer to the field, it just might help...

  • by bugeaterr (836984) on Wednesday September 17 2008, @09:34PM (#25049277)

    "The Fourier Transform and its Applications" WTF!!

    My employer's lawyers protect us from the liabilities of open source and I don't see the in-house tools I'm forced to use *anywhere* on Stanford's course listing!
    How *exactly* are we supposed to find people with expertise in our proprietary crap if no one out there is teaching it???
    Universities are soooo out of touch.

    • by Horar (521864) <slashdot@Nospam.asmith.id.au> on Wednesday September 17 2008, @09:41PM (#25049335) Homepage

      It's not the universities that are out of touch. It's your employers that are out of touch, and the multiple-choice generation of wannabe professionals who can't see past their first half-dozen paychecks. If you get the education that you appear to want, you'll be unemployable in five years.

      Take it from someone who's been in the industry for 30 years and still going strong... you can't learn too much theory because theory doesn't go out of fashion the way technology fads and acronyms do.

      • by syousef (465911) on Wednesday September 17 2008, @10:56PM (#25049985) Journal

        It's actually scary what the average slashdotter thinks makes a competent coder. When I suggested that I spent some spare time exploring and extrapolating FizzBuzz for fun (and testing!!! my solutions), I got called incompetent because it was an "uninteresting" problem. Instant gratification, instant results seem to be the flavour of the day...leading to poor untested code resulting from poor and/or incomplete analysis. I wonder how many "uninteresting" business problems some of these jokers would code poorly and/or incompletely without testing for the sake of saying they're quick and switched on.

      • by Duffy13 (1135411) on Wednesday September 17 2008, @10:41PM (#25049863)
        Except that you tend to get the reverse situation also; I've met CS majors who couldn't make a simple top level user app in a relatively generic IDE.

        In principle I agree with your basic assessment, the core skills should be as you listed, but by no stretch should they be the limits of what is taught in colleges. From what undergrad programs I have seen you tend to get either one or the other, with a few exceptions here and there.

        I am personally a result of an undergraduate Software Engineering program that covered a portion of the CS curriculum, and to a lesser extent CE, along with just about everything else in the realm of top level programming from an SE point of view.

        In my opinion, software is one of the fields that benefits from the jack of all trades route and I believe more collegiate programs should follow this model.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        *cough* Java *cough*

        rant: I hate Java so much. Don't waste my time with GUIs, 10 years from now swing won't frigging matter. Some of us aren't going to be software engineers dammit! MIT has been using Lisp in some form for ages, I wish every other school in the country would take a page out of their book. Even Caltech teaches Java as their main language, which is surprising. My ideal curriculum would start with a semester of Python just to get students familiar with how programming works without wor
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          My ideal curriculum would start with a semester of Python just to get students familiar with how programming works without worrying about the intricacies of a specific language.

          No. Start them up with Basic - and I mean the good old line-number one, not one of these new ones with procedures. Once their programs grow beyond the point where GOTO is practical, introduce the concepts of procedures and stack; then show how these can be managed automatically by the computer in, for example, C. Then wait again for

          • by pkaeding (1085893) on Wednesday September 17 2008, @11:45PM (#25050355) Homepage

            I'm afraid I have to disagree. Lisp and Scheme are excellent languages for beginning computer science students. Functional languages in general are great for beginners. Mutation is a difficult thing to wrap your head around when you are starting out; functional programming is much easier when you have no other exposure to programming.

            In high-school algebra, you learn that a function f(x) takes a single number as input, and returns another number. This idea of 'functions' translates perfectly to functional programming.

            Functional programming also teaches kids who may have limited experience in other languages to think differently. If you are used to loops, you learn recursion. If you have never used loops, recursion makes sense as a way to simplify a complex problem.

            I think that using C and Java to teach these concepts will introduce too much confusion, especially if these freshman students search Google when they get stuck with a problem. The solution on Google will be so much different that what they learned in class, and for a good reason.

  • by gsgriffin (1195771) on Wednesday September 17 2008, @09:45PM (#25049381)
    So what is better? Something free that everyone has access to or something that only the rich and privileged can attain? I would think that most \.ers would be cheering this since its akin to open source.
    • by zappepcs (820751) on Wednesday September 17 2008, @10:04PM (#25049569) Journal

      I'm cheering it. There are quite a few folks in the world that can neither attend the school, or afford it if they could attend physically. That said, they would love to have Stanford class material to learn from as part of their hobby ambitions. Hobbyists notoriously have a zero dollar budget and a zest for learning stuff. Even if it seems unlikely that you'd see Starbucks' employees logging on for a lecture during their lunch break, it's possible.

