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Coursera

edited August 2012 in Not Sports Related
Just discovered this, 117 courses provided online by some of the top Universities in the world. Just signed up to a 12 week history course provided by Princeton.

Has anybody ever used this before ?

https://www.coursera.org/

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    I think Professor Chris Powell has!
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    only problem with online courses is that you should make sure you're getting a recognised qualification at the end. a friend of a friend paid £500 for a course and got a certificate at the end. but when they tried using the certificate to get onto a higher level course they were told that the it wasn't a recognised qualification and they would have to resit the lower one again.
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    Is there a catch on this? It's free, so even if the certificate is not recognised you still have the education...

    Am i being naive?
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    It's in Spainish so you have to pay £3,000 to do the Spainish degree before you can do any of the free ones.
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    Whatever will be, will be
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    Spanish to degree level AND the course in Roman and Greek mythology i signed up for - all for £3,000?? I'll take it! I'll get looking down the back of the sofa. I hear the club are pretty well off right now, maybe they can help...what? Oh...
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    you dont get any qualification from this. If you was at University then these classes would count as a 'credit' towards your degree.

    I think for free and if you got nothing else to do, then its a good way to learn something new.
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    Try this. It was in the Telegraph about a month ago.


    Edinburgh University will launch a series of short courses accessible online to the public for free from late 2012, including an opportunity to study an "Introduction to Astrobiology and the Search for Extraterrestrial Life".


    The course, which will be taught by Charles Cockell, a professor of Astrobiology, is one of six being offered as part of the Coursera scheme – a US-run project backed by Stanford and Princeton universities which encourages leading institutions from around the world to make high-calibre courses available globally.


    "We took the decision to offer courses that reflect our specific strengths," said Ranald Leask, a spokesman for the university. "Something like extraterrestrial life comes out of a wide and deep base of knowledge and academic endeavour."


    "We have one of the world's leading schools of Science and Engineering. You could see this [extraterrestrial life] as a more niche area within Science and Engineering."


    Professor Cockell is the author of books including Response of Organisms to the Martian Environment and A Station for the Martian Geographic North Pole, and is Director for the UK Centre for Astrobiology.


    The course will aim to answer questions such as "Is there life on other planetary bodies?", and "How is it distributed throughout the Universe?".

    Edinburgh will also offer five other courses including "Equine Nutrition" and "Artificial Intelligence Planning" as a part of the scheme, which focuses on offering Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) to a global audience.

    Members of the consortium hope the experiment can "reinvent" the higher education landscape, with students signing up from around the world for four hours' study each week, consisting of an hour of lectures, one hour of discussion and additional self-study.

    "We are trying to pick subjects that will interest people who may not have a higher education background, but at the same time these courses are based on a strong basis of knowledge," said Leask.

    "Enabling wider access to excellent higher education is part of the core mission of the University of Edinburgh," said Professor Sir Timothy O'Shea, Principal of The University of Edinburgh. "We are therefore excited to join with our peers in North America in the Coursera consortium to offer Massive Open Online Courses on topics in which we have particular strengths."
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