InformationWeek: The Business Value of Technology

InformationWeek: The Business Value of Technology
e2 Conference & Expo - Boston 2013
= Member Content
Facebook Twitter Share

E-mail | Print | Permalink | LinkedIn | RSS

Coursera Courses Approved For College Credit


Certification group says five Coursera classes measure up, but universities must decide whether to award formal credit.




 12 Best iPhone, iPad Apps Of 2012
12 Best iPhone, iPad Apps Of 2012
(click image for larger view and for slideshow)
Some Coursera students might be able to get college credit for their courses, after Wednesday's move by the American Council on Education (ACE) to certify five Coursera classes.

Coursera, which offers massive online open courses, also known as MOOCs, is one of several efforts to bring higher education online. It now has a lineup of more than 200 classes, organized and taught by professors at 33 universities.

The ACE, a higher education organization, certified "Pre-Calculus" and "Algebra," both offered by The University of California, Irvine; "Introduction to Genetics and Evolution" and "Bioelectricity: A Quantitative Approach," both offered by Duke University; and "Calculus: A Single Variable," offered by University of Pennsylvania. Four of these are for college credit; the fifth, Algebra, is a developmental math class for vocational schools.

[ What does the future hold for online learning? Read Is 2013 Year Of The MOOC? ]

Coursera noted that more than 2,000 universities and colleges consider ACE recommended-courses for credit. But schools do not have to give credit for such classes. Even the schools that are offering the classes say they don't plan to give students credit for taking them. Officials at Duke, Penn and UC-Irvine told The Wall Street Journal they have no plans to offer formal credit for these classes.

One stumbling block in giving credit for classes has been that online courses are still developing some of the measures used to assess student performance, such as exams and grades. Coursera noted that students who would like to receive a college credit for the classes must sign up for the course in what it calls Signature Track. That verifies the student's participation. The student must also pay to take a proctored exam, through ProctorU, a separate company. Students then must request a transcript for the courses through ACE.

The five classes certified by ACE are the only Coursera courses that currently offer Signature Track. Later in February, two more classes will become part of Signature Track.

One university that is giving credit for MOOCs is Colorado State University-Global Campus, a fully online, regionally-accredited university that last year said it would give full transfer credit for students who completed Udacity's "Introduction to Computer Science: Building a Search Engine." Udacity is a Coursera competitor.

Some schools have developed for-credit classes with MOOC providers. San Jose State University and Udacity are piloting two basic math classes and one introductory statistics class for credit. EdX, a non-profit MOOC put together by Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is piloting for-credit computer science classes at Bunker Hill Community College and MassBay Community College.

ACE began evaluating the classes at Coursera's request in November 2012. In January, ACE said that it would also evaluate four classes from Udacity. Those classes include "Developmental Math (pre-algebra)," "College Algebra," "Elementary Statistics" and "Introduction to Computer Science." Of the four, all but the introductory computer science class are being piloted for credit by San Jose State.

ACE cited interest from its members in MOOCs as a way to improve the number of students who complete degrees -- almost half of students who attend two and four-year schools fail to earn a degree within six years of starting -- and to expand curriculum offerings.

The certification announcement is a bit of good news for Coursera, which earlier this week had to pull a course offline, due to technical and other issues.

Cloud Connect returns to Silicon Valley, April 2-5, 2013, for four days of lectures, panels, tutorials and roundtable discussions on a comprehensive selection of cloud topics taught by leading industry experts. Join us in Silicon Valley to see new products, keep up-to-date on industry trends and create and strengthen professional relationships. Use Priority Code DIWEEK2 by Feb. 9 to save up to $500. Register for Cloud Connect now.

Federal agencies must eliminate 800 data centers over the next five years. Find how they plan to do it in the new all-digital issue of InformationWeek Government. Download it now (registration required).




InformationWeek encourages readers to engage in spirited, healthy debate, including taking us to task. However, InformationWeek moderates all comments posted to our site, and reserves the right to modify or remove any content that it determines to be derogatory, offensive, inflammatory, vulgar, irrelevant/off-topic, racist or obvious marketing/SPAM. InformationWeek further reserves the right to disable the profile of any commenter participating in said activities.

Disqus Tips To upload an avatar photo, first complete your Disqus profile. | View the list of supported HTML tags you can use to style comments. | Please read our commenting policy.
Subscribe to RSS


Advertisement


InformationWeek Reports

report Cloud Implementer's Checklist
Once your agency has completed the business case for a private cloud, how do you actually move ahead with your data center transformation? Our report provides a practical set of steps to get you there, including a "to do" list that will be helpful to anyone on your IT team who's involved in the project. By the time you're done, your data center should be home to a more flexible, on-demand IT services.

report Cloud Compliance in Government
Compute clouds created for government data centers must adhere to a range of specifications designed to support data and system security, privacy, and governance. FISMA, HIPAA, SOX, and SAS 70 are just some of the requirements that have to be taken into account as federal IT pros deploy a shared-services cloud model. In this report, we identify the key specs that need to be factored into any federal cloud architecture.

report Government Cloud Platform Strategy
This report analyzes the key IT infrastructure considerations that must be taken into account for implementing cloud services in federal data centers: software/hardware environment, multi-tenancy, security, virtualization, and management tools. We also explain the key important role that APIs play in supporting hybrid scenarios that tap into public cloud services.

report The Business Case for Government Clouds
This report assesses usage scenarios, barriers, and other variables that factor into the decision of whether and how to implement cloud computing in federal environments.