Saturday, September 14, 2013

Wide Open University - University Courses for free!


Thanks to the internet, everyone can now get a free education at the world's top tertiary institutions. Does this mean the end for higher learning or a new beginning?
Harvard Professor Michael Sandel teaches ethics.
Harvard Professor Michael Sandel teaches ethics.
Imagine, says Harvard professor Michael Sandel, that you are a shipwrecked sailor, adrift in a lifeboat without food or water.
Is it morally permissible to kill and eat the cabin boy to ensure your own survival?
Sandel poses the philosophical question to about 1,000 students packed into Harvard's Sanders Theatre, a magnificent, three-tiered lecture room that oozes history through every wooden panel. But these days he is also talking to a much bigger audience - the 4.6 million people who have watched this televised lecture on YouTube and the tens of thousands who go on to follow his free and massively popular Justice course on the web. Students around the globe have voted on the fate of Parker the cabin boy, who was murdered by two English sailors in 1884, but judged a necessary sacrifice by 40 per cent of Sandel's online audience.
Courses like this are known as Moocs (Massive open online courses). These days anyone with a good broadband connection can use them to learn direct from the world's most prestigious professors and universities, usually without paying a cent. Most offer online discussion between students and use a computer programme or fellow students to award marks, as each course averages about 33,000 students. New Zealand dipped its toe in the water this week with the launch of a computer studies course from Waikato University, following years of anxious speculation that this could be a replay of the late 1990s dotcom bubble.
There has certainly been a lot of hype - Time magazine declared 2012 "the year of the Mooc" and British author Michael Barber, a former educational adviser to Tony Blair, described online tertiary education as an avalanche that would fundamentally alter the landscape for universities.
But nagging questions persist. Why would any serious student do a peer-graded Mooc instead of a real university course? Will the quality of education be up to scratch? And how will anyone involved make money when the product is free?
The questions have not disappeared but the search for answers has become more urgent, especially in the United States where politicians have decided Moocs could be a lifesaver for a tertiary education system drowning in student debt. In California, where 450,000 students are shut out of basic courses, the state will offer grants for online versions with full academic credit. Florida and New York are considering similar legislation. Last month President Barack Obama announced the Federal Government would give more money to universities that cut costs by using online courses. Suddenly the fad has become a serious business proposition after all.
The term "Mooc" was coined in 2008 but took off in 2011 when two Stanford University professors, Sebastian Thrun and Peter Norvig, put their Introduction to Artificial Intelligence course online, free of charge. Unlike Sandel's slickly produced video, this was a home-made geeky affair, consisting of a whiteboard, a voiceover and lots of quick quizzes. It got 160,000 students from day one.
Thrun and Norvig promptly left Stanford to set up Udacity, a company which teaches mainly computer science and maths to about 400,000 students and promises to fix America's "broken" higher education system. Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology responded with the not-for-profit edX, which boasts more than one million students and some of the world's top-ranked universities. Both are dwarfed by the global leader Coursera, which has enjoyed phenomenal growth to more than 4.7 million students taking 442 free courses with 87 university partners worldwide.
Other countries are trying to catch up. Britain's Open University has formed an online provider called FutureLearn, due to go live this month with 21 university partners and six of Australia's leading eight universities are now offering free online education. This week Waikato University offered New Zealand's first Mooc, a homegrown course in data mining using Weka, a programme created by its computer science department. Massey is due to launch next month in partnership with Australian provider Open2Study, concentrating on sustainable agriculture, emergency management and indigenous cultures.
The head of Massey's teaching and learning centre, Professor Mark Brown, says the university has carefully chosen the courses to showcase what Massey is good at. "It might be the very reason why they go on to complete a masters degree with more specialisation, as a result of one free course."
He has a simple answer to other universities still worrying about whether to join in or hold back on free online courses.
"We've taken the view that if we're not exploring and innovating within the Mooc playpen, then we're really not in a position to understand what the opportunities are. Sitting on the sidelines can take you only so far."
