Author: IBL News

  • 45 MOOC-Based Master’s Degrees Worldwide

    45 MOOC-Based Master’s Degrees Worldwide

    The MOOC-based Degrees phenomenon continues to expand. As of today, there are 45 degrees offered, according to research conducted by IBL News.

      • Most of those degrees are hosted on U.S. platforms: Coursera hosts 12; edX another 10; and Udacity, 1.

     

      • The most active and successful institution, in terms of students and revenues, is Georgia Tech, with two Masters on edX.org, as well as one in Udacity, the legendary OMSCS, which showed the way and is now in its fifth edition.

     

      • There are ten U.S. research universities managing low-priced degree programs: Georgia Institute of Technology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Arizona State University, University of Colorado Boulder, University of Pennsylvania, University of Michigan, Indiana University,  University of California, San Diego, University of Texas at Austin, and University of Notre Dame.

     

      • FutureLearn hosts 22 degrees and extended programs; most of them, 12, from Coventry University and 7 from Deakin University in Australia.

     

      • XuetangX in China is planning to launch an online MBA with London’s Open University.

     

    This is the complete list, organized by platforms:

     

    Udacity

    – Georgia Institute of Technology

    Online Master of Science in Computer Science (OMSCS)

    • Launched in 2014
    • Tuition: $6,800
    • Early decision deadline: March 1, 2019
    • Pioneer and starter of the “MOOC-based Degrees” revolution; conceived by Zvi Galil
    • Largest MS CS program in the U.S. and the world.
    • Completely online


    Coursera

    University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

    Master of Business Administration (iMBA)

    • 24-36 months
    • Tuition: $22,000
    • 18 courses plus three capstone projects
    • Final deadline: May 17th, 2019
    • Completely online

    Master of Science in Accountancy (iMSA)

    • 18-36 months
    • Tuition: $22,050 – $27,170
    • 16 eight-week courses
    • Final deadline: June 14th, 2019
    • Completely online

    Master of Computer Science (Computer Science and Engineering Degree)

    Master in Computer Science (Data Science Degree)

    • 12-36 months
    • Tuition: $21,000
    • 32 credit hours (8 courses)
    • Final deadline: February 15th, 2019
    • Completely online

     

    – Arizona State University

    Master of Computer Science

    • 18-36 months
    • Tuition: $15,000
    • 10 courses
    • Final deadline: April 15th, 2019
    • Completely online

     

    University of Colorado Boulder

    Master of Science in Electrical Engineering

    • 2 years for a full degree, 6-9 months for a graduate certificate
    • Tuition: $20,000 for the master’s degree or $667 per credit hour
    • 30 credit hours for a full degree, about 9 credit hours for a graduate certificate
    • Deadline: TBD
    • Completely online

     

    – University of Pennsylvania – Penn Engineering

    Master of Computer and Information Technology

    • 20-40 months
    • $15,000 (tuition) + $1,300 (fees)
    • 10 courses
    • Final deadline: May 1st, 2019
    • Completely online

     

    – University of Michigan

    Master of Public Health

    • 20-22 months
    • 42 credits ($960-$1,060 / credit hour)
    • Final deadline: June 1st, 2019
    • Completely online with a capstone project

     

    University of London

       Bachelor of Science in Computer Science

    • 3-6 years
    • 23 modules
    • Tuition: £10,088* – £15,132 depending upon geographic location of student
    • Online courses
    • Final deadline: March 11th, 2019

     

    HEC Paris

    MSc in Innovation and Entrepreneurship

    • 18 months
    • 20 courses
    • 20,000 EUR
    • Final deadline: May 6th, 2019

     

    Imperial College London

    Global Master of Public Health

    • 24 months
    • 16 specializations + research portfolio
    • £11,300 for UK/EU based (Home/EU fee status); £19,440 for outside UK (Islands/Overseas fee status)
    • Completely online
    • Final deadline: June 30th, 2019

     

    Macquarie University

    • 12 – 18 months full-time (average 37.5 hours per week)
    • 24 courses
    • Tuition: AUD $33,000 (US $23,600)
    • Final deadline: April 8th, 2019
    • Completely online

