Category: Platforms | Tech

  • Coursera Raises an Additional $103 Million – Closer to an IPO?

    Coursera Raises an Additional $103 Million – Closer to an IPO?

    Coursera.org has raised an additional $103 million in funding, Jeff Maggioncalda, CEO of the company announced.

    This investment, in a Series E equity round, comes from the Australian SEEK Group ($50 million) and two existing investors, Future Fund and NEA.

    How this funding will be used was not disclosed. “The additional funding gives us the resources and flexibility to further expand internationally and to accelerate the development of a learning platform that currently serves 40 million learners, 1,800 businesses, and over 150 top universities,” said Jeff Maggioncalda.

    Coursera, the leading MOOC platform which competes with Udacity and edX, has raised a total of $313 million in funding over 9 rounds, including this latest one.

    This investment places the company closer to an IPO.

  • Harvard’s Blockstore Technology Will Enable Personalized Learning on Open edX

    Harvard’s Blockstore Technology Will Enable Personalized Learning on Open edX

    Zoe Mackay | IBL News

    Robert Lue, the Faculty Director and Principal investigator for LabXchange at Harvard has envisioned an advanced way to create personalized learning paths through community engagement on Open edX with the upcoming release of Blockstore.

    “The hope is that what Blockstore on Open edX will allow us to do is truly create an environment for learning that is extremely flexible,” he said.

    LabXchange, which launches in September 2019, “represents a real effort to see if we can move Open edX to the next stage of evolution where we’ll be able to create much more flexible learning experiences that can be personalized.”

    Personalized learning started with MOOCs, and while there are vast libraries of open educational resources, these learning assets are locked within specific learning sequences — or courses.

    This is the issue LabXchange wants to fix, by proposing a single dynamic repository called the Blockstore. “Instead of [learning assets] being locked into courses, they are broken up at the asset level — to individual videos, problems, text documents, HTML pages, etc,” which are meta-tagged and searchable.

    Lue shows how you will be able to build a new learning pathway, by utilizing individual learning assets, remixing them and creating customized content.

    “What we’ve done is created a new environment where content can be used in a variety of different ways…this allows, for the first time, the ability to remix it and issue it with a unique URL that let’s say a teacher can share with her class free of charge.”

    LabXchange has also created a learning network to share “what [people] have learned from,” which allows others to share the learning pathways that can be built, have personal profiles, and the ability to mentor.

    “The hope is that what Blockstore on Open edX will allow us to do is truly create an environment for learning that is extremely flexible, that will [allow people] to work with an entirely different set of data around how content is used and reused by instructors, by learners, how are things clustered, how that aligns with performance, how that aligns with building proposals, to solve problems and what sort of networks can now form on a platform that allows you to network through learning and trying to solve problems.”

    LabXchange will launch in September 2019, and Blockstore plans on being rolled out over the next two releases of Open edX.

    Watch the Robert Lue’s full talk at the Open edX conference in the video below.

     

     

  • Learning At Scale | April 2019: Georgia Tech, Coursera, edX, 2U, Instructure…

    Learning At Scale | April 2019: Georgia Tech, Coursera, edX, 2U, Instructure…

    Newsletter format  |  Click here to subscribe ]

    APRIL 2019  –  NEWSLETTER #21 ON ONLINE EDUCATION AT SCALE

     

    DEGREES AT SCALE

    • Holy Cross and Notre Dame Start a New Model Around an Online Master’s

    The story of OMSCS, the largest master’s program in computer science, with 10,000 students and 2,000 alumni

    • Master’s degrees which can be completed online

    • Research: Top online Artificial Intelligence courses and programs at scale

    Success at Scale: The growth of large-scale online programs (UPCEA Report)

     

    ACADEMIA

    Technologies and policies needed to transform education, according to ASU’s Michael Crow

    • Carnegie Mellon University announced that it will open source its OLI adaptive software and LearnSphere learning analytics platform. These tools are valued at $100 million.