      Anything that educational institutes can do to generally raise the engineering awareness and savvy of the population is fulfilling their mission in a broad sense. I'm fully going to do these courses. I have more time than spare coin at the moment, and Stanford level courses are appreciated. Even if I got credit for them it would not affect my paycheck. What I know, and what I have accomplished do more to shape that number than anything I might have learned in school. When you are 24 that piece of paper is very important. When you put 10+ years on that, people are far more concerned with what you have done since graduation. Adding additional studies to your resume might sound hokey, but it shows what a lot of people want to see... effort, desire, and staying in-career with your interests.

      You might be a Windows system admin, but you only get to be a hero when you can also work on that new machine that the marketing guy set up and is now not working. Oh, yeah, it runs Linux. Specialists are passe' and the more you know how to deal with, the better you will deal with any one part of it. Continuing education is not a joke, and even this counts.

    • To view the course material, you need proprietary software or patented codecs - Silverlight ? Check. Flash ? Check. Itunes ? Check. WMV, MP4 ? Yepp.

      While this is truly an interesting development, I wish they would go the consequent route like Wikipedia (well, hopefully, (X)HTML5's video element will fix that).

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        Looking at the CC notice at the bottom of the page (to Share -- to copy, distribute, display, and perform the work and to Remix -- to make derivative works), I don't see why you can't re-encode it in an open format and redistribute it so long as you give credit where credit is deserved.

    • by PCM2 (4486) on Wednesday September 17 2008, @10:44PM (#25049899) Homepage

      So what is better? Something free that everyone has access to or something that only the rich and privileged can attain? I would think that most \.ers would be cheering this since its akin to open source.

      To be fair to Stanford, it's not only the "rich and privileged" who have access to its degree programs. As of this year, Stanford no longer charges tuition [sfgate.com] for students whose family income is less than $100,000 per year. Most other "posh" American schools have similar programs -- Harvard, for example, waives tuition for families earning less than $60,000. In 2005, Yale announced that it would waive tuition for any musicians who wanted to pursue a Master's degree in music and were good enough to be accepted in the program. And so on.

      Education really doesn't put up as many barriers in America as people think. It's the people who are rich who put up the barriers, whether they're going to university or not.

        • by Rakishi (759894) on Thursday September 18 2008, @12:01AM (#25050499)

          The problem is that, if your family makes $101,000, you're fucked.

          No you're not, you simply have to pay more than zero but not much more.

          That's all, of course, assuming you can get past their impossibly-high admissions standards.

          It's an elite school and the requirements are far from impossible given that people get in. Just because you couldn't make it in doesn't make it impossible. There are plenty of other schools with lower requirements including state schools and so on (granted you'd amusingly enough possibly pay more at said state schools).

  • MIT has many more... (Score:5, Informative)

    by fortapocalypse (1231686) on Wednesday September 17 2008, @09:56PM (#25049489)

    Good info on Stanford. In addition, don't forget that MIT has had many more courses available for a good while now:

    http://ocw.mit.edu/OcwWeb/web/courses/courses/index.htm [mit.edu]

    And many schools/universities have their material online. Try Google.

    Those with thin wallets and empty pocketbooks can get a decent education as long as they have the time, the will, and with free access to a computer (via public library for example).

    • by hax0r_this (1073148) on Wednesday September 17 2008, @10:13PM (#25049647)
      Yes, but no one goes to school for an education, they go to school for a degree. I'm not saying thats how it should be, but thats just the sad truth of this country. I can go through and learn that material, same as a student at Stanford, I could outscore them on the test, but in the end they will get the job and I will be on the street because they paid.
      • I don't know. If I had a choice between hiring somebody who got a 4-year BSEE the usual way, versus somebody who couldn't afford school but who instead downloaded all the lectures and book .PDFs and absorbed equivalent knowledge from those, I'd take the autodidact any day of the week. That's how you hire the next Wozniak.

