Category: Top News

  • The SUNY System Saw a Huge Success with Its Two-Week Fee-Waiver Initiative

    The SUNY System Saw a Huge Success with Its Two-Week Fee-Waiver Initiative

    IBL News | New York

    The SUNY system — the largest system of higher education in the U.S. — saw an increase of 110% year-over-year increase in the number of student applications. The total growth was from 97,257 to 204,437 in the Fall of 2023.

    It was due in large part to its first-ever two-week fee waiver initiative: students had the opportunity to apply for free to up to five SUNY campuses for a savings of $250.

    On average, each applicant applied to two SUNY campuses.

    At the same time, SUNY saw increases in applications from potential students from other states. Applicants in Connecticut, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire, Illinois, and California were eligible to receive their in-state tuition and fees at a SUNY school. From that program alone, applications were up nearly 80 percent for the Fall 2023 cycle, and across all states outside of New York, applications are up about 70 percent.

    SUNY Interim Chancellor, Deborah F. Stanley said, “New York State has significantly invested in higher education as a driving force for its economy, and we want to make sure all New Yorkers can avail themselves of a high-quality, affordable education across our state.”

    Joel Wincowski, Deputy to the Chancellor for Enrollment, said, “The increase in applications has far exceeded our expectations. It is a testament to the high-quality education for which SUNY is known, with some of the best faculty, staff, and campus communities in the nation. This increase is only the beginning of an upward trend we expect in enrollment across our campuses. To that end, we will work with campuses to help applicants make their final decision on which SUNY campus will be home next fall.”

    Another relevant data is that 50% of full-time New York undergrads are paying $0 for tuition at SUNY with financial aid.

    SUNY has ongoing fee waivers that apply to 60 percent of all high school seniors. Students in foster care, with military connections, low-income students, and students at 500+ designated high schools can apply for up to seven SUNY campuses for free, saving up to $350 any time during the year.

  • Cutting-Edge AI Chatbot Attracts Over a Million People In One Week

    Cutting-Edge AI Chatbot Attracts Over a Million People In One Week

    IBL News | New York

    Over a million people signed up in the last week to test ChatGPT, “the best artificial intelligence chatbot ever released to the general public,” as The New York Times wrote this week.

    San Francisco-based OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT and also responsible for tools like GPT-3 and image generator DALL-E 2, saw hundreds of conversations going viral on Twitter, with many fans speaking in astonishing terms of the virtual tool.

    Aaron Levie, a Twitter influencer with 2.4 million followers, wrote that ChatGPT is one of those rare moments in technology where you see a glimmer of how everything is going to be different going forward.”

    ChatGPT has broken the dominance of low-quality A.I. chatbots. Its technology is based on “GPT-3.5.”, an upgraded version of GPT-3, the A.I. text generator model that sparked some excitement when it came out in 2020.

    Most A.I. chatbots aren’t programmed to remember or learn from previous conversations. However, ChatGPT can remember what a user has told it before.

    OpenAI has trained ChatGPT to interact in a conversational way, answer followup questions, admit its mistakes, challenge incorrect premises, and reject inappropriate requests.

    ChatGPT is a sibling model to InstructGPT.

    The fact that ChatGPT linguistic superbrain has been made available to the general public through a free, easy-to-use web interface has stunned the Internet.

    Beyond essay-writing capabilities, ChatGPT has appeared to be good at helping programmers spot and fix errors in their code. “ChatGPT could be a good debugging companion; it not only explains the bug but fixes it and explain the fix,” said another influencer.

    “It also appears to be ominously good at answering the types of open-ended analytical questions that frequently appear on school assignments,” wrote The Times. “Many educators have predicted that ChatGPT, and tools like it, will spell the end of homework and take-home exams. We’re witnessing the death of the college essay in real-time.”

    The general feeling is that GPT-3 is old news, but playing with OpenAI’s new chatbot is mindblowing.

    Unlike Google, ChatGPT doesn’t crawl the web for information on current events, and its knowledge is restricted to things it learned before 2021.

    Its training data might find a treasure on Twitter, also a property of Elon Musk. But some websites are closing its door to ChatGPT’s answers. For example, on Monday, the moderators of Stack Overflow, a website for programmers, temporarily banned users from submitting answers generated with ChatGPT.