    Charles Isbell, professor and executive associate dean, named Dean of College of Computing at Georgia Tech, effective July 1

    37 % of all graduate education in the U.S. is now online or blended. A significant transition ahead

    Most colleges report online students perform about the same as face-to-face

    Gartner: Top 10 strategic technologies impacting higher ed in 2019

    • View: OPMs as banks and enrollment machines

     

    MOOC PLATFORMS

    Coursera announced two MOOC-based degrees from the University of Colorado Boulder

    • edX, the first non-profit OPM: “We can change the economics of customer acquisition and retention”

    Udacity laid off 20% of its workforce, 75 employees, in order to be “a profitable company by the next quarter”

    GFC Learning Free becomes the second largest MOOC platform

    • FutureLearn MOOC platform offers unlimited access for $199 per year

    Coursera released a Global Skills Index benchmarking 60 countries and 10 industries

     

    INTERVIEWS

    • Ray Schroeder: “Universities have to change to meet students’ needs”

    • Michigan Ross’s Develops One of the Most Ambitious Initiatives in Online Learning

    • Philanthropy University’s CEO says MOOCs are about social ROI

    • “When It Comes to Paying Users, the Completion Rate Is Pretty High”, says Dhawal Shah

    • Top professor in Health Informatics predicts the need for training in FHIR

     

    INITIATIVES

    2U acquired Trilogy Education for $750 million and duplicated its portfolio of universities

    Instructure (Canvas LMS) acquired MasteryConnect for $42.5 million to expand its K-12 footprint

    Gonzaga University rolls out an AI-driven virtual assistant for tech support

    The U.S. Education Department started an investigation of eight colleges named in the admissions scandal

     

    2019 UPCOMING EVENTS

    Education Calendar  –   APRIL  |  MAY  |  JUNE  |  JULY  |  AUG – DEC 2019


     

     

    This newsletter about learning innovation is a monthly report compiled by IBL News and IBL Education. If you enjoy what you read please consider forwarding it to spread the word. Click here to subscribe.

    Archive:
    IBL Newsletter #20– March 2019
    IBL Newsletter #19– January 2019
    IBL Newsletter #18 – December 2018
    IBL Newsletter #17 – November 2018

     

  • “Moving Towards a More Inclusive, Comprehensive Open edX Community”

    “Moving Towards a More Inclusive, Comprehensive Open edX Community”

    Zoe Mackay, Chris Dowhan | IBL News

    John Mark Walker, Open edX Community Lead, said in an interview with IBL News that “we are moving towards a more inclusive, comprehensive [Open edX] community, where we hope to be the home for learning practitioners in an open source collaborative way.

    He reflects after the 2019 Open edX conference, which took place during the last week of March in San Diego.

    With 5 years of progress, Walked reminisces on the community that edX has fostered, and looks to the future of growing this community.

    Over time, we found a lot of companies, like IBM, Microsoft, Redis Labs, Mongo DB…these are all joining the party because they are seeing the power of online learning.” These companies, says Walker, utilize Open edX because of the deeper engagement with their communities, customers, and partners. “It becomes a key component of a community and marketing strategy.

    The idea of offering training to everyone who uses software as a service is relatively new, but now with things like Open edX, with an open source platform, and a growing number of people that know how to use it… you’re now getting this convergence of practitioners that are expanding the universe of online learning.”

    With 20 years of experience in open source software, Walker identifies the different approaches taken by edX. These other companies were very circular, in that “it was technologists creating technology for other technologists.” When he came to edX, he found that edX incorporated their community, and strived for collaboration.

    There is a lot of demand for this combined world where technologists and course designers and educators can come together and collaborate with each other, and that’s what we are focusing on.

    edX aims to tailor its future approach toward instructional designers and researchers. With each Open edX conference, Walker says he realizes the need to expand and give these different groups of the edX community the attention they deserve. The Open edX community “really is the most positive community I’ve ever worked in. It is the most inclusive…and you feel that energy.”