          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            I run a small business, and when I interview/hire people, I prefer people who know the material without a degree. Anyone can throw 4 years away at a "higher education institution". I want someone who learned how to run on their own. I also don't pay them peanuts.
  • by engun (1234934) on Thursday September 18 2008, @01:06AM (#25050983)
    This is in the spirit of a true university. A university is "supposed" to be a place for learning and furthering the knowledge acquired by humanity, not a money making scam or a means of positioning yourself in the dominance hierarchy.

    I'm glad that whatever the motivation, education is being opened up to bright, eager people who can't get access to the same quality of teaching as in Stanford/MIT etc. ADUni was also an attempt to do this same thing and really deserves kudos.

    Hope more comprehensive lecture material (including video lectures) are released eventually for other subjects too. Why fleece students when good universities can always earn money via grants and patents.
    • by PuritySyrup (1066910) on Wednesday September 17 2008, @09:43PM (#25049347)
      No, no. Don't worry about it. To view the lecture video, you have to install Microsoft Silverlight. So in other words, the asking price is too high for many.
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        Nope, you can also get the video from YouTube, Itunes, Vyew (not working with Firefox 3.0), and WMV and MP4 video files that are being torrented. I feel like the bases are covered pretty well.
    • Re:I'd be pissed. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 17 2008, @09:44PM (#25049367)

      I'd say an in-class experience, including talking with an instructor, graded homework, and the recognition (towards a degree) is quite a bit of value that ISN'T included in the online version.

      Their two different beasts.

      • by gardyloo (512791) on Wednesday September 17 2008, @10:32PM (#25049787)

        I'd say an in-class experience, including talking with an instructor, graded homework, and the recognition (towards a degree) is quite a bit of value that ISN'T included in the online version.

        Their two different beasts.

        Totally agreed. I see that someone learned his homonyms via an online course.

        • by FTL (112112) <slashdot&neil,fraser,name> on Wednesday September 17 2008, @11:27PM (#25050219) Homepage

          Their two different beasts.

          Totally agreed. I see that someone learned his homonyms via an online course.

          I concur. Someone learned their vocabulary via an online course. Their/There/They're are homophones (same sound). Polish/polish and read/read are homographs (same spelling). Bank/bank and stalk/stalk are homonyms (same sound and same spelling). Homonyms are both homographs and homophones.

          I attended my university linguistics courses in person.

    • Re:I'd be pissed. (Score:5, Informative)

      by Skapare (16644) on Wednesday September 17 2008, @09:45PM (#25049371) Homepage

      RTFA! The freeloaders don't get Stanford credit for the free courses.

        • Re:I'd be pissed. (Score:4, Insightful)

          by Timothy Brownawell (627747) <tbrownaw@prjek.net> on Thursday September 18 2008, @06:56AM (#25052811) Journal

          Wait, so university is about credits and not about *learning*!?

          I think it's more about verified learning. When they give you course credits or a degree, they're saying "we know that Anonymous Coward is at least somewhat competent at X". And while knowledge may be free, verifying someone's level of knowledge takes work (if done right), and is rather expensive (partly because they can, partly because they need money just like everyone else).

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      I just can't imagine why you'd be pissed. People taking a course for free obv. don't have access to the professors (80% of the value of college). Been through college yet? A weekend of talking over particularly complex math with a professor >> a year of watching online videos. And this is coming from a guy who LOVES MIT's open courseware.

      At any rate, sunk costs shouldn't affect decisions. You paid the money and got the education (hypothetically), so sound economic theory suggests you shouldn't ca

    • Re:I'd be pissed. (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Molon Lave (797927) on Wednesday September 17 2008, @09:53PM (#25049463)
      What's the problem? If you read it a little more thoroughly you would see that they don't give any credit with the free classes. It doesn't hurt the paying students or lower the value of the actual degrees that paying students receive. I'm severely physically disabled and was unable to finish my EE degree back in 1993 because of health reasons. I doubt I'll ever go back to school. This is a great chance for me to at least finish educating myself, degree or no degree.
    • Re:I'd be pissed. (Score:5, Informative)

      by Dahamma (304068) on Wednesday September 17 2008, @10:24PM (#25049727)

      Are you kidding? When I was at Stanford (a ways back now) most of the intro class lectures were big enough that non-students could easily sit in on any lectures if they wanted (and I would recognize several who did repeatedly - some of whom were clearly not "all there"). I bet you could even turn in the homework and take tests in many cases... and occasionally they'd probably be oblivious enough to grade it and give it back.

