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Coursera

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  • 19-10-2012 3:53pm
    #1
    Posts: 4,630 ✭✭✭


    I've just discovered Coursera, a company that was founded in April of this year. I'm sure you've all seen websites that offer "online courses" from universities, such as OpenCulture or iTunesU. Coursera is similar in many respects, but different — and vastly more impressive — in others.

    How Coursera describes itself:
    We are a social entrepreneurship company that partners with the top universities in the world to offer courses online for anyone to take, for free. We envision a future where the top universities are educating not only thousands of students, but millions. Our technology enables the best professors to teach tens or hundreds of thousands of students.

    Through this, we hope to give everyone access to the world-class education that has so far been available only to a select few. We want to empower people with education that will improve their lives, the lives of their families, and the communities they live in.
    Their model goes beyond all that I've seen before; no other website offers such comprehensive university courses (that I'm aware of, at least).

    How Coursera describes its courses:
    Classes offered on Coursera are designed to help you master the material. When you take one of our classes, you will watch lectures taught by world-class professors, learn at your own pace, test your knowledge, and reinforce concepts through interactive exercises. When you join one of our classes, you'll also join a global community of thousands of students learning alongside you. We know that your life is busy, and that you have many commitments on your time. Thus, our courses are designed based on sound pedagogical foundations, to help you master new concepts quickly and effectively. Key ideas include mastery learning, to make sure that you have multiple attempts to demonstrate your new knowledge; using interactivity, to ensure student engagement and to assist long-term retention; and providing frequent feedback, so that you can monitor your own progress, and know when you've really mastered the material.

    We offer courses in a wide range of topics, spanning the Humanities, Medicine, Biology, Social Sciences, Mathematics, Business, Computer Science, and many others. Whether you're looking to improve your resume, advance your career, or just learn more and expand your knowledge, we hope there will be multiple courses that you find interesting.
    To test it out, I've signed up and enrolled a course entitled Think Again: How to Reason and Argue, which is a 12 week long courses, consisting of 5-6 hours per week, and it commences on November 26th.

    If you're at all interested in online university courses, or interesting in spending a few hours a week learning something different, or something that you've always wanted to know, then go and explore their website and view their upcoming courses. It seems like an absolutely fantastic resource. I hope it becomes known to more.

    Link.


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Comments

  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Here is a list of a lot of the freely available online courses. :)


  • Posts: 4,630 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    Here is a list of a lot of the freely available online courses. :)

    Thanks, Aristotle. Such websites are great resources. I've seen many websites that offer online courses, but none I've seen come close to Coursera. With Coursera, courses begin at set dates, and there are only so many lectures released per week, which you're required to "study" to progress. There are online tests in which your comprehension is tested and gained knowledge subjected to scrutiny, meaning you won't be able to progress until you possess a sufficient understanding of the previous lectures. ("Forcing" you to attempt to understand, which is a major problem with most other free online courses I've seen: you can progress without understanding with, say, iTunesU and others.) In short, the courses resemble real university courses to a far greater degree than anything I've seen online before. I'd really recommend exploring the website.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 12,449 ✭✭✭✭pwurple


    I completly love Coursera, huge fan, I've done 5 to date. Signed up for 2 more over the next few months. Nice to be able to dip into something different.

    And FREE! :)


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,403 ✭✭✭The Gnome


    Looks pretty good, I've tried some free online stuff before but as you've said the structure of Coursera seems to be better than anything I've seen.

    Just signed up to a few classes in my areas of interest so I'll see how it goes.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    gvn wrote: »
    Thanks, Aristotle. Such websites are great resources. I've seen many websites that offer online courses, but none I've seen come close to Coursera. With Coursera, courses begin at set dates, and there are only so many lectures released per week, which you're required to "study" to progress. There are online tests in which your comprehension is tested and gained knowledge subjected to scrutiny, meaning you won't be able to progress until you possess a sufficient understanding of the previous lectures. ("Forcing" you to attempt to understand, which is a major problem with most other free online courses I've seen: you can progress without understanding with, say, iTunesU and others.) In short, the courses resemble real university courses to a far greater degree than anything I've seen online before. I'd really recommend exploring the website.

