Category: Platforms | Tech

  • Coursera’s Blockbuster Classes of 2019: Preeminence of AI, with 2M Enrollments

    Coursera’s Blockbuster Classes of 2019: Preeminence of AI, with 2M Enrollments

    IBL News | New York

    Coursera’s AI-centric courses and Specializations will soon reach the milestone of two million enrollments in 2019, according to the company’s data. In this area, one of the most requested courses was AI For Everyone, taught by Coursera’s co-founder Andrew Ng.

    Other blockbuster courses and specializations were Learning How to Learn, from McMaster University and UC San Diego;  The Science of Well-Being, from Yale, IBM Data Science Professional Certificate (with 135,000 enrolled) and Google IT Support Professional Certificate (50,000 enrolled).

    “Demand for industry certificates is on the rise, as are innovative models for stackable credentials,” Dil Sidhu, Chief Content Officer at Coursera, wrote in a blog-post yesterday. “This marks a new era of higher education that recognizes the need for stackable content before entering a degree program.”

    The ranking of the most popular courses of 2019 features seven universities and three corporations:

    1. Machine Learning (Stanford)
    2. Learning How to Learn: Powerful mental tools to help you master tough subjects (McMaster University and UC San Diego)
    3. The Science of Well-Being (Yale)
    4. Programming for Everybody (Getting Started with Python) (University of Michigan)
    5. AI for Everyone (deeplearning.ai)
    6. Neural Networks and Deep Learning (deeplearning.ai)
    7. English for Career Development (University of Pennsylvania)
    8. Algorithms, Part I (Princeton)
    9. Introduction to TensorFlow for Artificial Intelligence, Machine Learning, and Deep Learning (deeplearning.ai)
    10. What Is Data Science? (IBM)

    Regarding the most popular Specializations and Professional Certificates of 2019, this is the list:

    1. Python for Everybody (University of Michigan)
    2. Deep Learning (deeplearning.ai)
    3. IBM Data Science (IBM)
    4. Google IT Support (Google)
    5. Architecting with Google Compute Engine (Google Cloud)
    6. Applied Data Science with Python (University of Michigan)
    7. Data Science (John Hopkins University)
    8. Excel Skills for Business (Macquarie University)
    9. Data Engineering, Big Data, and Machine Learning on GCP (Google Cloud)
    10. Improve Your English Communication Skills (Georgia Institute of Technology)

    With a catalog of over 3,800 courses, 400 Specializations, 16 degrees, 13 Professional Certificates, and six MasterTrack Certificates, Coursera reported annual growth of eight million users on a learner base of 45 million, with an age average of 32 years-old and the US, India, China, Mexico, Brazil, the UK, and Russia being their largest markets.

    • Coursera’s Top Courses of 2018  |  Top Courses of 2017

  • Two Professors from Dartmouth and IMT of France Awarded After their ‘C Programming with Linux’ Course

    Two Professors from Dartmouth and IMT of France Awarded After their ‘C Programming with Linux’ Course

    IBL News | New York

    Dartmouth College Professor Petra Bonfert-Taylor and Institut Mines-Télécom (IMT) of France Professor Rémi Sharrock won the 2019 edX Prize for Exceptional Contributions in Online Teaching and Learning. The announcement was done during a virtual Town Hall, which replaced the annual edX Global Forum (canceled because of the uprising in Hong Kong).

    The winners teach, through a joint partner program, the C Programming with Linux Professional Certificate program. This class has been running on edX.org since June 2018 and will be offered again in March 2020.

    To date, the program has logged over 170,000 enrollments in the seven courses of the series.

    “Both instructors solved how to provide rich, formative feedback to learners in real-time, at scale,” Anant Agarwal, co-CEO at edX, explained in a blog-post. “By using two open-source learning environments, the team was able to remove the most common barriers to beginner coders.”

    The two professors and their team spent a full year intensively working on the design, production, and development in this seven-course sequence.

