Education

U. of Colorado at Boulder pioneered idea of giving some students an extra year, and now other universities are adopting the model.   Editorial Tags: Engineering
U. of Colorado at Boulder pioneered idea of giving some students an extra year, and now other universities are adopting the model.   Editorial Tags: Engineering
about 1 hour ago
Challenging findings of landmark 2011 study, new data suggest that college students make significantly bigger gains in critical thinking. But differences in methodology may contribute to the differing conclusions. Editorial Tags: Assessm...
Challenging findings of landmark 2011 study, new data suggest that college students make significantly bigger gains in critical thinking. But differences in methodology may contribute to the differing conclusions. Editorial Tags: AssessmentAcademics
about 1 hour ago
ETS releases a new test to measure students' non-academic skills. Colleges want to use test for advising and finding remedial students with "grit." Editorial Tags: AssessmentRemedial education
ETS releases a new test to measure students' non-academic skills. Colleges want to use test for advising and finding remedial students with "grit." Editorial Tags: AssessmentRemedial education
about 1 hour ago
Study challenges assumption that professors have become more lenient in evaluating students, or that their grades have less "signaling" power. Another researcher challenges paper as inaccurate. Editorial Tags: Teaching
Study challenges assumption that professors have become more lenient in evaluating students, or that their grades have less "signaling" power. Another researcher challenges paper as inaccurate. Editorial Tags: Teaching
about 1 hour ago
The following colleges and universities have announced their commencement speakers for spring 2013:Editorial Tags: Commencement speakers
The following colleges and universities have announced their commencement speakers for spring 2013:Editorial Tags: Commencement speakers
about 1 hour ago
In today’s Academic Minute, Brown University's Jay Dickson examines what the world’s saltiest pond has to say about the possibility of life on Mars. Dickson is a science data analyst and lab manager in the Geological Science Departm...
In today’s Academic Minute, Brown University's Jay Dickson examines what the world’s saltiest pond has to say about the possibility of life on Mars. Dickson is a science data analyst and lab manager in the Geological Science Department at Brown, where he works in the lab of James Head. Find out more about him here. Section: Academic MinuteFile: 5-20-13_brown_water_on_mars.mp3
about 1 hour ago
Nathan O. Hatch offers 10 maxims for successful searches. Job Tags: ADMINISTRATIVE JOBSAd keywords: AdministratorsTopic: Administrators' JobsEditorial Tags: College administrationShow on Jobs site:
Nathan O. Hatch offers 10 maxims for successful searches. Job Tags: ADMINISTRATIVE JOBSAd keywords: AdministratorsTopic: Administrators' JobsEditorial Tags: College administrationShow on Jobs site:
about 1 hour ago
Education Department will delay enforcing a rule that requires states to submit evidence that colleges are authorized to operate within their borders -- and could end colleges' aid eligibility if states don't do so. Editorial T...
Education Department will delay enforcing a rule that requires states to submit evidence that colleges are authorized to operate within their borders -- and could end colleges' aid eligibility if states don't do so. Editorial Tags: Federal policyEducation Department
about 1 hour ago
Here's a course topic not currently offered by any of the providers of massive open online courses: "The Implications of Coursera’s For-Profit Business Model for Global Public Education." The course was proposed last week by Ro...
Here's a course topic not currently offered by any of the providers of massive open online courses: "The Implications of Coursera’s For-Profit Business Model for Global Public Education." The course was proposed last week by Robert Meister, professor of political and social thought in the department of the history of consciousness at the University of California at Santa Cruz and president of the Council of UC Faculty Associations. He sent a letter with his idea to Daphne Koller, a computer science professor at Stanford University and co-founder of Coursera, and then published his letter on the blog of the American Association of University Professors. Among the topics Meister proposes covering: Why venture capitalists "are willing to provide an even greater abundance of knowledge in the service of greater economic and social equality than is the State of California, which clearly has the means to spend much more than it has cost your company to reach a worldwide enrollment in the millions." The way "free MOOCs weaken the link between scarcity and quality on which the business model of all higher education, both public and private, unfortunately depends." Teaching students to "think financially about the socio-economic spreads created by our public educational system as a potential source of private profit." "[T}hat the for-profit logic of their online educational empowerment depends on the fact while they are consuming information, they are also producing information that Coursera can correlate with other data to predict what prices students with particular profiles would eventually pay for courses they are presently consuming for free." The piece ends by asking Koller if she would co-teach the course, saying "I’m sure that together we could reach a very large audience indeed." Via e-mail in response to an Inside Higher Ed question, Koller indicated that potential students might not find the course listed in the Coursera list of offerings any time soon, and that she does not consider that she was really being invited to co-teach it. "If you've read the (rather long) letter, you'll have seen that it's not actually an invitation to co-teach a course, but rather a thinly veiled attack on Coursera and the whole MOOC model," she wrote. " When we launched Coursera we introduced a completely new model for providing learners everywhere free access to a great education. It is not surprising that a model this transformative brings out skeptics and critics, and, indeed, some caution is appropriate whenever the world changes this quickly. I am happy to respond to concrete criticism of our actions or words, but Mr. Meister's letter criticizes the model not based on what Coursera has done, nor even on what we have said we would do in future, but rather based on a speculative trajectory of his own construction. Our mission, to enable anyone around the world to have access to education, and to do what's best for students, remains clear today and will not bend in the future." Ad keywords: FacultyTechnology/Faculty
about 1 hour ago
In today’s Academic Minute, Jay Dickson of Brown University explains what the world's saltiest pond has to say about the possibility of life on Mars. Learn more about the Academic Minute here. Ad keywords: Faculty
In today’s Academic Minute, Jay Dickson of Brown University explains what the world's saltiest pond has to say about the possibility of life on Mars. Learn more about the Academic Minute here. Ad keywords: Faculty
about 1 hour ago