    Yep, I agree. I've done numerous Coursera courses myself. I'd recommend checking out the edX courses too, they're similar in style to Coursera (set dates, weekly lectures etc.) but I find the edX courses to be more polished. Only a few available at the moment but that will greatly increase soon. :)


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  • Posts: 4,630 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    Yep, I agree. I've done numerous Coursera courses myself. I'd recommend checking out the edX courses too, they're similar in style to Coursera (set dates, weekly lectures etc.) but I find the edX courses to be more polished. Only a few available at the moment but that will greatly increase soon as you can see form my original link.

    Oh, really? I'd no idea free online courses had reached the level of sophistication that Cousera is at, so I assumed it was the first (and only) of its kind — the last online lecture platform I used several years ago was iTunesU, which is (or, at least, was) pretty basic. edX does seem to be more polished from flicking through its courses. I'll have to sign up there, too. I've committed myself to about a half dozen courses on Coursera (out of excitement) over the next few months, which might be infeasible, but I'll give edX a go, too. Thanks.


  • Registered Users Posts: 100 ✭✭reganovich


    Was online wondering if people in ireland who were studying coursera courses would be up for meet ups to discuss material, take lectures as a group etc?

    Any interest in doing one in dublin?


  • Posts: 4,630 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    Good idea, reganovich.

    If you're unable to find people to join your in-person discussion group, and if you'd still like to discuss certain courses, you're more than welcome to attempt to create one here, in this forum. The creation of discussion groups was something discussed at this forum's foundation several years ago. If the idea interests you, and enough support could be gathered — i.e. a few people willing to enrol in a particular course — I'd be willing to help you organise a topic in this forum in which those following a lecture series could discuss their ideas freely, ask questions regarding the course subject, generally "socialise" using the course as a basis, and so on. I understand that Coursera offers its own discussion groups, so this idea might be slightly irrelevant and redundant, but it could be interesting nonetheless.


  • Registered Users Posts: 409 ✭✭skyfall2012


    gvn wrote: »
    To test it out, I've signed up and enrolled a course entitled Think Again: How to Reason and Argue, which is a 12 week long courses, consisting of 5-6 hours per week, and it commences on November 26th.
    Link.

    I have been studying social psychology with Matt Liebermann in UCLA on you tube. I really enjoyed listening to them but without exams had no way of knowing if I grasped the concepts. A friend of mine told me about coursar and how you get a certificate at the end, to say you completed it, but you don't get any credits that go towards further education in University. I also have signed up for the 'How to Think and Argue' course starting on Monday.
    I am really looking forward to that and I hope you all here on boards notice a vast improvement in my abilities to analyse an argument and give my opinion.;)


  • Posts: 4,630 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    I have been studying social psychology with Matt Liebermann in UCLA on you tube. I really enjoyed listening to them but without exams had no way of knowing if I grasped the concepts. A friend of mine told me about coursar and how you get a certificate at the end, to say you completed it, but you don't get any credits that go towards further education in University. I also have signed up for the 'How to Think and Argue' course starting on Monday.
    I am really looking forward to that and I hope you all here on boards notice a vast improvement in my abilities to analyse an argument and give my opinion.;)

    Great to hear it! :) I, too, am looking forward to starting it on Monday. It'll be my first Coursera course, though I've enrolled myself in about half a dozen others, most of which don't start until next spring or even as late as summer.

    If there are others planning on taking part in the "How to Think and Argue" course, perhaps we could organise a small discussion group, hosted in this forum, like I described above.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 6,551 ✭✭✭SeaFields


    I finished an introduction to mathematical thinking recently. Superb course if difficult for someone who hadn't seen a maths problem in over a decade. Managed to see it through to the end and got my certificate :D

    Starting an introduction to astronomy next week.

