I enjoyed the Udacity AI course, but I was repeatedly frustrated by the many errors that were never corrected and especially Peter Norvig's nails on blackboard scribbling sounds with his felt tip. Am I the only one who could hear this?
Overall, I think there was a real lack of attention to detail after an excellent job on getting the big picture right.
That said, MOOCs have revolutionized my ability to keep up with technology trends and I spend 1-2 hours daily on Coursera and Udacity. I do not care whatsoever about certificates or completing courses. I just care about raw knowledge acquisition and reviewing previously learned material (i.e. refreshing my calculus, statistics, algorithms, and linear algebra skills).
I personally think the future of this business will involve celebrity teachers like Andrew Ng and Sebastian Thrun putting together more polished versions of their courses and then allowing a cottage industry to grow around tutoring people through them at their own pace rather than shoehorning a freestyle approach to learning into effective semesters and quarters.
If this is infotainment, it sure beats the likes of Fox News and MSNBC.
> I personally think the future of this business will involve celebrity teachers like Andrew Ng and Sebastian Thrun putting together more polished versions of their courses and then allowing a cottage industry to grow around tutoring people through them at their own pace rather than shoehorning a freestyle approach to learning into effective semesters and quarters.
This is actually fairly similar to my own classroom designs, so I wanted to call it out for emphasis.
Overall, I think there was a real lack of attention to detail after an excellent job on getting the big picture right.
That said, MOOCs have revolutionized my ability to keep up with technology trends and I spend 1-2 hours daily on Coursera and Udacity. I do not care whatsoever about certificates or completing courses. I just care about raw knowledge acquisition and reviewing previously learned material (i.e. refreshing my calculus, statistics, algorithms, and linear algebra skills).
I personally think the future of this business will involve celebrity teachers like Andrew Ng and Sebastian Thrun putting together more polished versions of their courses and then allowing a cottage industry to grow around tutoring people through them at their own pace rather than shoehorning a freestyle approach to learning into effective semesters and quarters.
If this is infotainment, it sure beats the likes of Fox News and MSNBC.