Harvard, MIT to offer free online classes

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University are teaming up to bring education to anyone who has an Internet connection. The prestigious universities will launch a $60 million initiative called edX that will offer course material from Harvard and MIT. Courses will consist of “video lesson segments, embedded quizzes, immediate feedback, student-ranked questions and answers, online laboratories and student-paced learning.”
Massachusetts-Institute-ofTechnology-Harvard-edX_620x350 Massachusetts-Institute-ofTechnology-Harvard-edX_620x350

Harvard and MIT may benefit from offering free classes by way of insight into the impact of education on people who wouldn’t otherwise have access to prestigious universities.

Harvard president Drew Faust told MIT news, “edX gives Harvard and MIT an unprecedented opportunity to dramatically extend our collective reach by conducting groundbreaking research into effective education and by extending online access to quality higher education.”

Students who demonstrate mastery of the courses will be eligible for certificates of completion. However, the credentials won’t be issued under the Harvard or MIT name.

The technology behind the partnership is also noteworthy. Because edX is an open-source online platform, programmers can continuously help improve the software and other universities can make the platform available for their students.

Classes start in the fall of 2012.

Source: CBSNews