    It really is a great website. There are a few over in the distance learning forum who use it too. I didn't know this forum existed until I saw it pop up on the boards homepage :)


  • Registered Users Posts: 409 ✭✭skyfall2012


    gvn wrote: »
    Great to hear it! :) I, too, am looking forward to starting it on Monday. It'll be my first Coursera course, though I've enrolled myself in about half a dozen others, most of which don't start until next spring or even as late as summer.

    If there are others planning on taking part in the "How to Think and Argue" course, perhaps we could organise a small discussion group, hosted in this forum, like I described above.

    I would definitely be interested in taking part.:)


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,794 ✭✭✭Barnaboy


    SeaFields wrote: »

    Starting an introduction to astronomy next week.
    :)

    Me too. Really looking forward to it. If you want to discuss the course as it progresses drop me a pm.


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,551 ✭✭✭SeaFields


    Barnaboy wrote: »
    Me too. Really looking forward to it. If you want to discuss the course as it progresses drop me a pm.

    Will do and the same applies to yourself. :)


  • Registered Users Posts: 252 ✭✭1stimpressions


    Thanks OP. Signed up and half way through week one. He is trying to flog his book but the standard of material and video seems very good. Looking forward to this.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,821 ✭✭✭18AD


    Introduction to astronomy started today. Haven't checked the material yet.

    If anyone can refresh my algebra skills I would be grateful. :p Hopefully I can keep my head above water.


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,551 ✭✭✭SeaFields


    18AD wrote: »
    Introduction to astronomy started today. Haven't checked the material yet.

    If anyone can refresh my algebra skills I would be grateful. :p Hopefully I can keep my head above water.

    There are a couple of refreshers that were sent out with the first email from the course admin. Looked to be the business, basic but would get the brain ticking again :)

    edit: here you go in case you didnt get/deleted that email.

    http://www.maths.lse.ac.uk/Refreshers/algebra_refresher.pdf

    http://go.hrw.com/resources/go_mt/alg1/alg1refresher.pdf

    http://spacemath.gsfc.nasa.gov/algebra2.html

    http://physics.bgsu.edu/~tiede/class/bmastronomy1.2.pdf


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,794 ✭✭✭Barnaboy


    SeaFields wrote: »
    There are a couple of refreshers that were sent out with the first email from the course admin. Looked to be the business, basic but would get the brain ticking again :)

    edit: here you go in case you didnt get/deleted that email.

    http://www.maths.lse.ac.uk/Refreshers/algebra_refresher.pdf

    http://go.hrw.com/resources/go_mt/alg1/alg1refresher.pdf

    http://spacemath.gsfc.nasa.gov/algebra2.html

    http://physics.bgsu.edu/~tiede/class/bmastronomy1.2.pdf

    Did I miss something? I don't remember seeing that mail. And 18AD talks about the course having started already? I got a mail saying first class starts today at 12:00EST (5pm our time). The mail doesn't offer any help with what to do if you can't make that time. I can't as I'll be on the way home from work at that hour. I just presumed I could watch the presentation in my own time and then take on the assignments.

    Anyone better informed on this?


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,551 ✭✭✭SeaFields


    Yes you can watch them in your own time. Going by the course I just finished the standard was that there were two lectures a week which would go live on the Monday and Wednesday. The assignments for those lectures would go live after the second lecture and would have a deadline of tuesday (and a hard deadline, meaning a penalty applied, of wednesday). This may differ with our course slightly but I would doubt by much.

    If you want to get your certificate you will need to have watched all the lectures and done all the assignments on time and get a certain aggregate grade.

