Archive for March, 2006

MIT’s OpenCourseWare: free online learning at its best

MIT's OpencourseWare logo Like probably many of you, I’m old enough to have had the privilege of access to what was basically a free tertiary education following high school here in Australia - I’m talking the early to mid ‘eighties. You remember, the golden days.

Today of course it’s pretty much user pays everywhere, and the kids coming through the universities and equivalent institutions have it much tougher. And it’s not just raw undergraduates or newly minted, debt-laden graduates who are pushing it uphill in this respect either. The cost of higher education today can often be a major barrier to access and advancement for anybody in the labour market who lacks the resources to invest in further education or skills training for themselves.

That’s why initiatives like OpenCourseWare (OCW) at MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) are so important. Launched in 2003, OCW is:

a free and open educational resource for faculty, students, and self-learners around the world. OCW supports MIT’s mission to advance knowledge and education, and serve the world in the 21st century. It is true to MIT’s values of excellence, innovation, and leadership.

MIT OCW’s goals are to:

* Provide free, searchable, access to MIT’s course materials for educators, students, and self-learners around the world.
* Extend the reach and impact of MIT OCW and the “opencourseware” concept.

The site reports that as at December 2005 there was 1,250 courses published on the site. The diversity and richness of the materials made freely available is staggering. Everything’s there, from Aeronautics and Astronautics to Writing and Humanistic Studies. Considering MIT’s formidable tech reputation, that’s some heavyweight intellectual property being opened up to everyone.

OK, so you don’t get a qualification from MIT. Then again, formal qualifications may not always be the critical thing sought after in the labour markets of the future.

Either way, these are great days for the autodidact. It takes me back ….

See also:

  • Wikipedia article on OpenCourseWare
  • Podcast: MIT’s Charles Vest - OpenCourseWare and the Emerging Global Meta University. Abstract available here.
  • This article at the Hewlett Foundation site
  • Share:These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
    • del.icio.us
    • digg
    • Reddit
    • NewsVine
    • YahooMyWeb
    • Furl
    • co.mments

    Comments

    Business blogging takeup in Australia remains slow

    Mainstream coverage of business blogging here in Australia has been patchy at best. So it was nice to see Chris Jenkins’ recent piece Blogging the Brand in the Australian IT section of The Australian newspaper.

    The article profiles Telstra’s other grand blogging experiment Now We Are Talking. Given it still has a way to go in rebuilding its corporate image, the telco seems to be betting that blogs will help it ratchet up the PR machine just that little further.

    More broadly, Jenkins quotes Microsoft’s Frank Arrigo on his outlook for Aussie business blogging, particularly at the big(ger) end of town:

    It’s likely that corporate blogging won’t begin to pick up momentum with Australian businesses until the middle of next year.

    As more organisations understand that this is a great way of talking to customers and hearing back from customers, they will start to embrace it.

    Share:These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
    • del.icio.us
    • digg
    • Reddit
    • NewsVine
    • YahooMyWeb
    • Furl
    • co.mments

    Comments