viveutvivas | 12 years ago | on: A summer job paid tuition back in ’81, but then we got cheap
viveutvivas's comments
viveutvivas | 12 years ago | on: Yandex Mail
viveutvivas | 12 years ago | on: obamaischeckingyouremail.tumblr.com
viveutvivas | 12 years ago | on: obamaischeckingyouremail.tumblr.com
viveutvivas | 13 years ago | on: Can I help you? Why retail customers always say No
viveutvivas | 13 years ago | on: Can I help you? Why retail customers always say No
viveutvivas | 13 years ago | on: Amanda Knox and bad maths in court
viveutvivas | 13 years ago | on: Running a software team at Google
viveutvivas | 13 years ago | on: California Court Bans Checking Smartphone Maps While Driving
Oh wait.
viveutvivas | 13 years ago | on: From Lawyer to Programmer
It makes me really happy to see other women become programmers after other careers. We aren't alone!
viveutvivas | 13 years ago | on: Online Education's Dirty Secret - Awful Retention
I think the majority of MOOC course developers want to run their online courses as closely to their university versions as possible, since that's what they're used to working with. It also provides a handy way for them to go off-duty, in a sense, if the course has a finite end date. Using their current pacing structure (which is incredibly difficult, as the OP points out, for people that aren't full-time students) allows the teachers to do something other than devote themselves solely to the course, assuming they don't want to just post an archive and leave it alone -- which would meet a lot of people's needs, but misses the whole teacher-student interaction, which is pretty much missing from MOOCs anyway. If they want to provide an environment that's like a classroom, with students interacting with the instructors and with each other, you kind of need everybody at the same pace. It would be nice for us if they could slow that pace down, but that would probably increase the workload for the instructors.
We're still early in this game. I'm glad that so many professors have been willing to invest the time into developing the courses, and I understand why they are currently set up to be conveniently structured for them. I think we'll start to see some improvements if/when the money appears in the MOOC game. Once it's no longer basically charity work for the instructors, there will probably be more efforts to work around student schedules.
viveutvivas | 13 years ago | on: Why Everyone Should Not Learn To Code
viveutvivas | 13 years ago | on: Why was my email leaked?
viveutvivas | 13 years ago | on: Bitter Pill: Why Medical Bills Are Killing Us