MOOCs and Digital Diploma Mills: Forgetting Our History | iterating toward openness - 1 views
-
Now play that record backwards, as the first generation of MOOCs (cMOOCs) – that allowed anyone from anywhere to participate however they liked in experiences built from openly licensed course materials – gives way to a new generation of walled gardens that call themselves “open” but require registration, use copyrighted materials, and take investment capital. They even prohibit students from using their services in the most useful ways: “You may not take any Online Course offered by Coursera or use any Statement of Accomplishment as part of any tuition-based or for-credit certification or program for any college, university, or other academic institution without the express written permission from Coursera” (Coursera Terms of Use). David Noble saw something like this coming. I’m not sure he was wrong.
-
Ted O'Neill on 21 Apr 13The Coursera Terms of Service explicitly break the first O of MOOC. This is the bait and switch and if it works will result in the hollowing out of higher education
-