MIT Master's Program To Use MOOCs As 'Admissions Test' (chronicle.com) 112
jyosim writes: In what could usher a new way of doing college admissions at elite colleges, MIT is experimenting with weighing MOOC performance as proof that students should be accepted to on-campus programs. The idea is to fix the "inexact science" of sorting through candidates from all over the world. And it gives students a better sense of what they're getting into: "When you buy a car, you take a test drive. Wouldn't it be a great value for prospective students to take a test course before they apply?" said one academic blogger.
What about the other test can you get a loan or pa (Score:3)
What about the other test can you get a loan or pay for it with out one?
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If it's a test of English, you should probably hold on to your money.
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Yeah, that kid that was smart enough to take an alarm clock out of it's case and put it into another is getting free ride from MIT. Not only was he smart enough to use a screwdriver, he was smart/lucky enough not to electrocute himself in the process!
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He's probably smart enough to know where to put an apostrophe. And where not to.
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"Still" with respect to when? In 1970, an MIT education, room and board, was about $3600 / year. A student could pay for that with a minimum wage job.
A video game as an admission tool?! (Score:2)
MOOC = Massive Open Online Course (Score:5, Informative)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Also, shame on submitter / editor for not including acronym expansion.
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Also, shame on submitter / editor for not including acronym expansion.
Yeah, I hate it when they use acronyms like CPU, RAM, SSD, and other jargon without expansion. I can't understand why they would expect this crowd to know what these terms mean.
Re:MOOC = Massive Open Online Course (Score:5, Insightful)
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AICCFAWTEAAOFU*
*Also, it's common courtesy for a writer to explain an acronym on first use.
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> If you are even remotely part of the IT industry, it is very unlikely that MOOC is a term you are unfamiliar with.
MOOC is a term I've never heard before. So EABOD and SIUYA.
Re:MOOC = Massive Open Online Course (Score:5, Informative)
I have heard of lots of acronyms. That doesn't mean I'm familiar with them.
> MOOC
Until I read the wikipedia entry, I had no idea what it meant even though I've participated in one (started on Stanford's machine learning).
> first introduced in 2008 and emerged as a popular mode of learning in 2012
Popular? That's laughable. Easily accessible, yes.
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Clearly not as many people know what MOOC means, hence the debate right here in the comments and the +5 given to the post pointing out what it means.
This is actual evidence showing that no, it is not well known on this site despite what you believe should be the case.
Now, you can pat yourself on the back, puff out your chest, and congratulate yourself about how smart you are for knowing this term all you want; but it does not change the fact that the term is not yet particularly well known.
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MOOC is not a commonly used term. The ones you mentioned are. Do you understand the difference?
Do you understand the difference between publishing a summary on CNN and publishing on a site where MOOC should be as commonly known as a term like SSD? If you are even remotely part of the IT industry, it is very unlikely that MOOC is a term you are unfamiliar with.
In terms of common usage, I would put MOOC in the same category as a term like UAT.
A) I know what MOOC means, but have no idea what UAT means.
B) Is Slashdot suffering a financial problem which requires that posting text be compressed into acronyms to save space? Is there a place we can send donations to help them get through this rough spot?
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Bah ... MOOCs are for cows, you're all cows ... MOOC cow ... MOOC ... cower before me and stuff.
Yay cows ... or whatever that cow thing is supposed to say. It's cows all the way down.
MOOC may be used a lot, but so are all other bullshit buzzwords ... Massively Online Ocelots and Cows or something.
It may surprise you that a lot of us don't give a crap about these buzzwords, and don't keep track.
Now moove along.
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MOOC is not a commonly used term. The ones you mentioned are. Do you understand the difference?
Do you understand the difference between publishing a summary on CNN and publishing on a site where MOOC should be as commonly known as a term like SSD? If you are even remotely part of the IT industry, it is very unlikely that MOOC is a term you are unfamiliar with.
In terms of common usage, I would put MOOC in the same category as a term like UAT. Unfortunately google disagrees with me [google.com], since it appears MOOC is twice as commonly used as UAT (another term no one here should be hearing for the first time).
http://www.acronymfinder.com/M... [acronymfinder.com]
http://www.acronymfinder.com/U... [acronymfinder.com]
Fuck off with your prescriptions as to what acronyms every person "even remotely part of the IT industry" should know.
