MIT offers all its courses free online!

NikPreviousAcct

No Lifer
Aug 15, 2000
52,763
1
0
linkadizzage

MIT offers all its courses free online
University: ?We are fighting commercialization of knowledge?

Oct. 10 ? The Massachusetts Institute of Technology has decided to publish online all its course materials ? a $107,840 value. The MIT OpenCourseWare project launched two weeks ago with a preliminary pilot that just scratches the surface of MIT?s publishing ambitions. As of Sept. 30, people with an Internet connection and a Web browser have been able to access the syllabus, lecture notes, exams and answers, and in some cases, even the videotaped lectures of 32 MIT courses.

SO FAR, MORE THAN 130,000 Web visitors from around the world have plugged into the pilot, tapping into a vein of information for which MIT undergraduates pay $26,960 per year for tuition.
?This material is out there for the good of mankind,? said Jon Paul Potts, an MIT spokesperson. ?There is no attempt to charge for this. There is no revenue model.?
By the 2006-2007 school year, MIT plans to publish the course materials for virtually all of its 2,000 graduate and undergraduate courses. The move to put the materials online stems from a multiyear effort by the MIT faculty to forge a unified approach to online access to its classes. The faculty?s efforts picked up pace while two related Internet penomena ? distance learning and open-source software ? were gathering steam.

MIT embraced a comparison to the open-source model, in which the source code for both grass-roots and corporate software titles is published, developed and licensed free of charge.
?We are fighting the commercialization of knowledge, much in the same way that open-source people are fighting the commercialization of software,? Potts said.

NO FREE DEGREE
MIT has stopped short of offering its degrees with a similarly free pricing scheme. The university insists that its online course materials ? even when the full 2000 courses? worth are published ? are not meant to be a substitute for an MIT education, much less an MIT degree. No course credits are available online.
?We have always stated that we are not in any way, shape or form trying to replicate an MIT education,? Potts said. ?An MIT education happens in the classroom, by interacting with other students and with faculty, not by reading some Web pages or downloading some materials, or even watching a video lecture.?

That philosophy hasn?t kept students from getting an increasing amount of their MIT education in the privacy of their own dorm room, rather than attending live lectures.
?I see the numbers of students at my lectures going down,? said Gilbert Strang, an MIT math professor who publishes his lectures online in a video format. ?They figure they can get it online at midnight when they?re ready, instead of one in the afternoon when I?m ready. I wish they came to the actual live lectures, because I put a lot of energy into it, but if the videos are good for them, that?s OK.?

?OPEN KNOWLEDGE SYSTEMS?
Just putting the courses online has been an education in technology, according to MIT. While the pilot was published using hand coded, ?brute force? methods, the school is now evaluating a number of content-managing systems it hopes will ease the process of publishing the remaining 1,968 courses. Like open-source projects, MIT has placed some restrictions on how its materials can be used. One can?t repackage the information and sell it, for example. But the faculty does intend for the materials to be used by other schools and teachers.

While there are no current plans for publishing except in English, the project is encouraging the translation of the materials for speakers of other languages.
MIT President Charles Strang called ?open knowledge systems? the wave of the academic future.
?The computer industry learned the hard way that closed software systems ... did not fit the world they themselves had created,? the president said in last year?s annual report. ?Higher education must learn from this. We must create open knowledge systems as the new framework for teaching and learning.?

Copyright © 1995-2002 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved

nik
 

DaveSimmons

Elite Member
Aug 12, 2001
40,730
670
126
nice find, this could be a good way to keep up what's going on in CS topics like AI and graphics, since textbooks are usually at least a year behind the latest papers.
 

NikPreviousAcct

No Lifer
Aug 15, 2000
52,763
1
0
Originally posted by: DaveSimmons
nice find, this could be a good way to keep up what's going on in CS topics like AI and graphics, since textbooks are usually at least a year behind the latest papers.

It's going to be nice to read through things outside of school and get up to par when I go to class - possibly getting ahead when the time comes. :)

nik
 

Viper GTS

Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
38,107
433
136
The one real value I see in this is the ability to preview the material of a given class, to see how well you would enjoy it (or fare in it).

I might have to take a look myself.

:)

Viper GTS
 

gopunk

Lifer
Jul 7, 2001
29,239
2
0
Originally posted by: ffmcobalt
Originally posted by: DaveSimmons
nice find, this could be a good way to keep up what's going on in CS topics like AI and graphics, since textbooks are usually at least a year behind the latest papers.

It's going to be nice to read through things outside of school and get up to par when I go to class - possibly getting ahead when the time comes. :)

nik

you know, with a small amount of gumption, you could already have done that... just buy the books ahead of time, or go to bookstore, or check out from library. then hunt around for the previous quarter's website

this is still cool though :) waiting for more csci stuff... there's only 2 items in that category :(
 

NikPreviousAcct

No Lifer
Aug 15, 2000
52,763
1
0
That's true. But I don't register until January, and I'm not sure what classes I'll be taking. So I've held off. Plus the fact that I'm a lazy ass. :p :D

nik
 

SuperCyrix

Platinum Member
Mar 4, 2001
2,118
0
0
Holy fvcking sh*t way to go MIT definitely the best school on earth, way better than harvard.
Too bad they only have a few course available. I'm waiting for them to publish the graduate courses :D
 

Martin

Lifer
Jan 15, 2000
29,178
1
81
I think its fabulous...

people can learn for free, knowledge can be shared and the university doesn't loose much, since people still have to pay for their degrees, TAs, practical experience etc.
 

NikPreviousAcct

No Lifer
Aug 15, 2000
52,763
1
0
Originally posted by: MartyTheManiak
I think its fabulous...

people can learn for free, knowledge can be shared and the university doesn't loose much, since people still have to pay for their degrees, TAs, practical experience etc.

There's a college that I'm already attending that is like that. College credits available if you pay for the course. Otherwise, you can sit in and take notes on the classes.

nik
 

naddicott

Senior member
Jul 3, 2002
793
0
76
1.00 (under Civil & Environmental Engineering) is a great introductory programming course. I see at least a couple other subjects available on the site already that I'd like to look into if I can pull myself away from NOLF 2.
 

bizmark

Banned
Feb 4, 2002
2,311
0
0
even the videotaped lectures of 32 MIT courses

[...]

virtually all of its 2,000 graduate and undergraduate courses.

[...]

the school is now evaluating a number of content-managing systems it hopes will ease the process of publishing the remaining 1,968 courses.

Do you think they have *exactly* 2000 courses? I think this reporter got a bit overzealous in subtracting 32 from 2000... I would have written 1970 or something similarly rounded-off. :p
 

udonoogen

Diamond Member
Dec 28, 2001
3,243
0
76
berkeley offers free webcasts of its lectures. if they offered readers for free, copy centers wouldn't make any money ... so i dont think they do that. =)

 

sciencetoy

Senior member
Oct 10, 2001
827
0
0
Cool. I'm going to start working my way through that Math class "Topix in Theor. Comp. Sci: Internet Research Problems".

Does anyone know of a non-MIT web site for "students" to hang out and chat about the courses?
 

geno

Lifer
Dec 26, 1999
25,074
4
0
Wow - very cool! What a great way to advance your mind - voluntarily :cool:
 

I read about this plan last year. It's cool and a perfect setting for a self-learner like me.

Thanks for sharing.
 

Deeko

Lifer
Jun 16, 2000
30,213
12
81
All of my classes are posted online...if I miss a lecture it doesn't matter because the whole thing is up there.