      I looked at the courses, and (scarily?) I recognize a few of the profs/lectures from over 15 years ago - they definitely picked some of the best for this program (the CS106A lecturer was my CS106A TA back then, but he was a fantastic TA ;)

      Anyway, as a former undergrad, I hope people do use this resource! The more quality education/teachers available to anyone who wants it the better.

    • Re:I'd be pissed. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by oldhack (1037484) on Wednesday September 17 2008, @10:53PM (#25049961)
      Kid, we don't pay the fortune for fancy college's teaching materials, we pay the fortune for their paper with their stamp on it. Welcome to the real life.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Trust me, this will in no way cheapen a Stanford degree. In fact, it will only generate more publicity for the school, and so increase its prestige (a little. It's up there to begin with.)

      (IANAWSIAW = I am not affiliated with Stanford in any way.)

    • Re:I'd be pissed. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by SilverJets (131916) on Thursday September 18 2008, @09:32AM (#25054761) Homepage

      The people paying get a degree. The people taking the free courses don't.

      Do you get angry when you buy a book and then find out your local library loans the same title out for free?

      • Re:I'd be pissed. (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Metasquares (555685) <<slashdot> <at> <metasquared.com>> on Wednesday September 17 2008, @11:46PM (#25050363) Homepage

        Very much like life, there is a default purpose and a self-determined purpose to a university experience.

        Going to a university solely for the degree is like living solely for the purpose of having kids: you'd fulfill the purpose the system set out for you, but you'd miss out on any chance at developing and expressing your own goals.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      As an actual Stanford student, I can shed some light on this. The official statement from http://www.stanford.edu/dept/registrar/bulletin/4447.htm#main [stanford.edu] is:

      Stanford does not have a standard course catalog numbering system. Courses numbered from 1 through 99 are primarily for freshmen and sophomores. Courses numbered from 100 through 199 are primarily for juniors and seniors; some departments, however, offer courses numbered from 200 through 299 for juniors and seniors. Most courses numbered 200 and above
    • Re:IQ bell curve (Score:5, Insightful)

      by daemonburrito (1026186) on Wednesday September 17 2008, @11:13PM (#25050115) Journal

      We need to temper our response to these programs [...]

      Why?

      What a strange response. I've read your comment three times now, and I still don't get it. That is, I don't get it because I'm giving you the benefit of the doubt; it seems like you're advocating for long-dead Social Darwinist tripe. But that couldn't possibly be the case, as you are one of those on the "right" side of the curve, right?

      You act as if this is your Harrison Bergeron fantasy (in which you are the protagonist, of course). This isn't the government forcing Stanford to admit cretins! It's just a school sharing part of their curricula on the web.

      If "you" are a member of "us", count me as a member of "them".

      Yay Stanford. Using the web to its potential for making civilization a little better for all of us. What's not to like? And what would we possibly have to gain by preventing people from learning?

      • Re:IQ bell curve (Score:5, Insightful)

        by eagl (86459) on Wednesday September 17 2008, @11:54PM (#25050441) Journal

        Simply by replying, and specifically by your spelling, you are NOT "them". You can benefit by a higher education that focuses not only on the practical application of our knowledge base that would be applicable in earning a respectable living doing a productive job (ie. a tech school), but on an education that uses theoretical considerations to go beyond simple application, towards synthesis that leads to new applications, new knowledge.

        A simple example is the requirement that algebra must be passed in order to get a high school diploma... I would argue that for a fairly significant portion of our society, passing an application-focused class such as auto shop is much more valuable and pertinent to graduating from high school than passing an algebra test. I grew up with a number of people who can't possibly grasp algebra, but who benefited greatly from various "tech school" high school courses, got their high school diplomas, and got decent jobs right out of school. They would have been very poorly abused by any system that required them to pass algebra to get their diploma, and they never would have graduated if the school system in place at the time had cut shop class in order to attempt to force these below average students to pass college-prep courses. They were much better served by being offered application-level courses that taught them practical skills that led directly to productive jobs.

