Category: Top News

  • Open edX & Learning Platforms | January-February 2021: MITx, SNHU, WordPress, Coursera, Docebo, Udemy…

    Open edX & Learning Platforms | January-February 2021: MITx, SNHU, WordPress, Coursera, Docebo, Udemy…

    Newsletter format  |  Click here to subscribe ]

    JANUARY—FEBRUARY 2021 – NEWSLETTER #34  |  Breaking news at IBL News  |  Noticias en Español

     

    edX

    • Former edX Executive Raises $7.5M to Build a Course Catalog Using AI Tools

    • edX.org Reaches 35 Million Registered Learners and 110 Million Enrollments

     

    edX Courses

    • An MITx Course on edX Explores Solutions for the Massive and Persistent World Poverty

    • SNHU Launches Two edX MicroBachelors in Business Analytics and Data Management

     

    Open edX

    • Develop.com Offers a Free Month Access to Career-Focused Courses Including Completion Certificates

    • Develop.com Adds an AI-Based Tool that Recommends Courses to Complement Skills

     

    MOOCs

    • MOOCs Skyrocket Due to the Pandemic: Over 180 Million Learners, and Counting

    • WordPress.com Issues Two Subscription-Based Courses on Blogging and Podcasting

    • The Top 40 Most Popular Courses at the Beginning of 2021 According to Class Central

     

    Coursera

    • Wesleyan University Launches Two Courses Focused on Taking Action for Social Change

    • Coursera Curates a Collection of Courses Inspired on Disney’s and Pixar’s Soul Movie

     

    Learning Platforms

    • The Top News Stories of the Year on edX, Coursera, and Learning at Scale Platforms

    • Docebo LMS, Valued at $2.23 Billion, Sells More Shares. Its Founder to Pocket $7.5M

    • Bitcoin SV Academy: A New Online Learning Platform, with a First Free Course Open to Enrollment

    • Udemy.com Hires a New President as Its Growth Continues

    • The College Board Will Allow Students to Take AP Exams at Home

     

    2021 Events 

    • Education Calendar  –  FEBMARCHAPRILMAYJUNEJULY-DECEMBER  |  Conferences in Latin America & Spain

     


    This newsletter is created in collaboration with IBL Education, a New York City-based company specialized in AI and credential-driven learning platforms and communities. Read the latest IBL Newsletter   |  Archive of Open edX Newsletters

  • Online Learning | January-February 2021: MIT, Harvard, College Board, Varsity Tutors…

    Online Learning | January-February 2021: MIT, Harvard, College Board, Varsity Tutors…

    Newsletter format  |  Click here to subscribe ]

    JANUARY—FEBRUARY 2021 –  NEWSLETTER #40  |  Breaking news at IBL News  |  Noticias en Español

     

    Higher Ed in the Pandemic

    • The Pandemic Caused a Huge Financial Hit to Public Research Universities

    • MIT Will Vaccinate 50,000 Members of its Community

    • Higher Ed Institutions Function Only at 75% Capacity. This Gap Costs $50 Billion

    • The Pandemic Accelerates the OPM Business: Universities Pay $4 Billion a Year

    • The College Board Discontinues SAT Subject Tests and the optional SAT Essay

     

    Federal Government

    • The Biden Administration Extends the Pause on Student Loan Payments for Eight Months

    • The Biden Administration Issues Guidance for Colleges on the COVID Pandemic

    • Senator Warren Says that Betsy DeVos Resigned to Dodge the 25th Amendment

    • Betsy DeVos Resigns as Education Secretary Because of “the Impact of Trump’s Rhetoric”

     

    Trump

    • Harvard Students Request to Revoke Graduate Diplomas from Prominent Trump Supporters

    • Twitter Permanently Suspends President Trump’s Account

    • ProPublica Releases an Unfiltered Collection of Parler’s Videos on the Riot at the Capitol

    • University Political Professors and Scientists Demand the Immediate Removal of President Trump

     

    Social Media

    • The Alternative to WhatsApp, Telegram Surpasses 500 Million Users

    • Parler May Never Get Back Online: Vendors Don’t Want Any Business with the App

    • Private Messaging Signal Becomes the #1 App on Apple’s and Google’s Stores

    • Parler Social App Sues AWS-Amazon For Suspending Its Cloud Hosting Service

    • Apple, Google, and AWS Kick Parler Off—the Social Media App Used by Trump’s Supporters