    Another debate about the ChatGPT phenomenon is whether it will question the existence of Google itself. Some people think it could make Google obsolete.

    OpenAI’s best A.I. version would be GPT-4, the next incarnation of the company’s large language model rumored to be coming out next year.

  • OpenAI Releases ChatGPT, an Advanced Text-Generating AI

    OpenAI Releases ChatGPT, an Advanced Text-Generating AI

    IBL News | New York

    The latest chatbot from OpenAI, called ChatGPT, is stunning educators, programmers, and analysts due to its ability to write essays.

    ChatGPT is the latest evolution of the GPT family of text-generating AIs, showing further capabilities than GPT3.

    OpenAI — a company founded by Elon Musk in 2015 — said the new AI was created with a focus on ease of use.

    “The dialogue format makes it possible for ChatGPT to answer follow-up questions, admit its mistakes, challenge incorrect premises, and reject inappropriate requests,” OpenAI said in a post announcing the release.

    Unlike previous AI from the company, ChatGPT was released for anyone to use for free during a “feedback” period. The company hopes to use this feedback to improve the final version of the tool.

    ChatGPT is good at self-censoring and at realizing when it is being asked an impossible question.

    The AI is trained on a huge sample of text taken from the internet, generally without explicit permission from the authors of the material used.

  • Selected the Ten Top Educators and Courses in MOOCs According to the edX Platform

    Selected the Ten Top Educators and Courses in MOOCs According to the edX Platform

    IBL News | New York

    edX.org, 2U’s MOOC platform, selected ten top faculty and educators on massive courses, ranging in topics from UX design to earth and environmental sciences.

    They are the ten finalists for the seventh annual edX Prize for Exceptional Contributions in Online Teaching and Learning. These instructors are recognized for their innovation when delivering student-centric, impactful learning courses.

    The winners are selected by members of the edX Partner Advisory Council.

    The winner of this year’s award will be announced by edX/2U in early 2023.

    Last year, University of Canterbury professors Ben Kennedy and Dr. Jonathan Davidson were the winners of the 2021 edX Prize for their course Exploring Volcanoes and Their Hazards: Iceland and New Zealand. They designed the course to deliver an immersive and fun virtual science experience focused on volcanic landscapes.

    Anant Agarwal, edX Founder and Chief Platform Officer at 2U, said, “from Alaska to Hong Kong, our 2022 edX prize finalists represent vastly different institutions and disciplines but are united in their commitment to broadening the horizon of society’s knowledge and understanding with free and open courses.” 

  • NYU Will Invest $1 Billion Into Its Engineering School in Brooklyn, NY

    NYU Will Invest $1 Billion Into Its Engineering School in Brooklyn, NY

    IBL News | New York

    New York University (NYU) will invest $1 billion in the Tandon School of Engineering, its flagship engineering school in Downtown Brooklyn. The goal is to improve its ranking among competitors while raising New York City’s profile in the technology sector, according to a story in The New York Times yesterday.

    NYU will add $400 million in new funds to the $600 it had already pledged to the school. The funding, which will come from the school’s reserve, will be used over a decade to revamp labs and student spaces at Tandon and expand its focus on cybersecurity and AI technology. In addition, 40 tenure-track faculty members will be hired.

    Tandon School Dean, Jelena Kovacevic, said to the Times, “no university can achieve national or international status without a viable technology school.”

    In 2015, NYU’s Engineering Faculty and Programs and the Polytechnic University renamed its merged school for trustees Ranjan and Chandrika Tandon, who donated $100 million to the institution. Last September, the university purchased a 10-story building in Brooklyn (3 MetroTech Center) to serve as the college’s central hub.

    “Engineering education is a force for social mobility, an economic engine for the borough, and a vital contributor to the city’s effort to be a world center of tech,” NYU president Andrew Hamilton said in a statement.

    The school has had two Nobel winners throughout its history. Rudolph A. Marcus, a former professor at Polytechnic, won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his contributions to the theory of electron transfer reactions in chemical systems. Martin L. Perl, a Polytechnic alumnus, won the Nobel Prize in Physics for his pioneering experimental contributions to lepton physics.

