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Education The Internet News Technology

Forget University — Use the Web For Education, Says Gates 393

An anonymous reader writes "Bill Gates attended the Techonomy conference earlier this week, and had quite a bold statement to make about the future of education. He believes the Web is where people will be learning within a few years, not colleges and university. During his chat, he said, 'Five years from now on the web for free you'll be able to find the best lectures in the world. It will be better than any single university.'" Of course, the efficacy of online learning is still in question; some studies have shown a measurable benefit to being physically present in a classroom. Still, online education can clearly reach a much wider range of students. Reader nbauman sent in a related story about MIT's OpenCourseWare, which is finding success in unexpected ways: "50% of visitors self-identified as independent learners unaffiliated with a university." The article also mentions a situation in which a pair of Haitian natives used OCW to get the electrical engineering knowledge they needed to build solar-powered lights that have been deployed in many remote towns and villages.
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Forget University — Use the Web For Education, Says Gates

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  • by FreeUser ( 11483 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @01:34PM (#33181358)

    While I used to often boast about having learned at least as much on the net as I did in class, the net is no substitution for a formal education. There is value to the structure of coursework, to the demands of learning material and being tested on it, and to requirement to learn to think and apply logic. There is also value in the advise and teaching of professors, as well as the social and academic interaction you have with other students.

    The Internet is a wonderful tool, and may become something much greater, but it is certainly no replacement for a university education just yet.

  • by Rainulf ( 1678822 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @01:39PM (#33181418)
    The only reason I go to college is to get the paper. =/
  • by Joe The Dragon ( 967727 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @01:42PM (#33181454)

    how about getting rid of need BS or MS for level 1 jobs and most IT jobs. The need BS or MS just to get on the help desktop is pushing way to many people to go to a Univerity rack up the bills and hope to get a $10 /h IT job and at the same it be overqualified for mcdonalds.

  • I saw this [washingtonexaminer.com] an hour ago, and it came to mind immediately upon seeing the headline and brief.

    Brick-and-Mortar schools have been engaged in an 'arms race' for students this past decade, fueled by easy credit and enabled by low academic standards. It's enabled them to offer all kinds of nice perks that are expensive and not central to education, and it has also allowed many universities to grow top-heavy with administrators.

    My degree as a mechanical engineer allowed me to get a job with a substantial starting salary, which was necessary to cover my substantial student loans. I came out okay after a few years of aggressively paying down my debt, but there are thousands of folks who are in just as deep as I used to be, with a degree that doesn't open up well-paying fields to them. Though I don't regret the path I took (my life is good), I wouldn't use debt if I had to do it again. There are other ways (in-state, scholarships, military, etc.)

    Anyway, from the article:

    My reasoning was simple enough: Something that can't go on forever, won't. And the past decades' history of tuition growing much faster than the rate of inflation, with students and parents making up the difference via easy credit, is something that can't go on forever. Thus my prediction that it won't.

    But then what? Assume that I'm right, and that higher education - both undergraduate and graduate, and including professional education like the law schools in which I teach - is heading for a major correction. What will that mean? What should people do?

    Well, advice number one - good for pretty much all bubbles, in fact - is this: Don't go into debt. In bubbles, people borrow heavily because they expect the value of what they're borrowing against to increase.

  • Worked for Gates (Score:5, Insightful)

    by russlar ( 1122455 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @01:43PM (#33181466)
    Gates dropped out of Harvard to found Microsoft, so seeing him say that university isn't necessary is a little unsurprising.
  • by DesScorp ( 410532 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @01:43PM (#33181470) Journal

    Keep in mind who we're talking about when it comes to predictions here.

    There's absolutely no doubt that the web is already changing education and revolutionizing it. But there's no substitute for actually going to a class in person... with other learners and a teacher in front of you... for much of your formal education.

    Anyone can read the Iliad on their own, or teach themselves HTML, or read the words of critics or teachers on a screen. But if you're missing the give and take of the classroom, then you're missing out on vital elements of an education.

    "He that teaches himself has a fool for his master" - Ben Franklin

  • by tverbeek ( 457094 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @01:45PM (#33181484) Homepage

    Only a small fraction of what people learn at a college is from the lectures. Most of the rest comes from being in actual contact with other people.

  • by morari ( 1080535 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @01:49PM (#33181528) Journal

    There is no value in social conditioning and student loan debt.

  • by Gopal.V ( 532678 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @01:50PM (#33181540) Homepage Journal

    There's so little taught in a university course that I couldn't read off a public library.

    But here's the deal, I don't think the epistemological quest for knowledge motivates me. I learn purely as a way of solving the problems I have. Sometimes real life doesn't even let me near interesting problems, because the cost of failure (and the risk) is too high.

