Mit Publishes 500th Course On Opencourseware

With MIT starting this process how do people feel it would affect the educational systems in the world and also will it reduce the value of the MIT degrees?


MIT PUBLISHES 500TH COURSE ON OPENCOURSEWARE

Offering course materials from all of MIT’s academic disciplines,
OpenCourseWare delivers on the promise of open-knowledge sharing

CAMBRIDGE, MASS. (September 30, 2003) - MIT announced today that the OpenCourseWare initiative has published its 500th course and now offers free and open access to the educational materials from all 33 of MIT’s academic disciplines and all five of its schools. This milestone represents a significant technical and organizational achievement, the first on the way to publishing virtually all of MIT’s courses online.

“MIT is delivering on the promise that it made when OpenCourseWare was announced in 2001, and we are pleased that educators and learners from all parts of the globe tell us that OCW is already having an impact on education and learning,” said MIT President Charles M. Vest. “We see OCW as opening a new door to the democratizing and transforming power of education. We hope the idea of openly sharing course materials will propagate throughout many institutions and create a global web of knowledge that will enhance the quality of learning and, therefore, the quality of life worldwide.”

MIT OpenCourseWare (MIT OCW), a large-scale, Web-based publication of MIT faculty’s course materials, enables the open sharing of the faculty’s materials and pedagogy with educators and learners around the world in a way that befits MIT’s reputation as a leading institute of world-class teaching and research. Available at http://ocw.mit.edu/, this initiative connects visitors with the syllabi, lecture notes, and calendars of 500 courses. In addition, most course sites include a subset of other materials such as multimedia simulations, problem sets and solutions, past exams, reading lists, sample MIT student projects, and a selection of video lectures.

Educators are encouraged to utilize the materials for curriculum development, and self-learners and students may draw upon the materials for self-study or supplementary use. Course materials contained on the MIT OCW Web site may be used, copied, distributed, translated, and modified by anyone, anywhere in the world. All that is required of adopters of the materials is that the use be non-commercial, that the original MIT faculty authors receive attribution if the materials are republished or reposted online, and that adapters openly share the materials in the same manner as MIT OCW.

First announced in April 2001, the MIT OCW proof-of-concept pilot site opened to the public in September 2002, offering 32 courses. Truly a global initiative, the site has received almost 120 million hits from visitors in more than 210 countries, territories, and city-states around the globe over the course of the last year. Materials have already been translated into at least 10 different languages.

More than a third of the MIT Faculty’s 950 members contributed course materials to MIT OCW for the September publication. On MIT’s campus, faculty have become more aware of what their colleagues teach, while students have welcomed the syllabi and lecture notes available on MIT OCW. Several participating MIT faculty have been recognized by peers at other universities for their MIT OCW course sites, and in some cases this has led to new teaching and research collaborations.

In order to increase international access to the faculty’s educational materials, MIT OCW has entered into a formal agreement with Universia.net to translate 25 MIT courses into Spanish and Portuguese. Active in 10 countries (Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Chile, Spain, Mexico, Peru, Portugal, Puerto Rico, and Venezuela), Universia counts more than 700 universities among its members. The 24 translated MIT OCW courses are hosted on the Universia Web portal at http://www.universia.net, and Universia is committed to expanding its translated MIT OCW course offerings over time. This relationship has the potential to extend MIT OCW’s reach to a new non-English-speaking audience, and both organizations will work to evaluate the impact of these translated sites in Latin America.

I had a chance to review their programming language course, and even though alot of material was missing, the material posted there was revolutionary studies!!!! Way to go, and its all free!!!