    Polytechnic students designed the cables used to hold up the Brooklyn Bridge. Those cables then paved the way for skyscrapers to be built in Manhattan, introducing the concept of elevators.

  • Open edX & Learning Platforms Newsletter | October – December 2022: Open edX, 2U, Coursera, Doulingo, LEGO, MasterClass.com…

    Open edX & Learning Platforms Newsletter | October – December 2022: Open edX, 2U, Coursera, Doulingo, LEGO, MasterClass.com…

    Newsletter format  |  Click here to subscribe ]

    OCTOBER – DECEMBER 2022 – NEWSLETTER #47  |  Breaking news at IBL News  |  Noticias en Español

     

    Open edX

    • The 2023 Open edX Conference Will Take Place March 28 – 31 at MIT

     

    2U / edX Platform

    • 2U Kept Flat Revenue in the Third Quarter of 2022

    • 2U Launches New Boot Camps Under the edX Brand, Retiring the Trilogy Name

    • The London School of Economics Launches a Stackable Pathway to Degrees in Mathematics and Statistics on edX

    • Cognizant Offers Five Train-To-Hire Courses on Java through edX.org

    • An edX Course Created as Peace Project Between Israel’s Jewish and Arab Cultures Makes a Global Impact

     

    Coursera

    • Coursera and SAP Release a Technology Consultant Professional Certificate

    • Coursera Improves Its Note-Taking Technology to Help Learners to Increase Retention

    • Georgetown and Coursera Offer the First Fully Online Liberal Arts Degree

    • Coursera Announces Layoffs Due to Slower Growth Rate

    • Coursera Expands Its Micro-Learning Approach by Adding Thousands of 5-10 Min Videos

     

    Learning Platforms: Transactions

    • LEGO Purchases Education-Technology Firm BrainPOP for $875 Million

    • Genius Group Acquires an American Documentary Film Company to Provide High-Quality Educational Videos

    • Duolingo Purchases the Animation Studio that Works on Its Brand

    • Zovio Sells Fullstack Academy and Liquidates the Company

    • The Owner of Inside Higher Ed Acquires a Leading Student Recruitment Events Firm

    • Anthology Sells the Blackboard K-12 Division

    • Investment Company Thoma Bravo Sells Frontline Education for $3.7 Billion

    • IXL Learning Purchased Emmersion, a Developer of AI-Powered Language Assessments

    • Scholastic Acquired the A2i System for Literacy Instructional Assessment

    • Testing and Assessment Prometric Acquires Finetune Learning

     

    Learning Platforms: Functionalities

    • Zoom Will Soon Be Installed in Tesla Cars

    • The Indian Giant BYJU’S Hires Leo Messi As Its Global Ambassador

    • D2L Issues an Interactive Content Creation Tool With Templates and Themes

    • MasterClass.com Issues a Course with Madeleine Albright and Condoleezza Rice

     

    Funding

    • EdTech Will Expand from K–12 and Higher Ed to Lifelong Learning Economy

    • A British Platform that Teaches Cybersecurity with Gamification Attracts Big Funding

     

    YouTube

    • YouTube Will Launch a @username Format to Boost User Engagement

    • YouTube Will Allow Course Creators to Charge for their Content

     

    Adobe, Figma

    • Figma’s CEO Dylan Field Pocketed One Billion More than Initially Announced by Adobe

    • Adobe’s Stock Continues to Fall as the Market Signals Its Concern About the Figma Deal

    • Figma’s $20 Billion Acquisition by Adobe Causes Concern in the Creative Community

     

    2022 Events | All of the Key Conferences Listed!

    • Education Calendar 2022  – NOVEMBER | DECEMBERConferences in Latin America & Spain

     


    This newsletter was created in collaboration with IBL Education, a New York City-based company specializing in AI-driven, skills learning platforms. We also film and produce courses for universities and business organizations. Read the latest IBL Newsletter   |  Archive of Open edX Newsletters

  • Ohio State University President Steps Down After an Investigation

    Ohio State University President Steps Down After an Investigation

    IBL News | New York

    Ohio State University President Kristina M. Johnson, 65 years old, stepped down following an investigation conducted by an outside firm. The content of that research was not disclosed. The university’s Board of Trustees asked for her resignation on Monday.