    The course isn't live yet (there are dozens ongoing so the other poster may be referring to another one). I clicked on in last half hour and still can get to course portal. I imagine at five you should be able to click in to it. :)


  • Registered Users Posts: 26,578 ✭✭✭✭Turtwig


    Just signed up for Introduction to Astronomy and Think Again: How to Reason and Argue. Let the Fun begin!:)
    Signed up for Astrobiology and the Search For Extra Terrestrial Life ages ago. :D

    They'll be my first COursera courses. Not sure if I'll be able to manage the two courses at once, but sure you only learn by doing and I'll know better for next time.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 2,570 ✭✭✭Elmidena


    Also doing Think Again: How to Reason and Argue :D Annoyed the speed button didn't work, was hard staying focused for 20min lecture (1-9) with how slowly he talks!


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,821 ✭✭✭18AD


    Barnaboy wrote: »
    Did I miss something? I don't remember seeing that mail. And 18AD talks about the course having started already? I got a mail saying first class starts today at 12:00EST (5pm our time). The mail doesn't offer any help with what to do if you can't make that time. I can't as I'll be on the way home from work at that hour. I just presumed I could watch the presentation in my own time and then take on the assignments.

    Anyone better informed on this?

    Yah, it hadn't started yet. It just said the start date was yesterday, but none of the stuff was up and running by then.
    Edit: The "Go to class" button is up now!

    There's a facebook page set up for the course too.
    http://www.facebook.com/pages/Introduction-to-Astronomy-Coursera-2012-13/139187849562371?ref=stream

    Thanks for the links SeaFields.

    Astrobiology should be amazing! I'll see how this goes first though. :P


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,551 ✭✭✭SeaFields


    18AD wrote: »
    The "Go to class" button is up now!

    It is and six lectures to watch this week before assignment :eek:

    First thing tomorrow morning with several cups of strong coffee :)


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,794 ✭✭✭Barnaboy


    SeaFields wrote: »
    It is and six lectures to watch this week before assignment :eek:

    First thing tomorrow morning with several cups of strong coffee :)

    Managed to watch three of them myself last night. The course has started promisingly enough. He seems to be an interesting guy. Too scared to look at the homework yet :o


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,821 ✭✭✭18AD


    Barnaboy wrote: »
    Managed to watch three of them myself last night. The course has started promisingly enough. He seems to be an interesting guy. Too scared to look at the homework yet :o

    I've looked at the homework and must rewatch the lectures. :o


  • Posts: 4,630 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    It's great to see so many taking part. Remember, if anybody wishes to do so, feel free to create a discussion group in its own thread with any particular course as its topic (or feel free to continue the discussion here). I started the Think Again: How to Reason and Argue course on Monday and completed all of the lectures and quizzes by yesterday. I'm contemplating starting the Astronomy course, though I think I might give it a miss. Next course up: Drugs and the Brain, starting on December 1st, which sounds very interesting, if a little short.


  • Registered Users Posts: 26,578 ✭✭✭✭Turtwig


    I've just signed up for the Drugs and the Brains, thanks.:D Have yet to start anything from the current courses I'm enrolled in though. :o


  • Registered Users Posts: 26,578 ✭✭✭✭Turtwig


    Anddd right now at this very moment I just realised from the Ds&B course email that Dec 1st isn't a year away it's this Saturday! :eek:

    D'oh:o
    Think I might be leaving the Drugs and Brain one. :(


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,551 ✭✭✭SeaFields


    Jernal wrote: »
    Anddd right now at this very moment I just realised from the Ds&B course email that Dec 1st isn't a year away it's this Saturday! :eek:

    D'oh:o

    Have to tell ya...i lol'd at that one :)


    Have watched the 1st four lectures of astronomy. Very very enjoyable. I would say that if it was in a proper class room setting we would be working on examples of his calculations very frequently throughout each lecture.

    Homework time could be interesting without such practical work :o

    I'm heading out in a minute with a telescope to try and spot the stuff from lecture 1 :)


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  • Registered Users Posts: 6,551 ✭✭✭SeaFields


    18AD wrote: »
    I've looked at the homework and must rewatch the lectures. :o

    Just attempting part 1 of the homework. Definitely fairly taxing but enjoyable trying to solve them.


    It seems that from now on looking at the homework before watching lectures would be an idea? And attempting questions as the concepts are covered individually?


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