    College and teachers have worked as a nice cycle breaker of that situation. They've thrown problems at me, which have taken weeks to solve (or groups of us, weeks to solve). Some of those have seemed pointless, but most of the stuff I remember still have been the ones that I've had to dig up again for some reason or the other (calculus, for instance).

    Essentially, without teachers, I'd have never really sat down and banged on a problem for a week - mostly to avoid having the shame of going back without an answer.

    On the other hand, I've had at least a few teachers who've cared enough about teaching me than making sure of their paycheck. I don't think the world needs less of those. And I don't think you (or anybody) should stop learning because they're out of uni.

    (goes back to reading wikipedia on RCU data structures)

  • Academia = filter (Score:5, Insightful)

    by TheMeuge ( 645043 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @01:53PM (#33181562)

    There is also another important benefit, that is really easy to understand if you just read a few science, and especially healthcare stories on Slashdot. Just reading the associated comments should generally be sufficient to realize how exquisitely important it is to have some sort of a moderating filter of an "academic community" of professionals. Yes it stifles dissent a bit, and yes there are other downsides that aim to preserve status quo. But the penalties we pay for having such a system pale in comparison to the fact that the upcoming professionals are in general guided to the more reliable sources, and are at least partially shielded from the self-important Charybdis of the "internet knowledge".

    Yes, he is right - all the information is out there on the Internet... somewhere. But where you need peer review, and a structured learning environment, is for the Sisyphean task of filtering out the noise... and the amount of noise has gone up exponentially with the advent of the internet and the complete absence of barriers to publication. It's easy enough to spend weeks, months, years on the Internet, perusing websites that are dedicated to supporting strictly one's own point of view, and have it become an essential part of one's worldview. That's how we would up with Vaccines/Autism and HIV-doesn't-cause-AIDS crowd.

    Furthermore, for all its failures, the academic environment does TEACH the students the skills they will need to acquire to be able to interpret primary data on their own, which is a far more important role, compared to teaching the students facts.

    If we let the Internet loose on the population to an even greater extent, I shudder to think of the kind of idiocracy we'll be living in, just one generation from now.

  • by vlm ( 69642 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @01:53PM (#33181568)

    There are two types of people in this world, the self learners and those that require a structured if not forced educational environment.

    HR uses type #2 as a gateway, real world management demands type #1. The bigger the company the worse the disconnect. Look at how many companies provide no training or at best, on the job training for the new technologies they roll out, yet demand the new hires have a 4 year degree and 10 years of experience with a 2 year old technology. Only folks with inside connections or BS artists can pass the filter, causing failure. Solution to the failure can't be pinned on "important" people, must come up with a nonjudgmental soution... How about tighter, higher requirements of course, leading to the spiral down the drain.

  • by blind biker ( 1066130 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @01:55PM (#33181592) Journal

    I noticed that in most modern cultures, having a lot of money seems to imply automatically that they are right. "Sure, he killed those children, but he's a billionaire." or "Well, this statement seems like bollocks, but it comes from one of the wealthiest persons in the world, so we should pay attention." Problem is, Gates really has no authority regarding higher education or any kind of career that leads to creativity. He's a very successful businessman, that's all. You can make a lot of money just by manipulating powerful people and making the necessary contacts.

    Now, if some of the established and creative scientists, engineers or physicians had made this assertion about education, I might listen. But Gates? What does his authority stand on, apart from his money?

  • by noidentity ( 188756 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @02:02PM (#33181654)
    I learn much better and faster from books than lectures. The material in books can be refined greatly and precisely, and digested at whatever rate I can manage. Watching someone lecture always leaves me feeling that I could be getting many times the knowledge using a more efficient delivery mechanism.
  • by Mordok-DestroyerOfWo ( 1000167 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @02:03PM (#33181658)
    While I was finishing my Master's I was offered a chance to get a certification in International Affairs through the same university. The caveat was that all of the courses were online. I can honestly say that the classes were basically worthless, the lectures were online, the readings were good, but without physical interaction an entire dimension was missing.
  • Re:Not likely! (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Ethanol-fueled ( 1125189 ) * on Sunday August 08, 2010 @02:05PM (#33181686) Homepage Journal
    As a troublemaker born into a family of educators, I declare that you are full of shit.

    In this land, parents try and get away with doing as little work as possible. Spineless administrators (the PHB's of academia) roll over to every little threat of a lawsuit because innocent little Johnny, always texting his buddies mid-class and distracting everybody else, needs his cell phone tethered to him at all times in case of a terrorist attack.

