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Comment by TomasBM

3 days ago

I've seen arguments that opening up fresh material makes it easy for less honest institutions to plagiarize your work. I've even heard professors say they don't want to share their slides or record their lectures, because it's their copyright.

I personally don't like this, because it makes a place more exclusive with legal moats, not genuine prestige. If you're a professor, this also makes your work less known, not more. IMO the only beneficiaries are either those who paid a lot to be there, lecturers who don't want to adapt, and university admins.

>I've even heard professors say they don't want to share their slides or record their lectures, because it's their copyright.

No, it's because they don't want people to find out they've been reusing the same slide deck since 2004

I wish we would speed run this to where these super star profs open their classes to 20,000 people at a lower price point (but where this yields them more profit)

  • That's basically MOOCs, but those kinda fizzled out. It's tough to actually stay focused for a full-length university-level course outside of a university environment IMO, especially if you're working and have a family, etc.

    (I mean, I have no idea how Coursera/edX/etc are doing behind the scenes, but it doesn't seem like people talk about them the way they used to ~10 years ago.)

    • They're still around and offering new online courses. I hope they don't have any problems to keep afloat, because they do offer useful material at the very least.

      I agree it's hard, but I think it's because initially the lecturers were involved in the online community, which can be tiring and unrewarding even if you don't have other obligations.

      I think the courses should have purely standalone material that lecturers can publish, earn extra money, and refresh the content when it makes sense. Maybe platform moderators could help with some questions or grading, but it's even easier to have chatbot support for that nowadays. Also, platforms really need to improve.

      So, I think the problem with MOOCs has been the execution, not the concept itself.

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    • Most of the MOOCs were also watered down versions of a real course to attempt to make them accessible to a larger audience (e.g. the Stanford Coursera Machine Learning course that didn't want to assume any calculus or linear algebra background), which made them into more of a pointless brand advertisement than an actual learning resource.

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    • They are mostly used for professional courses. Learning python, java, gitlab runners, micro services with NodeJS, project management and things like that

  • I'd definitely support that.

    On the flip side, that'd require many professors and other participants in universities to rethink the role of a university degree, which proves to be much more difficult.