    To watch John Mark Walkers full comments following the 2019 Open edX Conference, please see the interview below.

     

     

  • NYU Engineering Offers a MicroMasters in Integrated Media on edX

    NYU Engineering Offers a MicroMasters in Integrated Media on edX

    The NYU Tandon School of Engineering joined the edX Consortium, and its first offering will be a MicroMasters in Integrated Media.

    This program, which is open for enrollment, consists of three courses followed by a capstone project (for a total of $900).

    • Creative Coding – It introduces the fundamentals of object-oriented programming, and allows the use of code as a method of self-expression in a variety of media, including 2D graphics, animation, and video processing. This course starts on September 2, 2019.
    • Theories of Media and Technology, – It examines a range of historical and contemporary trends in the theoretical analysis of media and enables students to critically describe and discuss media concepts and projects, helps gain an understanding of how people create and consume media. This course starts on December 9, 2019.
    • Media Law, – It consists of an advanced seminar that explores media and communications principles and regulations and fosters an understanding of the legal and ethical framework surrounding issues in digital media. This course starts on March 16, 2020

    “Our partnership with edX allows us to offer yet another pathway to becoming a lifelong learner,” said NYU Tandon Dean Jelena Kovačević.

    “The road to an advanced degree is not always conventional or linear, and we are proud to offer a new entry point for motivated students, from mortarboard to beyond. We know that science, technology, and engineering are vital and enriching subjects, whether you are a K-12 student or a mid-career professional, and we are committed to offering learning opportunities to those at every stage.”

    “At NYU Tandon, we are finding novel ways to engage nontraditional students, such as our online Bridge Program, which we created to provide individuals with non-engineering backgrounds with the tools needed to embark on graduate-level studies here, and our MicroMasters program on edX is a welcome addition in our efforts to bridge the gap between aspiration and attainment,” she added.

    “NYU Tandon’s Integrated Digital Media program provides a wholly unique combination of theory and practice that sets it apart from other digital media offerings,” said R. Luke DuBois and Scott Fitzgerald, co-directors of the school’s IDM program.

    “We consider this MicroMaster’s to be only the beginning, and look forward to partnering with edX in the future,” stated Nasir Memon, NYU Tandon’s associate dean for online learning.

     

  • Michael Crow at ASU GSV: Technologies and Policies We Need to Transform Education

    Michael Crow at ASU GSV: Technologies and Policies We Need to Transform Education

    Michael M. Crow, President at Arizona State University (ASU), talked today on a keynote during the ASU GSV Conference in San Diego about the importance of connecting the workforce with lifelong learning opportunities.

    He elaborated on ASU’s model and mentioned the “technologies we need” to achieve a maximum impact in education. He listed those technologies in the following six categories. Personalized learning at scale will be one of the requirements.

    Mr. Crow, who has transformed ASU into one of the nation’s leading public metropolitan research universities, explained that “there are some policies as well as cultural norms and expectations we need to accomplish”, as reflected in these slides.

    The President of ASU stated that workplace partners are like “legos”, while “learning systems have multiple potential configurations”.

    At the kickoff of his talk, Michael M. Crow elaborated about how a universal learning system should be designed and what building blocks would be needed to create a new university.

    In this view, these are the three existing clusters:

    Exploring how corporations should help employees attain higher education, Crow highlighted ASU’s partnership with Starbucks, Adidas, and Uber.

    Kevin Johnson, CEO of Starbucks, revealed on Monday that about 12,000 Starbucks employees are taking ASU classes through the Starbucks College Achievement Plan, with about 3,000 graduates so far.

    “We find now that 50 percent of the graduates stay at Starbucks and get promoted faster and about 50 percent move on,” he said.  “In new applicants for jobs at Starbucks, nearly 20 percent indicate their primary reason is to get an education in partnership with ASU.”  

    Steve Ellis, Managing Partner at TPG Growth and the Rise Fund, said that a new model of education accessed via the workplace could help ease income inequality.