    Part of Bonfert-Taylor and Sharrock’s team were: Joseph Beaudoin, senior video producer at Dartmouth; Michael Goudzwaard, DartmouthX lead; Delphine Lalire, MOOC program manager at IMT; Ella Hamonic, an independent instructional designer commissioned by IMT; and Mathias Hiron, developer at IMT.

    “The world is a better place when knowledge flows freely,” Professor Bonfert-Taylor said. “One of my biggest passions is to transform education through the development of programs that provide accessible and high-quality student-centered learning opportunities across international and socio-economic boundaries.”

    The two winners of the edX Prize were chosen among more finalists, as shown below.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • edX & Platforms | November 2019: Python 3, MOOCs, Georgia Tech, IEEE, D2L Brightspace, Cybrary…

    edX & Platforms | November 2019: Python 3, MOOCs, Georgia Tech, IEEE, D2L Brightspace, Cybrary…

    Newsletter format  |  Click here to subscribe ]

    NOVEMBER 2019 – NEWSLETTER #22  |  More breaking news at IBL News  |  Noticias en Español

     

    edX | Open edX

    • The Open edX Platform Prepares Its Upgrade into Python 3

    Introduction to Java Programming Course Reaches 500K Enrollees

    • The edX Organization Adopts a More Commercial Structure Appointing a New Co-CEO

     

    MOOCs

    MOOCs Not Following a Revenue Model: GW Is Satisfied with Its Online Massive Courses

    • The New Face of MOOCs: Modular Credentials Stackable Into Degrees from Multiple Universities

    • IEEE Learning With MOOCS 2019 Five Leading Keynotes in Video

     

    Udacity

    • Udacity’s Achievement with its Nanodegree Program: Over 100,000 Graduates

    • With Intel, Udacity Offers a Scholarship Program for Edge AI Development

     

    Georgia Tech

    • “Faculty Buy-In Is By Far the Reason Why Georgia Tech’s OMSCS Has Worked So Well”

    • Over 1,000 Students Will Graduate from Georgia Tech’s Online Master in Computer Science

     

    Platforms

    • Brightspace LMS Retains Its Customers Despite a Massive Transition to the Cloud

    • Cybrary Training Platform on Cybersecurity Gets a New Round of Funding

     

    2019 Upcoming Events

    • Education Calendar  –  NOVEMBER  |  DECEMBER  |  JAN – JUNE 2020

     

     


    This newsletter is created in collaboration with IBL Education, a New York City-based company that has built the IBL Platform. Read the latest IBL Newsletter   |  Archive of Open edX Newsletters

  • Brightspace LMS Retains Its Customers Despite a Massive Transition to the Cloud

    Brightspace LMS Retains Its Customers Despite a Massive Transition to the Cloud

    IBL News | New York

    D2L, whose signature product is the Brightspace LMS, announced yesterday that it completed in moving 100% of its clients to the AWS Cloud, in a modernization effort that took three to five years.

    In addition, DSL – one of the three commercial LMSs, along with Canvas and Blackboard Learn– added other improvements to their core platform.

    The major transition to the cloud has allowed D2L to retain 98% of its education clients, according to its data.

    “We said we’d do it, we did it — and our customers can count on us to deliver,” said D2L CEO John Baker. “We listened closely to our clients to make sure we were doing it right.”

  • MOOCS Not Following a Revenue Model: GW Is Satisfied with Its Online Massive Courses

    MOOCS Not Following a Revenue Model: GW Is Satisfied with Its Online Massive Courses

    IBL News | New York

    Not all schools have turned into the all-for-business MOOC-model. The George Washington University (GW), which hosts four MOOCs, still holds the belief that self-paced classes help disseminate knowledge at no cost.

    In addition, officials at GW said the courses help their schools reach out to thousands of people from around the globe and make learning accessible beyond the GW community for students who can not attend classes full or part-time on-campus or online.

    Ken Schappelle, Director of Marketing and Communications for the School of Nursing, said at GW’s The Hatchet“by the belief that all people deserve quality health care, we aspire to be trusted advocates for the advancement of societal well-being in the clinic, community, and statehouse.”