     

    edX

    – Georgia Institute of Technology

    Master of Science in Analytics

    • Top 10 Ranked
    • Tuition: $9,900
    • Early decision deadline: March 1, 2019

    Master of Science in Cybersecurity

    • Top 10 Ranked
    • Tuition: $9,920
    • Early decision deadline: March 1, 2019

     

    – Indiana University

    Master of Science in Accounting

    • Top 10 ranked
    • Tuition: $21,000
    • Initial deadline: July 1, 2019

    Master of Science in Information Technology Management

    • Top 10 ranked
    • Tuition: $21,000
    • Initial deadline: July 1, 2019


    – University of California, San Diego

    Master of Data Science

    • Tuition: $15,000
    • Deadline: TBD

     

    – University of Texas at Austin

    Master of Science in Computer Science

    • Top 10 ranked
    • Tuition: $10,000
    • Priority decision deadline: April 1, 2019

     

    – Arizona State University

    Master of Science in Supply Chain Management

     

    – Curtin University

    Master of Marketing

    • Tuition: $22,254
    • Regular decision deadline: August 15, 2019

     

    – University of Queensland

    Master of Leadership in Service Innovation

    • Tuition: < $18,500
    • Regular decision deadline: June 15, 2019

     

    – University of Edinburgh (Upcoming)

     

    Future Learn (UK–AUS)


    – The University of Newcastle Australia

    Bachelor of Arts


    – Deakin University

    Cyber Security

    Development and Humanitarian Action

    Diabetes Education

    Digital Learning Leadership

    Entrepreneurship

    Information Technology Leadership

    Leadership


    – Coventry University

    MBA

    MBA for the Cyber Security Management Sector

    MBA for the Healthcare Sector

    MBA for the Sustainable Tourism Sector

    MBA with Artificial Intelligence Specialism

    MSc Business and Organisational Psychology

    MSc Construction Management with BIM

    MSc Construction Project and Cost Management

    MSc Cyber Security

    MSc Disaster Management and Resilience

    MSc Emergency Management and Resilience

    MSC Nursing 


    – Murdoch University

    One Health


    – The Open University

    Postgraduate Certificate in Online and Distance Education

     

     

    Open edX

    – University of Notre Dame

    Master’s of Science in Data Science

     

    – Moravian College

    Online Master of Science in Predictive Analytics

     

    XuetangX (China)


    – The Open University

    MBA (Upcoming)

     

    Resources:

    • IBL News: MOOC-Based Degrees: +10K Learners and $80M in Revenues

    • IBL NewsMOOCs Are Dead, Welcome MOOC-Based Degrees

    EdSurge: Year of MOOC-based Degrees: A Review of MOOC Stats and Trends in 2018

    • Class Central on MOOC-based Degrees: ListDistinctive Features | Second Wave of MOOC Hype

     

  • View: MOOC-Based CME Programs, a New Hot Area

    View: MOOC-Based CME Programs, a New Hot Area

    By Mikel Amigot

    Continuing medical education (CME) and healthcare content is a new area for MOOC providers.

    Professionals are obligated to complete CME credits every two years to maintain their medical licenses, and Coursera, edX, and other platforms are providing timely digital courses in new areas (machine learning, data analytics, law, and regulations, etc.) to re-skill them.

    Coursera has announced an entire vertical with 100 new courses and 30 new “specializations”, with six accredited CME universities: Columbia University, the University of California at Davis, University of Minnesota, Icahn School of Medicine Mount Sinai, University of Pennsylvania and Emory University.

    Additionally, Coursera has launched two degrees: a Master of Public Health from the University of Michigan School of Public Health, and Master of Public Health from Imperial College London.

    There are other entrants in the programs-based CMEs such as Lambda School, a well-funded coding boot camp, and Grand Canyon Education, who recently purchased healthcare OPM Orbis Education for $362 million.

    [Disclosure: IBL works for Vermont Oxford Network who trains healthcare professionals through an Open edX-based ecosystem]

  • Microsoft Releases a Course About Azure Stack

    Microsoft Releases a Course About Azure Stack

    Azure Stack is an extension of Azure, which enables a hybrid cloud platform.