    Is it the educator's fault that you and your kids are pieces of shit? Don't have kids then, asshole.
  • by bADlOGIN ( 133391 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @02:06PM (#33181692) Homepage
    Besides, higher education is only about coursework the same way international travel is only about airports...
    Would he like to tell the world how it should approach physical therapy based on the one time he sprained his ankle?
         
  • by Registered Coward v2 ( 447531 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @02:17PM (#33181814)

    Only a small fraction of what people learn at a college is from the lectures. Most of the rest comes from being in actual contact with other people.

    Exactly. Gates is confusing information with education. If classroom education could be replaced by non-traditional means; books and VCRs would have done that years ago.

    The real value, as you point out, is in the interaction with professors and fellow students. When I was in grad school, the ability to speak to a professor, who was an acknowledged expert in his field, ask questions and bounce ideas off of him were what I really paid for. No amount of web based lectures can replace that as a learning experience.

  • As a person who has been engaged in both tradition university and online courses, I can tell you that neither is perfect, but I would have to lean towards Mr. Gates statement. The coursework is similarly structured, there is still interaction between Profs and students, and also student-student interaction. You do lack the physical connection, and therefore the social network you might build, but for a non traditional student like myself, this really has fairly little value in the first place. One of the beauties of online work is that with non-semester based work, you can work at your own pace. So my international studies class I can whiz through, while I can take the extra time and effort on math that my feeble brain requires. To me it is an exercise in efficiency, but at the same time discipline. I find it hard to believe many of the 17-21 year olds who populate the majority of university have the amount of discipline to dedicate themselves to this format. So I think online courses can and will evolve but mostly for non-traditional students. One thing I struggle with though is the disconnect between the thirst for knowledge vs the practical knowledge for the profession I am currently undertaking.

    PS. Things like Opencoursewar and the Khan academy have some superior classes!

  • by Dragonslicer ( 991472 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @02:40PM (#33182028)
    You don't just learn social skills by interacting with others. Talking through a problem with someone else is often far more effective than trying to solve it on your own. Something you say may trigger an idea in the other person, which then triggers another idea in you, and so on.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday August 08, 2010 @02:43PM (#33182062)

    I've got a MSc in comp sci, entry level jobs start at $17/hr...while I get paid $25/hr, under the table, to mow lawns & do landscaping. Yes, I am the worlds most overqualified gardener : p

  • HR Drones (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday August 08, 2010 @02:46PM (#33182090)

    I'd love to see how many people Microsoft's HR department hired last year who have a completely OCW-based education. This statement will be newsworthy when he makes his firm walk the walk.

    The bottomline is that HR departments are mindless bureaucratic drones. And bureaucracies need pieces of papers to do their thinking for them -- which is why degrees and certifications instead of actual talent will always win in corporate America. (Albeit not in entrepreneurial America -- which Microsoft hasn't been in a long, long time. It's odd that Gates still seems to think of himself as an entrepreneur, though.) And HR people care more about the admissions process than what you learn when you are there, because that determines who the best is.

    As far as I cat tell, online lectures are good for three groups: (1) homeschooled highschoolers who have surpassed their parents; (2) for those who can't understand their professors because of their thick accents; and/or (3) students who just have bad profs.

  • At universities that care about undergraduate education, lectures are only a tiny part of the puzzle. Access to better lectures would certainly help a lot of people. But a university composed of online lectures is just going to be the best crappy university, not the best university. Bill Gates knows nothing about education, it's unfortunate that his vast fortune once again gives him the power to appear authoritative on any subject he feels like mouthing off about.

  • Ah, but there most certainly is! People with degrees in their field make, on average, more money than people who do not.

    Unless you don't know the first thing about saving money you'll pay off your student loans in no time and quickly come out ahead. As for social conditioning? Some of us are not so weak of willed that we have to avoid educational institutions to avoid being "corrupted".

  • by blind biker ( 1066130 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @03:19PM (#33182354) Journal

    but don't discard what he says just because he's rich

    You're distorting my words. I don't dismiss Gates because he's rich. I dismiss him because he has no authority to talk about this issue - not from his achievements nor his life. To demonstrate more clearly my position, I'll say that I would be very interested in what Warren Buffet has to say about higher education, since he's not only an educated and accomplished economist; he's an economist that has actually contributed original and thought to his field. He's not just a billionaire, he's a creative economist that points his finger to all (or most) that is wrong with modern corporations, banking and investment.

  • by Belial6 ( 794905 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @03:24PM (#33182376)
    Actually, your link doesn't poke a hole in his argument, it supports it. Gates dropped out and went on to become incredibly wealthy. Gates did NOT complete their coursework. He did NOT get the professor interaction. He did not show competency in all of the areas the University claims are important.