I only know MOOC because it's a shitty buzzword. I didn't know what UAT was because there are dozens of possible meanings, and the likely meaning you're referring to is related to "UX" bullshit where you talk about the user's feelings as they use a program blind.
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If you mean "User Acceptance Testing", it was around before most uxtards were born.
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"User Acceptance Testing" is the birth of UXtadation. It's focused on users blindly using a thing with no training and assessing how they feel. It provides very little testing coverage of the thing in question and serves only to waste time by dancing to the fickle users who don't even know what they're being asked to do.
Design, develop, test, document, train, use, repeat.
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If that's the case then they've hijacked the term.
As I said, it was in use long before the UX fad. It meant, funnily enough, the project phase where the actual users, not the developers and consultants, test and (with luck) accept it. Sometimes they have different ideas from their betters on how things should work...
It could also mean a system dedicated to that pu
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I'd also put MOOC and UAT in the same category. Acronyms I assume that most slashdotters did not know.
User-Acceptance testing is something I typically see spelled out.
Lets use your same link to compare the other three acronyms pointed out here, CPU, RAM, and SSD:
http://www.google.com/trends/e... [google.com]
Both MOOC and UAT are barely perceptible on the graph. Your earlier graph also shows that MOOC only really appeared as a term around 2 and a bit years ago, and has never been a common term.
It's not even clear to me
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Use the search bar here to and tell me how many older Slashdot stories have the word "MOOC" in them.
The Answer (Score:2)
Well, I got curious waiting, so I hope you'll forgive me answering my own question. As of today's date, Slashdot search shows 44 prior stories that include the word "MOOC" in the article. The first one showed up in Oct 2012; it's been 37 months since that time, so on average more than one article per month for the last 3 years.
The busiest period was Jun 2013 to Jan 2014, which had 18 MOOC articles on Slashdot in an 8-month period; that is, a MOOC article about every other week. I'll take this with a great s
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MOOC is not a commonly used term. The ones you mentioned are. Do you understand the difference?
You are correct that it isn't exactly the most common term. But it's sort of weird how EVERY TIME this acronym comes up on Slashdot (and it's pretty often), there is this same flamewar over how nobody seems to know what it means. To wit:
December 2012 [slashdot.org]
September 2013 [slashdot.org]
January 2014 [slashdot.org]
January 2014 [slashdot.org]
March 2015 [slashdot.org]
May 2015 [slashdot.org]
Etc., etc. I could go on, but I'm tired of reading through old threads.
Also, there's a headline about MOOCs on Slashdot at least once per month or so [google.com], and there has been for more than 3
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Don't be a DB.
Certainly not. If you're a DB, the DBA will keep performing inner joins on your column. Ouch.
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Also, shame on submitter / editor for not including acronym expansion.
Yeah, I hate it when they use acronyms like CPU, RAM, SSD, and other jargon without expansion. I can't understand why they would expect this crowd to know what these terms mean.
I tend to think the style rule I was taught for scientific papers is good overall here: Unless it's an utterly standard acronym used within the (sub)field you're in, one that anybody (including undergrads) who can be expected to be reading the paper will know the meaning of already, always expand it on first use in the paper. MOOC is not one that's standard, and probably won't be unless they become so utterly common that it's safe to assume that anybody here below a certain age has taken at least one MOO
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MOOC = Master Of Orion Collective
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You're very clever, ho ho.
However I've seen plenty of stories here that used an acronym with more than one meaning, and even in context it wasn't immediately clear which one it was referring to.
If you're Stephen King a bit of mystery is fine. If you're trying to write a factual article it's just annoying.
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For those like me who don't automatically know what some random acronym means.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Also, shame on submitter / editor for not including acronym expansion.
Damn. I thought it was the cows again!
black market of test takers ... (Score:2)
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Uh, no...
1. Finding a black market to take a course for you isn't being "smart" it's just as likely to be "lazy" or "helicopter parenting".
2. We are talking admissions to MIT master's program here, not some random community college or state U. That mission isn't to educate people that are working their way up, master's degrees are for people who have graduated bachelor program somewhere already and offer admissions to a graduate-level program.