    The School of Nursing offers two MOOCs, one on healthcare safety launched in May 2016 and one on clinical simulations launched in June.

    These courses have attracted more than 10,000 enrollees from around the world, with especially “strong” representation from Europe and Asia.

    MOOCs at The George Washington University started in 2014, with Dr. Lorena Barba, a professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering in the School of Engineering and Applied Science.

    She established two semester-long MOOCs in computing and aerodynamics in 2014 and 2017.

    More than 10,000 users have enrolled in her Practical Numerical Methods with Python course since its inception in 2014.

    The course teaches users how to work with Python, an online programming language.

    Barba has taken on the responsibility for creating, running and updating the existing courses, which are fully open at openedx.seas.gwu.edu.

    “These are all a ‘one-woman show,’” she explained.

  • The Open edX Platform Prepares Its Upgrade into Python 3

    The Open edX Platform Prepares Its Upgrade into Python 3

    IBL News | New York

    The Open edX platform is immersed in a race against the clock to upgrade to Python 3, as Python 2 will be non-supported and deprecated at the end of 2019. Meaning, if someone finds a security problem in Python 2, it will not have the ability to be easily fixed.

    The Python Software Foundation decided that January 1st of 2020 will be the day that it will sunset Python 2. Python 2 was released in 2000 and today there are improvements that Python 2 can’t handle.

    A part of the upgrade of the Open edX platform corresponds to course authors. In this regard, the edX managing team has urged instructors who use Python Evaluated Input problems to immediately upgrade into Python 3.

    Recently, edX outlined in this document how it plans to scope the problem, migrate the code, and work with the Open edX community to “ensure that the process is as painless as possible, and meets the needs of our stakeholders.”

    The Open edX software is considered a large project, spanning many applications and GitHub repositories, with even more dependencies on third-party libraries.

    “Thanks to helping from the community, we’re making good progress,” Ned Batchelder, Open edX Software Architect said. “The Python test suite for our main repository now runs under both Python 2 and Python 3.”

    Another porting effort ahead points to Django, the framework extensively used on Open edX web applications. The current version 1.11 of Django is coming to its end soon and there is a need to move to Django 2.2.

    Once the platform runs on Python 3 and Django 2.2, the next Open edX release, called Juniper, will get started.

     

    • OEP-7: Migrating to Python 3

  • Instructure Announces It Is Exploring to Sell the Company – Estimated to be Worth $2.5B

    Instructure Announces It Is Exploring to Sell the Company – Estimated to be Worth $2.5B

    IBL News | New York

    Instructure (NYSE: INST), the company behind Canvas LMS, publicly announced that it has begun to explore a number of strategic alternatives “to maximize shareholder value”, including a possible sale. Canvas owns about 38% of the LMS market.

    “These alternatives may include continuing as a standalone public company, going private, or being purchased by a strategic partner,” the company said in a statement Thursday.

    Instructure’s board retained J.P. Morgan as its financial advisor and Cooley LLP as its legal advisor.

    The move of the board took place in response to the pressure by activist investors Sachem Head, Praesidium Investment Management and more recently, Jana Partners, who disclosed it had a 1% stake. They called for Instructure to explore a sale, reportedly identifying multiple potential private equity buyers.

    Kevin Oram, Praesidium’s Co-Founder and Managing Partner, said last week that selling Bridge –Instructure’s unprofitable employee development platform– would unlock the value of Canvas, which he estimated to be worth $2.5 billion.

    Phil Hill, consultant and author of Phil on Ed Tech blog, wrote that competitor Blackboard went through a similar process a few years ago, going private in 2011. Blackboard considered a sale in 2015 but didn’t go through with it.

    Instructure’s previously scheduled financial analyst day on December 3 was canceled “to allow management and the board to explore these strategic alternatives for the company,” said the Salt Lake City-based corporation.

    The stock has gained significant value since activists hedge funds started to call for a sale, especially this week, when it moved from $47.91 on November 13 to $52.98 on November 15.