Reaction to the Mooc phenomenon among many university academics has ranged from scepticism to horror, with Sandel and the ethics of cannibalism centre-stage. In April, San Jose State University announced it would include his EdX Justice course as part of its teaching programme, prompting a revolt by philosophy professors who refused to use it. The course is now being taught through the English department.
Associate philosophy professor Karin Brown told the Harvard university newspaper The Crimson that this confirmed their worst fears. "Eventually, you will only have facilitators for those courses ... It's a very cheap way to solve the budget problem of public universities, but you are creating a university without professors."
Otago University's vice-chancellor Harlene Hayne summed up local scepticism in an editorial in the university's magazine in January. She argued that education was more than a knowledge transfer from teacher to student - it was the development of skills such as communication critical thinking which relied on human contact. Hands-on experience, such as laboratory experiments for science students, was essential. Hayne also noted that more than 90 per cent of students who signed up for free online courses never completed them, probably, she suggested, because they got bored.
After exhaustive research she had concluded that "the concept of the Mooc will not displace the traditional university experience and the business case for the future of Moocs actually hangs by a thread".
Waikato University professor Michael Peters, who specialises in the politics of education, shares Hayne's reservations but disagrees with her conclusion. He predicts online tertiary education will be unstoppable because, as the US experience shows, the financial incentives to extend it are so strong.
"You look at student loans in America. It's just passed the US$1 trillion ($1.23 trillion) mark. It's supposed to blow out by another US$1.4 trillion in 10 years. That's the largest form of debt apart from housing mortgage."
Peters believes the Mooc movement has been taken over by governments with an agenda to cut costs in tertiary education and introduce privatisation. He makes a distinction between most of the early courses, which grew out of an idealistic open education movement, and the profit-driven "industrial broadcast model".
The first type is more interactive and uses extensive social media. Students partly determine what they learn, which can mean the course changes each time. The second is similar to a television broadcast, often featuring a celebrity speaker who imparts information to tens or even hundreds of thousands of students simultaneously.
To Peters and other educationalists, this echoes the attempts of last century to beam in TV and radio lessons to underdeveloped countries. He contrasts this one-way teaching method with the traditional Oxford-Cambridge university model, which relies on skilled tutors working with small groups of students.
Brown says Massey is well aware of these pitfalls and will avoid the old-fashioned video dump.
"A lot of effort has gone into how to create videos that are truly interactive," he says. "One of the criticisms of Moocs that Massey was very mindful of was taking 1960s-style teaching and putting it on 21st century networks and claiming this is somehow new and revolutionary."
He says testing will involve written answers, not just multi-choice questions, marked by real people. Science students will carry out experiments in a simulated lab. Open2Study has also rethought some of the much-touted advantages of early Moocs, including learning at your own pace, which has been linked to the high drop-out rate. Tutors will check students' progress to make sure they don't fall away.
As for Hayne's comments, Brown says face-to-face contact is important "but I think we need to be careful that we don't put a gold standard on traditional ways of teaching. I don't really think that in the type of world we live in today sitting in a lecture theatre with 400 or 500 students is what we would see as an effective model of learning."
For US-born Massey business lecturer and digital learning enthusiast Dennis Viehland, Moocs represent an opportunity to revolutionise not just online education but university teaching in general. He says some lecturers are already "flipping the classroom" by giving their students Mooc-style video lectures to watch at home, so they can discuss the issues in class time.
He lists several online teaching innovations including:
• replacing the traditional 50-minute lecture with a 12-15 minute interactive video;
• tutorials in the form of online discussion forums, using social media techniques (so the most "liked" student answer goes to the top);
• instant feedback on computer-marked answers - highly appealing for the video game generation;
• students marking each other, which some academics hate but Viehland says is supported by research showing their grades closely match the teachers'.