FWIW, the idea of this program is to treat certain MOOC's offered
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Anyone caught cheating should be transferred to the MBA program.
Those who can cheat without getting caught are probably already on it.
Re:black market of test takers ... (Score:4, Informative)
This is already a solved problem for numerous certification testing programs. Just make sure all official tests need to be taken at a webassessor location, or something similar. If universities are serious about using MOOCs for credit or for admission, they have plenty of options that would significantly reduce* cheating.
* Obviously you cannot completely remove cheating, but that is true on campus as well.
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You're telling me that, even though we cannot do certs properly for much more important applications, online testing is a solved problem???
I'm not sure I understand your post. Who is saying we cannot do certs properly? Most certifications may be worthless, but the ability to authenticate the person taking the test is rarely in question.
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I'm not worried about the cheating, I'm more worried about the multiple choice like questions that require practically no effort for the computer to grade, and give the student an 25% chance at an A regardless if they know the material or not.
While you are probably just intentionally exaggerating, a multiple choice test does not give any student a 25% chance at an A (assuming 4 choices per question). That would only be true if there was only one question. With even 2 questions, the chance of even passing drops to 6.25%. With 3 it drops to 0.156, and so on.
I would agree it is much easier to write a crappy test when it is multiple choice though. Poorly thought out answer choices can give clues as to which options to rule out. I have taken many tes
Bad idea (Score:2, Insightful)
Given the rampant cheating that goes on in MOOCs all they're going to get is students who are good cheating and hiding their lack of knowledge. Those people shouldn't be going to MIT. They're future politicians and MBA holders, not engineers.
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We're to learned English just as properly as any students in regularly classes!
That's better English than most American high school graduates. You're hired!
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Fail. You forgot to ask him if he has the needful 27 decades of experience in JavaNetScript+-+- 38.
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Fail. That was last month. It's like Weimar inflation.
not easy to cheat at MIT (Score:2)
You are all MOOCS! (Score:2, Funny)
Somebody had to do it.
We need to stop people from wasting money. (Score:5, Insightful)
Anything we can do that stops people from wasting money on college will help to solve the massive problem that exists in this country right now. There are millions of kids that go to college that really have no business being there. Colleges have learned and adapted to the free market system we now suffer under and have realized that the more they can sell college as an automatic ticket to "the good life", and the more parents they can make feel inadequate if they don't fork over the dough to send their precious children there, the more $$$ they will be rolling in. There should be strict admissions testing for college just like we had to have strict requirements to receive a mortgage after the 2009 subprime lending crisis that nearly destroyed the economy. What we have going right now is a massive scam where millions of young people are sold a bill of goods and spend the rest of their lives paying back loans that they cannot get rid of, working in jobs that are nothing like what they were told they would have when they were first courted by the universities that dot our landscape. Protip: The college campuses are not as nice as they are because they have lots of wealthy alums contributing back millions to the college. They're as nice as they are because of all the people like you who are mortgaging the rest of your life to make them wealthy.
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Colleges have learned and adapted to the free market system...
I'll stop you right there. With the number of federal, state, and local subsidies in the form of the subsidized federal student loan program (which, for full disclosure, I participated in), and merit- and need-based grants unbalancing the supply of funding for college, we don't have a free market. And it is because of all the extra money made available by the government interference in the marketplace that has helped to drive college costs even higher than they might be otherwise. It's the law of supply and
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Back in the "good old days," an educated populace was a source of communal pride. Providing everyone with the opportunity to try (and the opportunity to fail) to better themselves through education used to be a way to reward individual initiative and merit. It's why we have land grant schools and the GI Bill. "State" schools were actually funded by the states; they'd let anyone in; and many of them would fail.
Now, it seems that education has become an individual benefit for which the individual should pa
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Back in the "good old days," an educated populace was a source of communal pride. Providing everyone with the opportunity to try (and the opportunity to fail) to better themselves through education used to be a way to reward individual initiative and merit. It's why we have land grant schools and the GI Bill. "State" schools were actually funded by the states; they'd let anyone in; and many of them would fail.