    “What would it take for us to create a movement that would make this a responsibility of all corporations and organizations? There was more than $800 billion of company stock bought back in 2018. What if we spent a tiny fraction of that to create programs like the Starbucks College Achievement Plan?”

    Resources:

     

     

  • Coursera Announces Two MOOC-Based Degrees from the University of Colorado Boulder

    Coursera Announces Two MOOC-Based Degrees from the University of Colorado Boulder

    Coursera, the leading MOOC platform, announced during its 2019 Partners Conference in London the launch of two more online degrees, both from the University of Colorado Boulder: a Master of Science in Electrical Engineering (MS-EE) and a Master of Science in Data Science (MS-DS). This brings the total number of degrees announced on Coursera’s platform to 14.

    Admission to both degrees will be performance-based, and there will be no prerequisites or an application. Students will need to pass a series of courses and obtain stackable credentials. The pathway to enrollment for the MS-EE is expected to open in 2019.

    Last week, Imperial College London announced a Master of Science in Machine Learning on Coursera. It will be one of the world’s first online master’s degrees in Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence. [Research: Top Online Artificial Intelligence Courses and Programs].

    “Degrees continue to be the most valuable credential for career and economic mobility. In an era of rapid change and evolving skills, degrees and credentials are key to career advancement. The Coursera platform has been able to provide access to top quality degrees at a highly affordable cost,” said Jeff Maggioncalda, CEO of Coursera during the annual Conference (in the picture).

    Coursera.org, which competes with edX, Udacity, and FutureLearn, works with 190 top universities and industry partners and has accumulated 40 million registered learners, according to its latest data. Its Coursera for Business division has reported the launch of 97 new courses in February and March of this year, including 13 courses in Arabic, 10 in Spanish, and 11 in Russian.

    Here is a selection of tweets of the London Conference:

     

  • MIT’s ‘Intro to CS Using Python’ On EdX Reaches 1.2 Million Enrollments

    MIT’s ‘Intro to CS Using Python’ On EdX Reaches 1.2 Million Enrollments

    The “Introduction to Computer Science Using Python” course on edX has reached 1.2 million enrollments to date, becoming the most popular MOOC in MIT’s history, the institution reported.

    Launched as an online offering in 2012, this course was derived from a campus-based and Open CourseWare subject at MIT developed and originally taught by John Guttag, the Dugald C. Jackson Professor of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering. It was initially developed as a 13-week course, but in 2014 it was separated into two courses, 6.00.1x and 6.00.2x.

    Also, it was one of the very first MOOCs offered by MIT on the edX platform.

    “This course is about teaching students to use computation, in this case described by Python, to build models and explore broader questions of what can be done with computation to understand the world,” said John Guttag.

    “It is designed to help students begin to think like a computer scientist,” says Grimson. “By the end of it, the student should feel very confident that given a problem, whether it’s something from work or their personal life, they could use computation to solve that problem.”

    “At its core, the 6.00 series teaches computational thinking,” adds Bell. “It does this using the Python programming language, but the course also teaches programming concepts that can be applied in any other programming language.”

     

     

  • Analysis: Certifications to Grow Your Developer Community

    Analysis: Certifications to Grow Your Developer Community

    By Miguel Amigot II (*)

     

    The Problem

    We all have too much information to process, too many things to do, and too many libraries, frameworks, and languages to learn. Moreover, everything has an opportunity cost… but not everything has an equal return.

    In order to grow an open source community, it’s not enough to release great software, blog posts, and videos, if the truly relevant KPI’s have to do with developer engagements and statistics on GitHub like how many people interact with our repositories by starring, creating issues and submitting pull requests.

    Since we compete for engineers’ very limited attention and time, we have to make it worth it for them to learn and benefit from our software.

    From an incentive analysis standpoint, what can we do to attract and retain engineers’ attention? What is the real reason that they would choose to invest four hours of their time learning about some tools out of the many others that flood Hacker News every week?