     

    Trends

    • Varsity Tutors Will Become a Public Company—Valued at $1.7 Billion

    • Over Two Billion Children and Young People Lose Out on Education Due to No Internet Access

    • How to Equip Managers to Lead Remote Teams and Reap Productivity Gains

    • 2020 Year Review: Top News Stories on Online Learning

     

    2021 Events 

    • Education Calendar  –  FEBMARCHAPRILMAYJUNEJULY-DECEMBER  |  Conferences in Latin America & Spain

     


    This newsletter is created in collaboration with IBL Education, a New York City-based company specialized in AI and credential-driven learning platforms and communities. Read the latest IBL Newsletter   |  Archive of Open edX Newsletters

  • The College Board Will Allow Students to Take AP Exams at Home

    The College Board Will Allow Students to Take AP Exams at Home

    IBL News | New York

    High schoolers will be able to take AP (Advanced Placement) exams at home, due to the closure of many classrooms because of the pandemic.

    The College Board, which administers the AP program, issued yesterday an update on testing procedures.

    However, exams will return to their usual length.

    On the other hand, layoffs have started at The College Board. According to Inside The Higher Education, about 14 percent of people lost their jobs this week.

    A spokesman said, “We have made changes to become a more flexible organization, which included difficult decisions to reduce the size of our team.”

    A month ago, The College Board announced that it was dropping the Subject Tests and the optional essay section for students in the U.S.

     

  • Develop.com Offers a Free Month Access to Career-Focused Courses Including Completion Certificates

    Develop.com Offers a Free Month Access to Career-Focused Courses Including Completion Certificates

    IBL News | New York

    Online learning platform Develop.com started offering this week a free month of unlimited access to hundreds of career-focused courses, including expert-led classes.

    The free offering includes completion certificates for every course.

    Develop currently has currently three custom-built subscriptions, starting at $9.99/month: Foundation, Data Academy, and Cybersecurity. Topics include project management, software development, cybersecurity, and cloud technologies.

    “Our high-quality courses are the best way for professionals looking to grow their careers to gain skills and experience to stand out,” said Kevin Pawsey, CEO at Develop.

    Boston-based Develop.com competes with Pluralsight.com by providing on-demand, subscription courses for IT and business professionals.

    The platform is built on an Open edX ecosystem developed by the New York-based IBL Education learning software company.

  • MIT Will Vaccinate 50,000 Members of its Community

    MIT Will Vaccinate 50,000 Members of its Community

    IBL News | New York

    MIT will develop its own framework for vaccinating approximately 50,000 students, employees, affiliates, and dependents on campus.

    The Commonwealth of Massachusetts approved last month MIT’s request to serve as an employer-based distributor of the Covid-19 vaccine—MIT News reported.

    The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has been administering regular Covid tests to thousands of members of its community.

    In terms of the vaccine roll-out, roughly 700 individuals categorized as top-priority recipients—frontline, public-facing, or essential employees…—have received the shots.

    Across the country, teachers and school staff members are on many priority lists to get their vaccines.

    The CDC has put out guidance on how to prioritize different groups, but states can ultimately make their own decisions on the rollout.

    Education Week tracked this week plans for vaccinating K-12 educators across all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico.

  • Varsity Tutors Will Become a Public Company—Valued at $1.7 Billion

    Varsity Tutors Will Become a Public Company—Valued at $1.7 Billion

    IBL News | New York

    Nerdy Inc., the parent company of Varsity Tutors, announced last week that it will be acquired by a SPAC (special purpose acquisition company) called TPG Pace Tech Opportunities.

    The transaction, expected for Q2 of 2021, will value Nerdy at a $1.7 billion market capitalization. The company will be listed on the NYSC as NRDY.

    Based in St. Louis, Varsity Tutors is a live tutoring platform from K-5 to graduate school test prep and professional certifications.

    Nerdy raised $107 million in funding from Learn Capital, Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, and TCV. These existing investors are expected to retain over 50% of ownership.

    The acquisition is expected to be complete in the second quarter of 2021. Then Nerdy will be listed on NYSE under the tickers NRDY.

    According to its SEC filing, Varsity Tutors posted $106 million in revenue for 2020, with a loss of $23 million.