Now, it seems that education has become an individual benefit for which the individual should pay. Nobody wants to pay to educate his neighbor's dumb kid. State support for "public" universities has dried up, and they depend on tuition to keep the lights on.
Back in the "good old days," the degrees offered were skewed in favor of ones which brought some benefit to society on the whole and the actual value of the education you received was overall better. It was safe to presume that the this "neighbor's dumb kid" had to have mastered the basic skills to have graduated high school--now, that's not so much the case and in some cases it would actually have been better to flunk that kid, and ideally done so early enough to minimize the work needed to catch up, as o
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When I was at MIT, tuition was either up front or 4 payments throughout the term. It was paid whether the student passed of failed.
Why weren't you in class today? (Score:3)
"Why weren't you in class today?"
"I was. I logged on and no one was there."
"No, I mean why weren't you in CLASS?"
"I went to the website."
"Did you go to the CLASSROOM?"
"What's a classroom? You mean the chatroom?"
"take a test course" (Score:5, Insightful)
Isn't that called your undergrad degree?
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Good to know. I guess I can cross that off the list of recommended things for my (rather bright) niece to try. It doesn't take a lot of effort to be a decent person to others. It really doesn't. It takes more effort to post some dick comment than it does not to post at all.
You see the same thing in a lot of online communities though. Massive egos, know-it-all types, people far more interested in putting others down instea
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Do they hold your hand in college in the US? When I was at university almost everything was self study. The professor and the teaching assistants are available to aid you if you run into trouble but you had to show that you put some effort in first.
In the final year you have a project that is completely on your own. There is no class. You have a professor to which you submit a project proposal and the finished project. They are available to provide guidance (is the project too ambitious to do in a year,
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Generally speaking, way more difficult and time-consuming than either science or the humanities, but with greatly increased dating opportunities.
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My experience is from science and engineering so I don't know what the arts was like.
Generally speaking, way more difficult and time-consuming than either science or the humanities, but with greatly increased dating opportunities.
"Yeah, I kept failing in Art because I couldn't solve the problem sets so I got a Master's in EE instead." - said no one ever.
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Wow, science is more difficult and time-consuming than either science or the humanities. No second guesses to tell which of the two you came from.
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BS in anthro, BS in comp sci, minor in art.
I try not to have opinions on subjects I don't know anything about, CanadianMacFan. It's not a bad way to live.
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I might see it being useful if maybe you do really well in the MOOC and they grant you some credit toward your degree.
MIT OCW-MOOC should go live/big-time (Score:1)
Not a good idea (Score:2)
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> Getting into university by cheating isn't a particularly worthwhile endeavour
Not if you keep paying the team or another team to do your work for you. This can go on for _years_, even decades if you've got the money or the athletic career to help the school ignore the behavior.
(US) Citizenship first. (Score:2)
Test for that, then worry about the rest.
a poor filtering system (Score:2)
The upside would be that the most skilled students would be admitted. The downside is that others will be disadvantaged not due to inability but to inexperience.
Two of my universities had a foreign language requirement. I attended and audited language classes on several occasions and in each case the classroom was full of native speakers of that language. My honors calculus class stunned me on the first day when the instructor discovered 3 advanced students and thereafter directed all his attention to them.
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Undergrads who need work and study for financial aid will not have time to work, study for their current coursework, and take another course through MOOC. Even more so for those that are also trying to do undergraduate research.
That depends on how well the class is set up--I know quite a few students in the situation you're talking about, and the bottom line is that being able to time-shift their classes matters a lot, simply because one's boss may not know how to and/or care to schedule you around the classes you have to be physically present for. (I know one person whose boss this week wanted her at work ten minutes before one class ended--and she had given notice over a month ago of the time she could make it there after class
Time Sink? (Score:2)
I'm not sure this will attract the best candidates. For a Master's program, candidates from from three pools:
(1) Students who just finished undergrad and want additional specialization before entering the workforce
(2) Working professionals who want to return to school to gain additional skills or enter a new field
(3) Those who never found a job and are trying to wait out the market in school
Of these, only (1) and (3) likely have the time to commit to a MOOC. (2) could (and many people do this), but will alw
All about the data (Score:2)
What it always seemed to be about was the data - how do students behave, how can we tune the system to monetise elearning more effectively.