Moocs also allow providers to crunch huge amounts of data to see how students really learn, then adapt course materials and teaching methods accordingly. Coursera, which raised US$43 million from venture capital investors in July, is using this technological advantage to market its courses to universities trying to develop their own online offerings. Like many entertainment and news providers, it is also developing an optional paid subscription to bring in some much-needed revenue.
"But the big question nobody's been able to answer is, how are universities going to make money out of this?" says Viehland. "Why should we give away something for free for which we have traditionally charged? That's the way the music business and the newspaper business have gone, to their detriment."
The answer may lie at Georgia Technical Institute, which will next year offer an online masters degree in computer science for US$6,600 ($8,120) - a fraction of the usual US$45,000. Other universities have tried and failed to charge for online courses before but Georgia Tech's computer science department is among the best in America, so the experiment has the potential to change the way tertiary education is delivered. Students can choose to do the course as a free Mooc or pay for tutoring, student support and the chance to sit online exams for a recognised qualification.
"It could be epoch-making," Obama's science and technology adviser S. James Gates jnr told the New York Times. "If it really works, it could begin the process of lowering the cost of education."
For many academics this is code for lower pay and lost jobs but Viehland thinks these fears are misplaced, as most joiners so far have been students in undeveloped countries and professionals looking to add to their skills. "Moocs have the opportunity to grow the pie, not just slice it differently," he argues. "So they won't replace university-based education."
Meanwhile, he's looking forward to next month's The Kennedy Half Century , the Mooc world's most spectacular offering to date. It has stunning video with Hollywood production values, a superstar presenter in US political commentator Professor Larry J. Sabato and a tie-in to Sabato's book and TV series on the same subject.
Viehland's picking the due date for the final assignment could even be the 50th anniversary of Kennedy's assassination on November 22, 1963. History purists should probably look away now.
Scott Wilson says you need to be good at working on your own to do a Mooc. Photo / Dean Purcell
Scott Wilson says you need to be good at working on your own to do a Mooc. Photo / Dean Purcell
My first Mooc - a student's guide
Scott Wilson reckons he hit gold on his first Mooc. The Unitec performing arts lecturer was on a Fulbright scholarship in Washington DC when he signed up with 22,000 others to Aboriginal Worldviews and Education, a free four-week online course run by the University of Toronto through Coursera, the world's biggest Mooc provider.
He thoroughly enjoyed the course but was struck by the amount of work involved.
"In a single week, you'd have about five hours of viewing to do which is more than an undergraduate course, where you'd have two lectures and a tutorial. Plus you had readings, you had exercises. So all in all, you had between eight and 10 hours a week for a single course."
Wilson says the instructor combined personal guidance chats from a webcam in his office with video of him teaching in class, plus other video from sources such as YouTube.
Each essay was marked by at least five fellow students, whose scores were aggregated by a computer and returned to him with selected comments. He had to mark five essays himself to pass the course.
He is keen to trial the online teaching methods for about 200 students in his film studies course next year but is still in two minds about Moocs.
He worries that several problems have been overlooked, starting with the assumption that everyone can study online.
"Even in Unitec, a large number of our student body don't have internet at home or don't have broadband or don't have access to the kind of technologies that would make the streaming of a 30-minute video possible."
He predicts intellectual property could also become a headache, especially in commercially sensitive subjects such as film studies or art history.
"I think everyone is looking the other way and whistling in the hope that no one raises this."
Wilson says you need to be good at working on your own to do a Mooc. Online interaction with other students doesn't spark ideas in the same way as classroom discussion, although he did get into a lively transpacific discussion about Maoritanga with other Kiwis from Gisborne to Whangarei.
Assessment by fellow students is potentially a great idea, he thinks, but should come with training.
"When students peer-assess they're much harder on each other than the person at the front of the class would be. They can be quite ruthless."
He emerged with a certificate of proficiency with honours from the University of Toronto but has no idea whether it's worth anything.
"It's the Wild West of education."