    In 2020, companies like Skillsoft and Meten were purchased and went public through a SPAC.

  • Former edX Executive Raises $7.5M to Build a Course Catalog Using AI Tools

    Former edX Executive Raises $7.5M to Build a Course Catalog Using AI Tools

    IBL News | New York

    Esme Learning Solutions—a Boston, MA-based ed-tech company led by former edX and Pearson executive, Beth Porter, along with David Shrierannounced last week the close of a $7.5 million Series A financing round.

    The funding—led by Adit Ventures—will help the company to further develop AI tools applied to its portfolio of executive-level courses, offered in conjunction with colleges and universities.

    Currently, it has three 6-week courses with Oxford University, priced at £2,350: Fintech Programme, Cyber Security for Business Leaders, and Blockchain Strategy Programme.

    Founded two years ago and with a staff over 20 people, the start-up plans to announce new classes with MIT’s School of Architecture.

    “Our vision is to create a truly effective online learning experience that rivals that of an in-person, face-to-face classroom,” said the company. It creates live simulations and small group exercises that emulate work scenarios.

    “We blend high-production-quality video, formative assessments, and interactive media with learning design principles that emphasize measurement and feedback, augmented by AI.”

     

  • The Pandemic Caused a Huge Financial Hit to Public Research Universities

    The Pandemic Caused a Huge Financial Hit to Public Research Universities

    IBL News | New York

    The 199 U.S. public research universities—which employ three million faculty and staff—lost $17.7 billion in revenues during the pandemic and employment fell 14%. In addition, they had to spend another $3.1 billion to take safety measures last fall.

    This is what the Association of Public and Land-grant Universities (APLU) reported to Congress while requesting relief funding. So far, they have received $5.7 billion.

    “APLU urges Congress to provide $97 billion in the next Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund to address the emergency needs of colleges and universities and those we serve.”

    “The $15.1 billion gap of funding number will, unfortunately, continue to grow significantly,” announced APLU.

    On the other hand, the University of Michigan’s Ann Arbor campus’ students will remain at home for two weeks to slow the spread of the virus, following the recommendation of health officials. The university has recently identified 175 COVID-19 cases among students, including 14 of the B.1.1.7 variant that was first detected in Britain.

  • Udemy.com Hires a New President as Its Growth Continues

    Udemy.com Hires a New President as Its Growth Continues

    IBL News | New York 

    Udemy.com announced this Wednesday the appointment of a new President, Greg Brown.

    Brown [in the picture] most recently served as CEO of Reflektive, an employee performance platform. Prior to this company, he was the Senior Vice President of International Business at Blackhawk Network and held the position of Chief Revenue Officer at Achievers.

    This key hire comes at a growth state for Udemy, which accelerated with the pandemic. In 2020, Udemy reached a $3.25 billion valuation and Udemy for Business surpassed $100 million in annual recurring revenue, according to its data.

    Udemy, the largest global marketplace for online learning, claims to reach over 35 million learners with 57,000 instructors teaching 130,000 courses in more than 65 languages.

  • An MITx Course on edX Explores Solutions for the Massive and Persistent World Poverty

    An MITx Course on edX Explores Solutions for the Massive and Persistent World Poverty

    IBL News | New York

    MITx launched on edX.org an 11-week, free course for learners interested in solving the massive and persistent economic poverty in the world.

    The Challenges of Global Poverty is taught by two Nobel Prize instructors: Abhijit Vinayak Banerjee, Ford Foundation International Professor of Economics, winner of the 2019 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences, and Esther Duflo, Abdul Latif Jameel Professor of Poverty Alleviation and Development Economics in the Department of Economics, winner of the 2019 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences.

    The course–part of the MITx MicroMasters program in Data, Economics, and Development Policy—challenges economics to provide solutions.

    The authors pose the following questions:

    “Is extreme poverty a thing of the past? What is economic life like when living under a dollar per day? Are the poor always hungry? How do we make schools work for poor citizens? How do we deal with the disease burden? Is microfinance invaluable or overrated? Without property rights, is life destined to be “nasty, brutish, and short”? Should we leave economic development to the market? Should we leave economic development to non-governmental organizations (NGOs)? Does foreign aid help or hinder? Where is the best place to intervene?”