     

     

    IBL News: News about Canvas LMS and Instructure

  • With Intel, Udacity Offers a Scholarship Program for Edge AI Development

    With Intel, Udacity Offers a Scholarship Program for Edge AI Development

    IBL News | New York

    Udacity announced yesterday in San Francisco the Intel Edge AI Scholarship Program and the Intel Edge AI for IoT Developers Nanodegree Program.

    The pedagogical goal is to teach developers to accelerate the development and deployment of high-performance computer vision and deep learning solutions using Intel Distribution of OpenVINO toolkit (which allows deploying pre-trained deep learning models.)

    In the first phase of the scholarship program, students will get access to the Intel Edge AI Fundamentals course, the first class of the Intel Edge AI for IoT Developers Nanodegree program.

    Students who successfully complete this course will earn a full scholarship to the Intel Edge AI for IoT Developers Nanodegree program. The number of seats is limited to 750 students.

    “With Udacity, we are training the next generation of AI developers to go where the data is generated in the physical world: at the Edge,” said Jonathan Ballon Intel Vice President and General Manager, Internet of Things Group. “Optimizing the direct deployment of models on edge devices requires knowledge of unique constraints like power, network bandwidth & latency, varying compute architectures and more.”

    The deadline to apply is December 10.

     

     

  • Udacity’s Achievement with its Nanodegree Program: Over 100,000 Graduates

    Udacity’s Achievement with its Nanodegree Program: Over 100,000 Graduates

    IBL News | New York

    Udacity’s Nanodegree has revealed as the most promising credential in higher education at scale. Today, there are over 100,000 graduates in the Nanodegree program, sources told IBL News. [Update: Five weeks later, Udacity’s CEO confirmed this data.]

    The Nanodegree online program currently includes five schools: Data Science, Artificial Intelligence, Programming, Autonomous Systems, and Cloud Computing.

    Conceived as an industry-oriented credential for career-seeking and job-ready students, Nanodegree was described by Udacity’s founder Sebastian Thrun as the new fourth degree, beyond the three common university degrees — the Bachelor’s, Master’s, and PhD.”

    Sebastian Thrun claims that his company, which has achieved the status of a unicorn of $1 billion, is on the way to becoming the “University of Silicon Valley” –although it’d be an unaccredited university.

    “The Nanodegree program is well on its way to becoming a de-facto standard for hiring and corporate training in the tech industry,” he recently wrote.

    However, Udacity’s newly appointed CEO, Gabriel Dalporto, a former manager at LendingTree, with no experience in education, contradicted the founder’s view, talking about the need to “get more clarity on our long-term vision and strategy” and the more upcoming partnerships with other universities.

    “I do believe that we will be partnering with universities because we can provide the specialization in a lot of areas that universities just aren’t prepared to teach,” he said in an interview at EdSurge last week.

    “We’re a company that is going to help universities and governments around the world retrain the world’s workforce in an extremely cost-effective way.”

    • PitchBook: This day in unicorn history: Udacity and its $1B edtech experiment

  • The New Face of MOOCs: Modular Credentials Stackable Into Degrees from Multiple Universities

    The New Face of MOOCs: Modular Credentials Stackable Into Degrees from Multiple Universities

    IBL News | New York

    “In the past, MOOCs were individual courses; today are sequences of courses that converge into micro-credentials like Certificate or MicroMaster programs,” Anant Agarwal, Co-CEO at edX, said in an interview with IBL News during the Learning With MOOCs 2019 Conference, which took place last week in Milwaukee. [Watch the interview below]

    Modular credentials that stack up into new degrees, offered by different higher education institutions, are an upcoming trend, according to Anant Agarwal. “This is the new face of MOOCs“.

    “Multiple universities will supply modular credentials, and learners will be able to stack them up into full degrees; I see this as the next step“.

    One early example is MicroMasters from MIT that is combined with courses from Arizona State University to become a Master’s degree.

    Prior to the interview, Anant Agarwal highlighted on a keynote the importance of understanding that learners are the new stakeholders. He elaborated on the different types of learners. IBL exclusively recorded his talk: