Fareed speaks with Stuart Butler, a Brookings scholar, who's written
extensively on massive open online courses, or so-called MOOCs, and
Anant Agarwal, who runs edX, a MOOC outfit founded by two bricks and
mortar institutions.
http://www.cnn.com/video/data/2.0/video/bestoftv/2014/11/17/exp-gps-moocs-panel.cnn.html |
Stuart, explain first the kind of crisis in what you've called the business model for higher education.
Well, it certainly is a crisis that they’re facing. First of all, the costs of traditional education have been going up and the indebtedness associated with it. Now student tuition debt in the United States exceeds credit card debt. Secondly...
And it's $1 trillion, right?
Well, it certainly is a crisis that they’re facing. First of all, the costs of traditional education have been going up and the indebtedness associated with it. Now student tuition debt in the United States exceeds credit card debt. Secondly...
And it's $1 trillion, right?
Butler: Yes, exactly. Secondly, you're seeing
different kinds of information coming forward so that people can
actually evaluate the success of going to one college or another,
whether it actually pays off.
And then the third thing, which you referred to, is that you're seeing new kinds of technologies that, first of all, appeal to students who are not part of the regular market, but now that technology is being developed, such as through edX and through others, such that it is really beginning to break open the existing traditional market. So there's an existential threat to the very business model that, quite honestly, has been lasting for almost 2,000 years.
Read more...
Source: CNN (blog)
And then the third thing, which you referred to, is that you're seeing new kinds of technologies that, first of all, appeal to students who are not part of the regular market, but now that technology is being developed, such as through edX and through others, such that it is really beginning to break open the existing traditional market. So there's an existential threat to the very business model that, quite honestly, has been lasting for almost 2,000 years.
Read more...
Source: CNN (blog)