Moocs 101
Mooc stands for:
• Massive: The average course has 33,000 students and the biggest 300,000.
• Open: Most courses are free, although some charge for certificates.
• Online: Students study on the internet and discuss their work with other students or tutors in online chat forums.
• Course: Until recently most have not counted towards a recognised university qualification but this may soon change.

The main players:
United States
• Coursera: By far the biggest with 4.7 million students worldwide and growing. Founded by former Stanford University professors Andrew Ng and Daphne Koller.
• Udacity: Also started by ex-Stanford professors, it specialises in computer science and maths. Promises to make university learning more relevant for the workplace.
• edX: A not-for-profit company started by Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Has more than one million users, including 500,000 at Harvard alone.
UK
• FutureLearn: A spin-off from the Open University, in partnership with 21 universities (but not Oxford or Cambridge). Due to start this month.
Australia
• Open2Study: A homegrown response to Coursera, the US giant which has teamed up with three of Australia's big universities.
New Zealand
• Massey University starts courses with Open2Study next month.
• Waikato has begun its own course.

Sunday, September 8, 2013

Halo - single - new release - Stephen Skelton - on iTunes now - all proceeds to War Child helping children whose lives are torn apart by war


Cover Art

Halo - Single

Stephen Skelton
Electronic

Stephen Skelton has recommended that you check out Halo - Single:

Hi Everyone My new single Halo has just been released.
If you want to help children separated from their families by the war in Syria then
buy this single and 100% of the income generated by the sales will be donated to War Child,
the charity in the UK dedicated to this purpose. Thanks for your support!

Saturday, September 7, 2013

Olympics 2020 TOKYO!!! - Tokyo 2020 Announcement 東京2020 [HD] - video




Olympics 2020: Tokyo wins race to host Games

Tokyo has been chosen to host the 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games ahead of Istanbul and Madrid.
The Japanese capital won a final round of voting by International Olympic Committee (IOC) members in Buenos Aires to beat Istanbul by 60-36 votes.
Madrid had earlier been eliminated in a first-round ballot.

Analysis

There were huge scenes of celebration from the Tokyo delegation - it means a huge amount to them.
There are always frontrunners and outsiders in any bidding process but what went on here in the last few days and hours proved decisive.
Madrid appeared to have the momentum but Tokyo's presentation was wholly impressive.
The announcement was met with jubilant scenes in Japan, as Tokyo prepares to host the event for the first time since 1964.
When IOC president Jacques Rogge - who will retire after 12 years in the role on Tuesday - announced the winning city, the Tokyo delegation jumped to their feet in celebration and waved the Japan flag.
A number of them were overcome with emotion and wept, after two years of intense lobbying.
"I would like to thank everyone in the Olympic movement and we will host a wonderful Olympic Games," a delighted Prime Minster Shinzo Abe said.
Bid leader Tsunekazu Takeda added: "It is a great honour that Tokyo has been chosen. The first thing I will do when I return is to thank all of Japan."
London mayor Boris Johnson sent "huge congratulations to Tokyo for winning the honour of hosting the greatest sporting spectacular on the planet".
"I am sure that, like London, your great city will put on an extraordinary event. This is a magical moment of celebration to savour before the years of hard work ahead."
The decision means Tokyo - which campaigned with the message that "the Olympics will be safe in our hands" - will become the first Asian city to host the Games twice.
They had also been awarded the event in 1940 but the Games were cancelled because of World War II.

Olympic hosts since 1972

Olympic rings
  • 1972: Munich, West Germany
  • 1976: Montreal, Canada
  • 1980: Moscow, Soviet Union
  • 1984: Los Angeles, US
  • 1988: Seoul, South Korea
  • 1992: Barcelona, Spain
  • 1996: Atlanta, US
  • 2000: Sydney, Australia
  • 2004: Athens, Greece
  • 2008: Beijing, China
  • 2012: London, UK
  • 2016: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
  • 2020: Tokyo, Japan
The success of the Tokyo bid followed a personal address from the Japanese prime minister during the presentation stage, in which he allayed fears over the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant 150 miles (240km) from the city by saying: "It has never done, and will never do any damage to Tokyo."
The plant had been leaking radiation after an earthquake and tsunami hit the north-east of the country in 2011.
"I cannot believe it," Japanese fencing Olympic silver medallist Yuki Ota told BBC Sport. "A thousand times I imagined Jacques Rogge opening the paper - it has become a reality.
"After the earthquake everyone in Japan was depressed but now we have to make a dream come true."
The prime minister's presentation also revealed the role sport had played in boosting the country in the past two years and pointed out that no Japanese athlete had failed a drugs test at an Olympics or Paralympics.
It added sponsorship would reach record levels and 10 new permanent sports venues would be constructed, including the Olympic Stadium, which will be finished by 2019 in time to host the Rugby World Cup.
For Istanbul, their campaign had not been able to overcome concerns about serious political unrest in the country, a series of doping scandals among the country's athletes, the jailing of political opponents and journalists, plus the conflict in neighbouring Syria.
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan had flown to Buenos Aires from the G20 summit in Russia to argue the Turkish city's case.
But his efforts were to no avail, and Istanbul registered its fifth failed bid. If they had been successful, it would have been the first Games in a predominantly Muslim country.
In Madrid, tens of thousands of people were left dejected in the city's Puerta de Alcala square when the news was announced it had failed for a third straight time to win the summer Games.
The Spanish capital's presentation - which featured former Olympic sailor Crown Prince Felipe - had emphasised providing a "sensible, reliable and trustworthy" Olympics but ongoing worries about the economy undermined the bid, along with the recent Operation Puerto doping scandal.