    Bringing Gates in to speak at Harvard is a little like some chick inviting an old boyfriend to her wedding to give a speech explaining to her husband how to perform sexual techniques that will please her in bed because the old boyfriend was hung so much larger than the groom that the groom will never be able to compete no matter how hard he tries. The people at Harvard that asked Gates to speak were just being jerks.

    Even though it was surely unintentional, they were basically rubbing the graduates noses in the fact that they spent all that money and time for nothing if they want to be like this incredibly successful guy.

    On top of that, it was incredibly unethical for Harvard to give him a degree, as it is clearly an attempt take credit for work they did not do. So, that should be the take away from their actions. Harvard shows their students how to cheat. OK, that may be a little harsh, but only just a little since they did cheat.
  • by porkThreeWays ( 895269 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @03:40PM (#33182490)
    The fact he doesn't have a Ph.D is misleading. He has a bunch of bachelor and masters degrees. Pretty darn difficult ones if you ask me. Perhaps he saw more value in learning a bunch of related subjects pretty well instead of specializing. Regardless, he is definitely a product of the traditional university system.
  • by 91degrees ( 207121 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @04:20PM (#33182798) Journal
    This is the guy who completely failed to predict the effect the internet would have on society... In 1995.

    And he's a college dropout.

    He a businessman. He's damn good at that. If he wants to suggest marketing strategies I'm all ears.
  • by History's Coming To ( 1059484 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @04:34PM (#33182886) Journal
    Agreed all round, with a caveat. I'm paid minimum wage in the UK (around $9/hr) and I frequently use the internet to learn about programming and computational science. Admittedly, it's never likely to turn me into a well rounded commercial coder, but that's not what I want. I want a FREE education at approximately university level. I can't afford £20k to do a degree that I won't use, that probably won't get me a job in the industry and will leave me burdened with repayments for a decade or more.

    I want the information that's useful for my little projects and I can't afford to pay much, if anything. It's freely available. That's really cool. I might end up doing something computer based for a living eventually, but I'm certainly not going to spend two years income and five years with no income, that's SEVEN YEARS WAGES in effect, to be interested in something.
  • by turbidostato ( 878842 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @04:35PM (#33182910)

    "There's so little taught in a university course that I couldn't read off a public library."

    Except which contents you should read, of course.

  • by bky1701 ( 979071 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @04:36PM (#33182924) Homepage
    I think you're confusing the HR sorting algorithm with ability to do the job.
  • by djupdal ( 629381 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @04:45PM (#33182982) Homepage

    You are not overqualified, unless gardening requires knowledge of comp.sci. A degree does not make you an expert in every area.

  • by superdude72 ( 322167 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @04:53PM (#33183034)

    He has a point in that paying $50,000 yearly tuition to attend large lectures where the professor just reads his notes isn't a good deal for students. This is why one of the key measures of educational quality is the degree to which the classroom experience moves *away* from this model. If you're paying that much for tuition, you expect to have small classes and a lot of interaction among professors, TAs, and students.

    So the fact that you can provide this inferior educational experience cheaply online isn't an argument for more online learning, so much as it is an illustration of how many universities need to improve teaching and stop giving students the shaft when it comes to their needs vs. the professors' research.

  • by Registered Coward v2 ( 447531 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @06:04PM (#33183492)

    When I was in grad school, the ability to speak to a professor, who was an acknowledged expert in his field, ask questions and bounce ideas off of him were what I really paid for.

    Then your professor can idle on your school's IRC server and do what you paid for over instant /msg.

    Right. Let me guess - you don't know many professors, do you?

    Seriously, IRC or other electronic communications mediums are no substitute for the interaction you get face - to face. You simply cannot get the same level of social interaction and feedback that you get face to face. Not to mention the ability to walk to the lab and try something, real time, under the guidance of an expert.

  • by hedwards ( 940851 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @06:32PM (#33183708)
    Gates was able to get a substantial loan from his parents as well as introduced to the right people at IBM. Most of us will never have that kind of easy access to connections and money. Gates was a good businessman, but he would never have made it big like he did without access to the things that an upper class upbringing can provide.
  • by Nemyst ( 1383049 ) on Sunday August 08, 2010 @07:07PM (#33183958) Homepage
    Good luck writing some indented code or a long mathematical formula involving integrals or fractions over IRC, let alone digging through some books and sharing excerpts or doing something physical like a lab experiment.
  • I think a lot of people knew it was coming, but hoped there would be just one more sucker after them, and they'd make their money before the bubble burst.

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