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MITx Opens Enrollment for First Interactive Online Course; Pilot Certificates Will Be Free

February 13, 2012, 12:01 am

picture of a circuitWant to learn the basics of what goes inside your smartphone and computer?

You can get a better grasp of that gadgetry in a free online course announced today by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology—the first class to open in the institute’s closely watched new interactive online learning venture, MITx. And if you pass the course, MIT will award you a certificate for free.

The prototype class, “6.002x: Circuits and Electronics,” opens for enrollment today (sign up here). The course will run from March 5 to June 8. Modeled on an introductory class typically offered to between 100 and 250 undergraduates on campus, the course will help students make the transition from physics to electrical engineering and computer science. Teaching it will be Anant Agarwal and Chris Terman, co-directors of MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory; Piotr Mitros, a research scientist in the lab; and Gerald Sussman, a professor in the department of electrical engineering and computer science. (Follow this link for an earlier version of the course offered through MIT OpenCourseWare.)

“This course offers the foundations behind pretty much all the smart devices and cool electronic gadgets out there,” Mr. Agarwal said in a conference call with reporters. “And this course really establishes the absolute basic foundations that are needed in order to build and engineer and create those devices.”

Students will get grades based on homework assignments, activities in a gaming-style virtual lab, and tests—all evaluated by machines. But MIT is still putting together the system for credentialing that work, which has attracted much attention (see here and here). While the certificates for this course will be free, students will have to pay a modest fee for credentials in future courses expected to begin this fall. And while those certificates will indicate that work was done on an honor system, future MITx classes will take a more sophisticated approach. Plans call for partnerships with companies that offer proctored test sites around the world, and, ultimately, perhaps even the use of electronic systems that verify students’ identities through facial-recognition and other technologies, institute officials have told Wired Campus.

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  • drangie

    “. . . professors are dissatisfied with declining enrollment and a poor public image.”  I  wonder how a no-confidence vote is going to help the institution’s public image.

  • willynilly

    We’ve heard this song before.  Mr Carter has previously expressed concerns over “faculty stagnation.”

  • jesor

    How does that old story go…the new college president meets his predecessor on his first day and asks for some advice.   The predecessor says, I’ve left three envelopes for you in the desk.  They contain the advice given to me by my predecessor. If you ever get into a mess you can’t figure out, open them in order. 

    Things go well for a while, but a campus crisis blows up after the first year and nobody is buying into his solutions.  The president opens the first letter and it says “blame the students”.  He follows this advice and sure enough things calm down.   A year or two later another crisis erupts and nothing he does can calm it down.  He opens the second letter and it says “blame the faculty”, he spends the next week publicly calling out the faculty on their privledges, grade inflation, and productivity.   The crises then dies away.   A year later another crisis erupts and this time he tries everything he knows, he blames the students, he blames the faculty, and nothing seems to work.  Finally, with trembling hands he opens the last letter, it says “write three letters”.

  • blesstayo

    President of WVSU since 1987??? Why won’t you expect “instutional stagnation” after 24 years??? Academic institutions need term limits on presidency. Now you can see why a new president of WVSU will need a brand new strategic plan!

  • realtyannie

    How exhilarating to witness such a moment in the evolution of higher education. Digital learning legitimized. This is how our children will attend college.

  • http://www.vikramadhiman.com/ Vikrama Dhiman

    Fantastic. At Online courses on WizIQ, MIT OCW and such initiatives are a huge inspirations and influence. I wish them all the best.

    @chronicle-96c7763795a64c9769402cb6fbca1228:disqus Yes, that is one of the parts of the future :) How much, we will know soon.

  • http://twitter.com/rsgray Scott G

    already enrolled!

  • http://www.facebook.com/c.jason.smith C. Jason Smith

    And here we go.

  • arrive2__net

    Considering the extent of commenting on the earlier coverage of MITx I’m surprised this announcement didn’t get more notice.  I hope this works out well because making people smarter and more capable is what higher education should be all about. 

    The sign-up page says “In order to succeed in this course, you must have taken an AP level physics course in electricity and magnetism. You must know basic calculus and linear algebra and have some background in differential equations.”  So it seems to me that this course is not something to be entered into lightly.

    Some of MITx’s automated grading may have gotten new credibility from the man v machine essay grading competition: 
     http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/curriculum/2012/04/computer_v_human_who_wins_the.html 

    Good luck, MITx.

    Bart Schuster
    OnlineGraduateSchool.tripod.com
    Twitter.com/arrive2_net