    “I’m saddened by the circumstances. My record of accomplishment at Ohio State speaks for itself, and I made the difficult decision to step down,” Johnson said.

    In a statement, Kristina M. Johnson [in the picture] expressed her gratitude and wished everyone the very best in the future. No clue of her departure was issued.

    Johnson has served only 2½ years out of her five-year contract. At the time of her departure, Johnson will have the second-shortest tenure as a president at Ohio State behind only former Ohio State President Walter Q. Scott, who served from 1881 to 1883. That does not include acting or interim presidents.

    Ohio State’s Board of Trustees will begin searching for the university’s 17th president. The university said it will share more information about the search and how the community can participate in early 2023.

  • Online Learning Newsletter | October – December 2022: Trends, AI, ML, Analytics, Universities, Higher Ed, Enterprise…

    Online Learning Newsletter | October – December 2022: Trends, AI, ML, Analytics, Universities, Higher Ed, Enterprise…

    Newsletter format  |  Click here to subscribe ]

     

    OCTOBER – DECEMBER 2022 – NEWSLETTER #53  |  Breaking news at IBL News  |  Noticias en Español

     

    Trends

    • Pandemic-Disrupted Teaching and Learning Effects Will Continue for Decades, Stanford Says

    • Higher Ed Experts Craft Their Vision to Evolve into a Hybrid Learning Scenario

    • “Career Readiness and Skill Competency Are Key Factors to Measure Student Success”

    • Learners Prefer the “Anytime-Anyplace” Approach Along with Blended Technology

    • Online Learning Is Now Seen in Positive View Among Learners, Wiley Says

    • Around 771 Million People Lack Basic Literacy Skills Today

    • Confidence In the Teaching Profession Continues to Decline in the U.S.

    • Students Say that College Is Worth What They Pay Despite the Financial Struggle

     

    AI, ML, Analytics

    • National Louis University Shared Data Model Used For Student Onboarding, Academics, and Support

    • Key Research on Data Analytics Shows How AI/ML Will Shape the University of the Future

    • Most Higher Ed CIOs Are Ready to Invest More in Analytics, Says Gartner

    • “We Need More From Technology,” Says Educause While Presenting the 2022 Top 10 Issues

    • AI Language Model GPT-3 Arrives into Higher Education

    • 74% of Users Prefer AI Chatbots for Answers to Simple Questions

    • 85% of Data is Unstructured and Not Ready for AI Use, Industry Experts Say

    • Data Mismanagement Jeopardizes the AI Achievement, Says an MIT Report

     

    Universities

    • CUNY Unveils a $1.6B Plan to Build a Science Park and Research Campus in Manhattan

    • A Duke Administrator and Cell Biologist Researcher Named MIT’s 18th President

    • Arizona State University Opens a Lab that Will Create a Metaverse with Zoom

    • UCLA Acquires Marymount California University’s Campuses for $80 Million

    • Stanford Law School Launches Controversial Income-Share Agreements as a Pilot Program

    • Harvard Business School Will Offer Its Two-Year MBA Program for Free to 200 Students

     

    Higher Ed

    • Students Name the Best Colleges in the U.S. in Princeton Review’s Annual Survey

    • U.S. Colleges and Universities Saw an Increase of 80% in International Student Enrollment

    • Stanford, Michigan, Duke, Northwestern Law Schools Join the Exodus from U.S. News Rankings

    • Harvard, Yale, and Berkeley Criticize U.S. News Rankings Methodology and Decide Not to Participate

     

    Enterprise

    • Amazon Will Invest $5,250 Per Year For Each Delivery Partner By Providing Educational Programs

    • IBM Teams with 20 Black Universities to Address the Cybersecurity Talent Shortage

    • Oracle Launches a Cloud Infrastructure that Allows ISVs to Run their Own Services

     

    Biden Administration

    • The FTC Sues Chegg for Exposing Millions of Users’ Social Security Numbers and Other Key Data

    • The Biden Administration Launches the Official Application for the Student Debt Relief

    • Six Republican-Led States Sue Biden Administration Over Student Loan Forgiveness Plan

    • President Biden’s Student Loan Cancellation Plan Will Cost $400 Billion

    • Fintech Donation Start-Up Give Campus Raises Massive Funding

     