Sunday, September 1, 2013

Elif Shafak: - famous Turkish writer - The importance of storytelling in fiction - awesome TED Talk - video




Elif Shafak is the leading female writer and a vastly 
popular voice in Turkish literature. She explains the 
importance of storytelling
Elif Shafak is one of the most prominent voices in Turkish literature. She is the most read and celebrated female novelist in the country.
Shafak began writing creatively at the age of eight and is the author of 12 books, eight of which are novels. She writes in both Turkish and English, tackling difficult topics like domestic violence, honour killings and the question of Armenia, a controversial subject in Turkey. 
In her discussion with Talking Books’ Razia Iqbal, Shafak describes how books were a powerful force that helped her through an often solitary childhood on the move. She enthuses about the importance of storytelling in bringing together multiple voices and finding common ground.


Saturday, August 31, 2013

Top 10 Celeb Kids Public Slip Ups


Tony Blair, Martin Sheen and now John Key – the prime minister has joined the ranks of famous fathers everywhere as the antics of their offspring put them in the public spotlight
Stephie Key in a self-portrait shot as part of her studies in photography at the Paris College of Art.
Stephie Key in a self-portrait shot as part of her studies in photography at the Paris College of Art.
The sushi was strategically placed, the French fries covered what they were meant to and if Stephanie Key had been someone else's daughter the world would have ticked on undisturbed. Instead, the naked pictures shot for her Parisian design course became a global talking point this week after they were revealed in the Herald on Sunday, and John Key became the latest in a long line of famous fathers to watch the spotlight swivel toward his offspring.
He is in good company - Tony Blair, Martin Sheen and Sir Paul Holmes have all fielded questions about their children's behaviour - but Key got lucky: his daughter's arty shots were easy to defend. The drug habits, car crashes and arrests that usually land celebrity's children in the headlines are harder to brush off.
Why is the behaviour of celebrity's children so colourful so often? "I don't think it is," says registered psychologist Sara Chatwin. "They are simply scrutinised more closely.
"Unfortunately when they make a slip-up, like we all make, theirs are public," she says.
Very public. Here is our top 10.