        One friend of mine was particularly affected by the current philosophy that no student is "below average", and that all students deserve a college education. He got all the opportunities anyone could imagine including a free ride to a good university based on an intercollegiate athletic scholarship, and he was completely unsuited for the academic challenge. When he failed out of college, he found himself unsuited for any job other than fast-food shift supervisor because his high school refused to recognize that he was "below average", and refused to tailor his education towards something he could have actually used. He ended up with few practical skills since they forced him into math courses that he barely passed instead of letting him take skills-application courses, and was unable to get a job that paid well enough to support himself.

        That's what I'm talking about when I say as slashdotters we should temper our response to these education opportunities. They are not the answer to all our problems, because the vast majority of people in the US are incapable of benefitting from the and trying to tailor high school education to force the no-shit 50% of students who are "below average" to go to college, is a gross injustice. We need to recognize that an awful lot of people have absolutely no use for a Stanford level of education, and ensure that rather than trying to force them into a particular college-prep track that they are not prepared or capable of following, we should provide application-level educational opportunities that lead to jobs, not a future involving washing out of college and ending up on the street with a bruised ego and no practical education that they'll find useful in finding a job they can handle.

        • Re:IQ bell curve (Score:4, Insightful)

          by daemonburrito (1026186) on Thursday September 18 2008, @12:57AM (#25050927) Journal

          I bet you say that to all the nerds... ;)

          I share some of your opinions, but I arrived at them from a different place. I've never feared greater access, but I have been saddened by our system's failures. I think these failures are more complex than the paradox of Lake Wobegon's test scores, though. Whatever the failures are, and whatever the details of the failures, it seems to me like putting material on the web is an excellent bypass.

          I think that the missing great students are still a bigger problem than an abundance of under-equipped students. Coping with some more of the latter is worth it to catch more of the former. In any case, putting this material on the web can feed the lonely minds of those that didn't make it, for reasons other than lack of intelligence.

          I totally agree with you about providing more of what you called application-level education; both for the lives of those who just need to learn a trade, and for the institutions who could put more effort into theoretical considerations. But I also get serious warm-and-fuzzies thinking about all humanity being able to access stuff like this someday.

    • by goatherder23 (1189859) on Wednesday September 17 2008, @11:25PM (#25050207)

      Slashdotters are largely made up of people on the far right side of the bell curve distribution of intelligence.

      Have you actually read any of the comments on slashdot?

    • Re:IQ bell curve (Score:4, Interesting)

      by mdfst13 (664665) on Thursday September 18 2008, @12:06AM (#25050551)

      The reason why slashdotters go ape over this is that we might actually take a Stanford online course on robotics. That's why it's news for nerds. It's also worth noting that /. is probably heavy on Intuitive Thinkers [look.net], the kind of people who are good at math and not interested in teaching. As such, it is often hard for us to find good real world teachers (teachers tend to be Empiricals [look.net] rather than Intuitives). Replacing teacher and book courses with online courses makes sense for us, since teachers are scarce in our subjects and we are online friendly.

      Now, if you want to talk about how we could change the educational system to be more supportive of people who aren't going to go to college, let's start with making it easier to leave school earlier. The typical schooling in the US is 12 years of 180 days each. Move that around a bit, and you can get the same 2160 days in ten years of 216 days each. No more summer vacation to work the farm (and forget what was learned last year), but still about five weeks of vacation (which could be spread around the year in addition to the current four weeks of holidays).

      For those who aren't going on to college, offer better apprenticeship programs. Companies will need to provide this, but the government can help with tax incentives and some adjustments to labor laws.

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      The solution is obvious: we need to work hard to increase the number of students above average!

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        And how do you say that one man, over the course of 8 years caused what the USA is today?

        Bush didn't cause the mortgage crisis.
        Bush didnt get companies to heavily finance subprime lending.
        Bush didnt encourage or discourage manufacturing sector to leave the country.

        Economically speaking, what is doing us in is the unspoken deal with China. Yes, Clinton did initiate it, but I believe he did in the best interests of the USA. We already had large portions of our manufacturing moving out of the country, so we ne

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        I'm saying that an awful lot of people will not benefit from being forced into an educational track that leads to a bachelors degree, when they are not capable of achieving at that level. We must recognize that 50% of students are below average, and the education we offer them must be applicable to their future, not some fairy-tale future where everyone can pass differential equations and get a degree in aero engineering if they only had a fair chance. Guess what - even really smart people fail out of eng