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Education Programming The Almighty Buck The Internet

190 Universities Launch 600 Free Online Courses 82

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Quartz: If you haven't heard, universities around the world are offering their courses online for free (or at least partially free). These courses are collectively called MOOCs or Massive Open Online Courses. In the past six years or so, over 800 universities have created more than 10,000 of these MOOCs. And I've been keeping track of these MOOCs the entire time over at Class Central, ever since they rose to prominence.

In the past four months alone, 190 universities have announced 600 such free online courses. I've compiled a list of them and categorized them according to the following subjects: Computer Science, Mathematics, Programming, Data Science, Humanities, Social Sciences, Education & Teaching, Health & Medicine, Business, Personal Development, Engineering, Art & Design, and finally Science.
The full list is available in the report. If you need help signing up, there's a report for that too.
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190 Universities Launch 600 Free Online Courses

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Education must not be free, it must result in debts so that students can be controlled and funneled into class warfare to promote more Republican nazism.

    • How about commenting on the utility effectiveness of the classes instead?
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Education debt is a hallmark of democrat solutions.

    • Education must not be free,

      Education is free. You can learn anything online.

      You pay for the diploma.

      • Education is free. You can learn anything online.

        You pay for the diploma.

        Actually that's a problem when people learn "anything" online. People tend to go overboard on this idea, and thus believe everything whatever the online said whether or not it is true. I just hope that more people know how to verify information and understand it instead of take everything as a fact or truth due to bias and belief.

      • by elrous0 ( 869638 )

        Education is free. You can learn anything online.

        You pay for the diploma.

        This. No one goes to university and spends a small fortune to *learn*. You can already learn for free. You pay the university for a piece of paper that will get you past the HR screeners.
         

    • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

      Trump Derangement Syndrome, modded up to +5 on Slashdot. So disgraceful.
    • What has led you to believe that Republicans are against this?
  • Look at the quality lecture hall.
    Enjoy our most fun, charming and photogenic academics.
    Take out a loan and enrol.
  • But... (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward

    What is the value of the certificate they provide at the end? Does it hold any weight?

  • by Chalex ( 71702 ) on Thursday October 25, 2018 @06:26PM (#57537249) Homepage

    There are also many non-university courses available online.

    One example is this excellent free introductory data science course which can be done entirely in your browser. "Chromebook Data Science": https://leanpub.com/universities/set/jhu/chromebook-data-science [leanpub.com]

  • by voicofsf ( 5555226 ) on Thursday October 25, 2018 @06:41PM (#57537323)
    I'm enormously thankful for the expansion of the MOOCs. I've completed 12 to date this year and am currently enrolled in 7. I've already tagged interest in 6 more. I'm auditing only and all have been free of cost. They are generally extremely polished and equal to in-room courses currently taught in universities. Princeton, Harvard, Penn Law, Illinois Law, U Cal Davis Law have all contributed to extending my knowledge. Professors I've only read about have taken their time to teach online. If these had been available before I started college I could have made better choices in my curriculum. When Professor Charles Fried or Professor Erwin Chemerinsky sign up for these classes, I'm greatly appreciative. Hats off and a deep bow.
  • Despite popular beliefs, MOOC are not free to run. The University must appoint teachers to support them. Indeed less teachers per student are required than on a regular course, but it is still a cost. How is it funded here?
    • It's funded because they know the game is up. The days of unconditional loans for kids to rack up untold tens of thousands and hundreds of thousands of dollars of debt will draw to a close one way or another. Because in all truth it probably is less sustainable than fossil fuels even. They will be forced to change their models or go out of business. Just on the fact that many prospective students will increasingly just give up on college all together without even trying because of the worrisome debt problem

  • by Snotnose ( 212196 ) on Thursday October 25, 2018 @08:29PM (#57537657)
    Some 3 years ago I decided to learn Java, after being an embedded guy for 30 years or so. I learn best by being given problems to solve (I was a math major, learned C/C++ on my own, long story deleted). I could not find a single book, nor course, that would help me. Lots of disjointed tutorials on how to do this, or that. But absolutely nothing to take me from installing java/javac, to learning the libraries (yeah, libraries. They're all C++ like, you'll learn the syntax in a day, but it's the libraries and philosophy of the language that counts.)

    Seems we could put off gassing up an F-35 to fail the latest test to pay for a free course on how to learn Java. Hell, for the price of gassing up an F-35, then paying to maintain that aircraft after a 1 hour flight, they could come up with free courses on 3-4 languages, plus another for OO design.

    Why do I still have to add markup paragraph breaks between paragraphs? I remember when it was normal, but now the "leading" tech site, /., is the only one that requires them. Stuck on stupid.
    • If you already know one programming language, why do you need a course or a book to learn another? Just take any program you would have done in C++ and try doing it in Java if you need a problem to solve. Or just pick something that might be interesting to build as a toy project, like a proxy server. You'll probably learn best by doing something and running into problems. Then you can start asking specific questions that are well covered by the disjointed tutorials.

      Almost any book or course on Java is go
  • by TJHook3r ( 4699685 ) on Friday October 26, 2018 @07:07AM (#57538901)
    Keeping track of thousands of MOOCs is tricky, and even trickier is finding the good ones. There are some half-assed courses on Udemy for example that are significantly worse than equivalent (but unstructured) offerings on YouTube.
  • Here's almost an indentical article, from the same site, dated Nov 8 2017. Numbers are different. https://qz.com/1120344/200-uni... [qz.com]

There are two ways to write error-free programs; only the third one works.

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