    Intending to educate IT Professionals and Enterprise Architects about it, Microsoft has launched the free “Configuring and Operating Microsoft Azure Stack” online course through its Open edX-based platform.

    It’s a 30 to 35 hours, nine modules, self-paced course, ending on March 22, 2019, which provides in-depth discussiosn and practical hands-on training of Microsoft Azure Stack, including Azure Virtual Machines, Storage, Virtual Networking, and deployment options.

    In addition, students participate in several assessment checkpoints to help them gauge their level of understanding.

    The course includes nine labs:

    • Connecting to Microsoft Azure Stack using Azure PowerShell
    • Configuring Delegation Using the Azure Stack Administrator Portal
    • Add a Windows Server 2016 Image to Azure Stack using Azure PowerShell (Disconnected Scenario)
    • Add a Linux Image to Azure Stack using Azure PowerShell (Disconnected Scenario)
    • Create a Custom Marketplace Items using the Marketplace Toolkit
    • Validating ARM Templates with Azure Stack

     

  • EdX Launches a Promotional Website About its Open Source Platform

    EdX Launches a Promotional Website About its Open Source Platform

    The edX organization launched today a new marketing-oriented website about the open source software called Open edX, which powers its educational portal and is freely available on GitHub.

    This website, open.edx.org, highlights the fact that the Open edX software is trusted and used by top organizations, such as edX, MIT, Harvard, IBM, Microsoft, XuetangX, and Global Knowledge, among others. Overall, there are over 20,000 courses built on the Open edX software and over 40 million learners.

    The confusion in the industry between edX and Open edX is handled on the home page. “edX is the online learning destination co-founded by Harvard and MIT. Open edX is the learner-centric, massively scalable learning platform behind it,” edX explains.

    This promotional site, created with an investment of $30K, open to enterprise donations and engineered with WordPress technology, has been developed under the direction of Berkay Baykal, a manager in charge of the Open edX business area. [Update: Berkay Baykal is not part anymore of the edX team.]

  • Coursera Opens its Data Science Academy

    Coursera Opens its Data Science Academy

    Coursera launched this month a new vertical called Data Science Academy to help professionals find data science-related courses on R, Python, SQL, SAS, Java, and other skills.

    “Over the last decade, data has become one of the world’s most valuable resources. As data transform nearly every industry and function, top companies are prioritizing job candidates with data skills,” states in a blog post.

    Related careers include data scientist, data analyst, machine learning engineer, and data engineer. Statistics show that 110,000 new jobs are projected in this area by 2020 in the U.S.

    This Coursera Academy offers learners a quiz intended to offer directions.

    Beyond short programs and courses, Coursera hosts two Master’s degrees: the Master in Computer Science in Data Science from the University of Illinois or the Master of Applied Data Science from the University of Michigan.

    Meanwhile, edX offers the Master’s Degree in Analytics from the Georgia Institute of Technology and the Master’s Degree in Data Science from the University of California, San Diego.

  • View: Master’s Degrees Are Increasingly Online

    View: Master’s Degrees Are Increasingly Online

    By Mikel Amigot

    Master’s degree programs are increasingly offered online.

    Over 31 percent of students enrolled in master’s degrees took them entirely online, while 21 percent took some, but not all, classes online, according to an analysis from the Urban Institute.

    Digital education fits particularly well for these students because they tend to be proactive and self-directed learners. This segment tends to achieve better outcomes as they are more likely to be employed.

    For every five taken bachelor’s there were two master’s degrees during the 2015-16 academic year. In total, about 785,000 master’s degrees were awarded in the U.S.

    In terms of pricing, tuition and fees for full-time master’s rose by 79 percent during the last 20 years, compared to a 47 percent increase for full-time bachelor’s programs.

         Mikel Amigot is CEO at IBL Education        

  • The Open edX Platform Faces a Huge Upgrade into Python 3

    The Open edX Platform Faces a Huge Upgrade into Python 3

    With nearly a million lines written in Python, mostly on the 2.7 version, the Open edX platform, has a large task ahead: convert its code to run on Python 3 by the end of this year.

    Python 2 is coming to its end; there won’t be more bug fixes after January 1, 2020, and Python 3 is not backward-compatible with Python 2.