10. Euan Blair 
Euan Blair. Photo / AP
Euan Blair. Photo / AP
There is never a good time to be found by the police, drunk and vomiting on the pavement, but Euan Blair's timing was excruciatingly bad.
It was 2000 and his father, Tony Blair, was Prime Minister. He had just begun a war on drunk and disorderly behaviour, declaring that the police should be able to give on-the-spot fines to wayward drinkers. No wonder when 16-year-old Euan's end of exams celebration ended in arrest he decided to lie about his identity. What a shame he was carrying ID ...
9. Carrick Graham
After some life training, Carrick Graham now works in crisis management.
After some life training, Carrick Graham now works in crisis management.
The only thing worse than crashing your father's car is crashing your father's work car then ending up in the headlines for doing so. Carrick Graham was 23 and his father, Doug Graham, was a respected senior Cabinet minister, when the young man smashed up the ministerial limo while driving in Auckland's Domain, then fled the accident scene.
Carrick appeared in court charged with making a false statement to police, and got diversion. Themedia attention that followed was perhaps good training for his future career - he now works in crisis management.
8. Dylan Norgate
Dylan Norgate. Photo / Janna Dixon
Dylan Norgate. Photo / Janna Dixon
The former head of Fonterra, Craig Norgate, must have considered moving suburbs in 2009 after it was revealed that his son, Dylan, was one of Auckland's most prolific taggers. The 19-year-old spray-painted the word SPEKT liberally across East Auckland - including Mission Bay,where his parents lived.
7. Miley Cyrus
Miley Cyrus twerking it. Photo / Getty Images
Miley Cyrus twerking it. Photo / Getty Images
Goodness knows just how achy and breaky Billy Ray Cyrus' heart is right now. The country singer's daughter was once known as the sweet child star ofHannah Montana, but this week became infinitely more famous for introducing the masses to "twerking". Performing at the MTV Music Video Awards, Miley Cyrus stripped to flesh-coloured, latex underwear before channelling an oversexed labrador. With her tongue hanging from her mouth, she bent over and reversed into the crotch of married musician Robin Thicke before using an oversized foam finger to indicate her own nether regions.
6. Tristan Barker
Tristan Barker, internet troll. Photo / Stephen Parker
Tristan Barker, internet troll. Photo / Stephen Parker
Kiwi drummer Michael Barker should be known for his accomplished music career with Split Enz and the Michael Butler Trio but for the past year he has mostly been referred to as "the father of that internet troll". Tristan Baker's prolific and contentious online outpourings about suicide victims, public displays of grief and 9/11-not to mention his assault on a journalist - have captured media attention and divided opinion. Police have labelled the 18-year-old "a blight on society"while his enormous teen following - and father - have defended him as "misunderstood" and a "satirist".
5. Millie Elder
Millie Elder. Photo / NZPA
Millie Elder. Photo / NZPA
The late Sir Paul Holmes bounced back from controversy many times during his long broadcasting career but in 2001 he faced a crisis he couldn't control: his step-daughter Millie Elder got hooked on P. Her four-year-long addiction, her relationship with a gang associate, and the chaos that accompanied it, played out in public with Sir Paul watching from afar during a two-year estrangement. Elder-Holmes eventually beat her addiction and the pair reconciled before his death.
4. Mark Lyon
Mark Lyon. Photo / NZ Herald
Mark Lyon. Photo / NZ Herald
A prominent and wealthy New Zealand businessman, Cliff Lyon seemed to have raised a chip off the old block when his son, Mark, became a successful property developer and multi-millionaire in his early 20s. Then Mark discovered methamphetamine. A string of mysterious fires at his properties in 2002 caught the media's attention and his chaotic life of gangs, criminal charges and court appearances has played out across the pages of the country's newspapers ever since.
3. Patti Davis
Patti Davis. Photo / AP
Patti Davis. Photo / AP
Ronald Reagan won the 1981 and 1985 presidential races but his conservative politics never won over his daughter. A liberal, Patti Reagan dismissed his political views and his personal legacy, dropping his surname for her mother's maiden name. Then came the drug problem, the Playboy cover and the unflattering book about life with her parents.
2. Charlie Sheen
Face of a winner? Photo / AP
Face of a winner? Photo / AP
No father imagines his son will grow up and declare himself a warlock. The actor Martin Sheen must have thought his child would be the last to do such a thing after Charlie Sheen followed him into showbiz, winning big roles, nabbing prestigious awards and making buckets of money as the star of TV show Two and a Half Men. In 2011, just as Sheen snr had to promote a new film, Sheen jnr melted down publicly and stupendously. He flitted in and out of rehab, lost his job, gained two live-in lovers and used social media to tell the world that he was a warlock with tiger blood and Adonis DNA.
1. There could be only one: Prince Harry
What happened in Vegas most certainly did not stay in Vegas.
What happened in Vegas most certainly did not stay in Vegas.
His grandfather has insulted almost every race on the planet during his long and gaffe-prone run as the Queen's consort. His father was recorded telling his lover that he would like to be her tampon. But Prince Harry managed to upstage them both on a trip to Las Vegas last year when he revealed the crown jewels during a game of a strip billiards in a hotel suite. What happened in Vegas most certainly did not stay in Vegas after the royal rear-end turned up on the internet and was on the front page of Britain's biggest tabloid.