    Conferences

    • The OLC Conference Awarded Twelve Educators for Innovation in Online Learning

    • The OLC Accelerate 2022 Conference Posts Its Program

    • Educause Recognized Five Top Educators for Their Accomplishments in Higher Ed IT

     

    2022 Events | All of the Key Conferences Listed!

    • Education Calendar 2022  – NOVEMBER | DECEMBERConferences in Latin America & Spain

     


    This newsletter was created in collaboration with IBL Education, a New York City-based company specializing in AI-driven, skills open source learning platforms, and predictive analytics. We also film and produce courses for universities and business organizations. Read the latest IBL Newsletter   |  Archive of Open edX Newsletters

  • Coursera and SAP Release a Technology Consultant Professional Certificate

    Coursera and SAP Release a Technology Consultant Professional Certificate

    IBL News | New York

    SAP (NYSE: SAP), the largest provider of enterprise application software, announced its goal to upskill 2 million developers worldwide by 2025 at the SAP TechEd conference in Las Vegas this month.

    The German software giant said it would triple its learning offering on its SAP Learning site while it partners with Coursera.com.

    Through the Coursera platform, SAP will issue a professional certificate for entry-level job roles designed for learners with no college degree or industry experience.

    The SAP Technology Consultant Professional Certificate comprises seven courses, two of which are available today with the rest rolling out over the coming months. Altogether, the certificate can be completed in about  5-6 months.

    The authors of the certificate said that demand for technology consultants is set to increase in the coming years. In the U.S. alone, there were more than 50,000 technology consultant job postings in the last year, with a $76,200* median salary for an entry-level role.

    SAP’s learning site features well elaborated corporate content about the tools and technologies of the brand.

    In total, the platform learning.sap.com includes 25 courses and programs, or “learning journeys,” as the company calls them. Interestingly, those lessons are open, without the need for registration.

  • Stanford, Michigan, Duke, Northwestern Law Schools Join the Exodus from U.S. News Rankings

    Stanford, Michigan, Duke, Northwestern Law Schools Join the Exodus from U.S. News Rankings

    IBL News | New York

    Stanford, Michigan, Columbia, Georgetown, Duke, and Northwestern’s law schools, among others, joined the wave of swearing off U.S. News & World Report’s ranking.

    The exodus started a week ago when Harvard’s, Yale’s, and the University of California, Berkeley’s law schools decided not to participate in the mentioned ranking expressing doubts about its methodology.

    Harvard Law School’s Dean, John Manning, summarized the concerns of the schools: “By heavily weighting students’ test scores and college grades, the U.S. News rankings have over the years created incentives for law schools to direct more financial aid toward applicants based on their LSAT scores and college GPAs without regard to their financial need.”

    Overall, at least nine of the U.S. News’ top 15 schools have told U.S. News & World Report that they won’t send data for the upcoming lists.

    The magazine said that it will continue with its ranking of the 200 accredited law schools in the country, regardless of whether institutions agree to submit their data.

    However, U.S. News has a responsibility to prospective students to provide comparative information that allows them to assess these institutions. U.S. News will therefore continue to rank the nearly 200 accredited law schools in the United States.

    Robert Morse, Chief Data Strategist, wrote, “the U.S. News Best Law Schools rankings are designed for students seeking to make the best decision for their legal education; we will continue to pursue our journalistic mission of ensuring that students can rely on the best and most accurate information.” 

    The Washington Post columnist Megan McArdle wrote that “Yale has recently suffered some reputational damage over its hostility to conservatives, leading some to wonder whether the school was pulling out to avoid the embarrassment of losing its No. 1 slot.”

    “One way to keep from being held accountable for discriminating against Asian students, or in favor of underrepresented minorities, is to down-weight or eliminate objective metrics such as test scores in favor of harder-to-compare criteria such as essays, interviews, and recommendations. Since doing so would cause the schools to suffer in the U.S. News rankings, perhaps they’re preemptively taking their ball and going home.”

    “U.S. News has provided value to those people, and it’s not going to stop just because Yale and Harvard and Berkeley law refused to cooperate. All that will happen is that the rankings will become less accurate — and less helpful to the very people from outside the current elites that these schools say they most want to recruit.”