Google Wants To Power The Online Learning Revolution With MOOC.org | Fast Company


EdX, the not-for-profit online learning initiative founded by Harvard and MIT, today announced a partnership with Google to jointly develop their open-source learning platform, known as Open EdX. The core edX offerings currently consist of a few dozen free “Massive Open Online Courses,” or MOOCs, from top-flight university partners like MIT, Harvard, and Berkeley–but the Open EdX vision goes far beyond that.

Google and edX will build out and operate MOOC.org, which will come online early next year. The site aims to be to online courses more or less what WordPress is to publishing: A free, open-source way for universities, institutions, businesses, and individuals to build and host courses in the cloud on any topic and in any format for a global audience.

via Google Wants To Power The Online Learning Revolution With MOOC.org | Fast Company | Business + Innovation.

Related:

PCMag.com | News & Opinion — Harvard, MIT to Offer Free Online Classes | The Modern MLIS, May 2, 2012

Taking Embedded Librarianship To the Next Level | ALA TechSource


Taking Embedded Librarianship To the Next Level | ALA TechSource

Coursera under fire in MOOCs licensing row | The Conversation


A prominent member of the open education movement, former Open University Vice-Chancellor Sir John Daniel, has criticised online education provider Coursera for not making its materials available under creative commons licensing.

Coursera is one of the largest providers of MOOCs – Massive Open Online Courses – which allow students to take university courses for free online from anywhere in the world.

Quotable

“While MOOCs have open enrolment, many of the MOOCs offered through commercial partners do not have open licences,” he said.

“It would be a pity if MOOCs were to act as a brake on the open education movement.”

via Coursera under fire in MOOCs licensing row | The Conversation.

See also: Coursera partners with 10 universities for online classes | CNET