University Senate task force exploring online education

Posted: October 4, 2012 at 11:22 am


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A University Senate task force is wading into one of the hottest topics in higher ed: the question of online education.

The task force, which was established by the senate last year, will explore Columbias current online offerings and examine its options going forward. The committee met for the first time Sept. 19, a day before the University opened registration for its first two massive open online courses.

Were in the data-collecting mode. We are working on pilot programs of courses and we are seeing which other offered courses can be adapted to online learning, Assaf Zeevi, the Business Schools vice dean of research and a member of the task force, said. So far, the experience has mostly been in areas with undergraduate classes with very high appeal that can be pitched to a large audience.

Columbia will offers its first two massive open online courses through Coursera next semester, but several schools, including the School of Engineering and Applied Science, the School of Continuing Education, the Journalism School, and Teachers College, have created their own online courses and initiatives over the years.

The task force, which is being led by Senate Executive Board Chair Sharyn OHalloran, will work to unify Columbias online education offerings.

Columbia has 20 schools. Were very decentralized, which is a good thing, since it allows individual departments and faculty to create initiatives, task force member and astronomy professor James Applegate said. However, at the same time, the senate is the only institution Columbia has for the function of town hall meetings. The task force will play that same role, only more specifically for online learning.

The committee met last week with Stanford University professor Daphne Koller, one of the founders of Coursera. Still, Sree Sreenivasana Journalism School professor who was appointed Columbias first chief digital officer in Julysaid that Coursera is just an example of what we can do.

Right now, were talking with many other vendors and platforms to see what works best for us, he said.

There has been a surge of activity in online education over the last year, with MIT and Harvard partnering to launch edX and schools ranging from Princeton to the University of Pennsylvania signing up for Coursera. But even with universities scrambling to open their courses to the world at large, University Senator Akshay Shah, SEAS 14, said the senate task force is focused on Columbia students first.

Our biggest priority is to make full-time, tuition-paying students get benefits from Columbia taking courses online, Shah, a member of the task force, said. This could open up the option of students studying abroad. If they have to fulfill requirements, they could just take exams at the global centers.

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University Senate task force exploring online education

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October 4th, 2012 at 11:22 am

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