    “Much of the work is not hard, it’s just extensive, and can’t all be done automatically.  To help organize the effort, we’ve created the Incremental Improvements JIRA board: INCR,” explained in a blog post Ned Batchelder, edX Architect.

    At the same time, this engineer encouraged other developers to participate in this development.

    • Open edX Blog: Python 2 is ending, we need to move to Python 3

     

     

  • Duke University Ditches Open edX and Moves to Sakai

    Duke University Ditches Open edX and Moves to Sakai

    Why not use WordPress or Drupal instead of Open edX?

    Duke University has decided to shut down its Open edX platform, which empowered the Duke Extend service, arguing precisely this.

    Michael Greene, Associate Director of Learning Technology Services and Strategy, states: “If you don’t need the assessment features and just want to share your content with a wider audience, why not use a content management system like WordPress or Drupal?”

    In terms of engagement, this is Duke’s reasoning: “If you want highly engaged discussion, why not use Slack or Microsoft Teams?”

    “By using the online.duke.edu catalog as our communication and marketing platform, we are now free to choose the most appropriate technology for delivering a Duke Extend learning experience.”

    “We are very excited about the possibilities this change opens up for Learning Innovation and our partners,” wrote Mr. Greene.

    For now, all active Duke Extend courses have been moved to Sakai. “The new look for Extend has a clean, streamlined design that will allow us to create a more guided learning experience for students,” literally said Heather Hans, Learning Experience Designer.

    See the layout above.

    “Duke Extends lives on multiple technology platforms. (…) We want to help high schoolers before they get to Duke, offer any current student the ability to level up with co-curricular learning, help graduate and professional schools expand their online education, and serve alumni in their lifelong learning needs,” said Michael Greene.

    “As a department, we’ve rebranded and restructured ourselves to help achieve those goals. We also need technology infrastructure to facilitate them.”

    The Open edX technology, universally used by top universities and consortiums, won’t be part of the equation.

    Duke Learning Innovation: Duke Extend Is Dead. Long Live Duke Extend.

     

     

  • MOOCs Will Evolve Into Online Degrees

    MOOCs Will Evolve Into Online Degrees

    Low student retention and enrollment decline showed that MOOCs didn’t work in the way they were conceived.

    “MOOCs will not transform higher education and probably will not disappear entirely either,” said researchers Justin Reich and José Ruipérez-Valiente after analyzing data provided by HarvardX and MITx—edX’s founding partners—from their courses offered from 2012 to May 2018.

    The best use of MOOCs may be in providing instruction that leads to online master’s degrees for professionals, researchers stated in a forum titled “The MOOC Pivot” published on the January 11 issue of Science.

    Their prediction seems to strike a blow at the heart of edX’s mission: to ensure access to quality education for learners around the world.

    Anant Agarwal, CEO of edX, argued that the study misses the continuing growth in the edX platform overall, with 2,400 courses and 20 million learners. Today, edX addresses the professional degrees, and offers programs directly to businesses.

  • HBX Removes its “X” and Rebrands as Harvard Business School

    HBX Removes its “X” and Rebrands as Harvard Business School

    The letter “X” became synonymous with online learning in the last eight years, with edX, MITx, HarvardX, MichiganX, IsraelX, and many more universities and initiatives.

    Founded in 1908, Harvard Business School launched its digital initiative HBX in 2014. Since then, its online course offerings have significantly expanded.

    Last week, HBX announced that it has rebranded as “Harvard Business School Online”. Its goal is to “raise awareness of its online courses.”

    “Harvard Business School Online has allowed us to extend the reach of the School to people wherever they are in the world,” said Nitin Nohria, dean of Harvard Business School.

    “We were founded five years ago by Harvard Business School to bring the HBS case method experience to the online world,” explained Patrick Mullane, executive director of Harvard Business School Online. “Today, nearly 40,000 students from around the world have completed a course with us. What’s most exciting is our participants say we have helped them achieve greater career success and, perhaps more importantly, greater satisfaction in life.”

    In an interview with Inside Higher Education, Mr. Mullane noted that the name X was no longer working, and, additionally, some prospective students assumed HBX was connected to edX.