     

    The Solution: Certifications

    Engineers need to learn the latest technology in order to advance their careers and establish with their employers, peers, and recruiters that they’ve learned it.

    Consequently, if they have to choose between spending four hours per week learning X as opposed to Y, they’re going to focus on the tool that has the highest rate of return for their careers. All else being equal, if they can get some sort of certificate or credential from one of them, then that’s going to make it that more compelling. Especially if it’s one that can be posted on LinkedIn or another channel.

    From the educator’s perspective, sharing certificates on social media is also going to viralize the offering and lead to a positive feedback loop, as peers are going to view and wonder what it takes to earn it.

    The level of effort that goes into earning that certificate or microcredential can vary: sometimes it can be indicative of an understanding of the fundamentals of a topic while other times it can represent true mastery. The important thing is that the learners be able to obtain some sort of credit or recognition for the time they invest.


    Case Study: NVIDIA Deep Learning Institute

    In less than a year, the NVIDIA Deep Learning Institute at courses.nvidia.com surpassed 100k users following a simple idea: in order to attract users, you have to make their time worth it.

    NVIDIA launched a catalog of high-quality deep learning courses and provided learners with tangible, verifiable and visible certificates that they could post on LinkedIn and Twitter.

    This allowed learners to go to their employers and prove that they know the topics since NVIDIA’s certificates cannot be earned unless students train models sufficiently well.

    From a market standpoint, NVIDIA’s deep learning education program has become much more valuable than any other which does not issue a certificate.

    Needless to say, many other organizations such as Udacity, Coursera, edX, IBM, Red Hat, Databricks and others have also followed this mantra, evidenced by the frequency with which their learners share their credentials on social media.


    Next Steps: Certify Your Open Source Community

    Grow your open source community by issuing certificates that explicitly make it worthwhile for engineers to learn your technologies.

    Implement an online learning platform which compiles documentation, readings, videos and multimedia materials (most of which likely exist from conferences and blog posts, anyway) into attractive online courses which, ideally, won’t last for longer than four hours.

    These courses will culminate in certifications or microcredentials, which can correspond to any of the following: understanding the fundamental use cases and codebase, maintenance, unit testing, extensions or applications to a certain industry.

    They will also provide developers with a “how to” venue to get answers, collaborate with each other and, potentially, benefit from mentor support.

    If you want to implement a high level of rigor in your courses then, like NVIDIA, issue labs that provide learners with programming environments where they must achieve certain outcomes in order to pass assignments.

    In any case, the argument is clear: if you want engineers to invest time learning about your technologies, then you have to make it worth it for them.

    * Miguel Amigot II is CTO at IBL Education

  • EdX as a New OPM: “We Can Change the Economics of Customer Acquisition and Retention”

    EdX as a New OPM: “We Can Change the Economics of Customer Acquisition and Retention”

    Adam Medros, President and CCO at edX, explained in a video-interview with IBL News the new business model that edX Inc is adding to its strategy to become financially sustainable.

    Medros elaborated on the B2B, the edX For Business initiative, which he defined as “a natural extension of selling in bulk what is already available for B2C”.

    He also referred to edX’s new “Lean OPM” model. “Online Master’s is a fantastic market opportunity: we can change affordability, accessibility, and the cost of offering a degree,” he explained.

    “Together, with schools, we can change the economics of customer acquisition and retention”. “Our approach starts with stackability and modularity of courses”, added Mr. Medros.

    The determination to offer its services as a “Lean OPM” (Online Program Manager) was one of the relevant announcements at the 2019 Open edX conference last week in San Diego.“We are doing it differently from other OPMs. We give universities more control, and we are the only non-for-profit OPM”, said Anant Agarwal, CEO of edX.

    The main value of the edX (and Coursera, too) offer in this area is the cost of acquisition per learner. Usually, with 2U and other traditional OPMs the cost of getting a student goes beyond $5,000, experts told IBL.