Showing posts with label electronics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label electronics. Show all posts

Monday, February 13, 2012

MIT launches free online electronics course

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has launched an online learning initiative called MITx which will offer a portfolio of MIT courses through an online interactive learning platform. Enrolments for the initative’s prototype electronics course have begun. The course is being offered free of charge. Students can sign up at the MITx website. The course will officially begin on March 5 and run through June 8, 2012. 

MIT expects that this learning platform will enhance the educational experience of its on-campus students, offering them online tools that supplement and enrich their classroom and laboratory experiences. MIT also expects that MITx will eventually host a virtual community of millions of learners around the world.

MIT: Delivering education through technology
MIT’s online learning initiative is led by MIT Provost L Rafael Reif, and its development will be coupled with an MIT-wide research initiative on online teaching and learning under his leadership.

“Students worldwide are increasingly supplementing their classroom education with a variety of online tools,” Reif says. “Many members of the MIT faculty have been experimenting with integrating online tools into the campus education. We will facilitate those efforts, many of which will lead to novel learning technologies that offer the best possible online educational experience to non-residential learners. Both parts of this new initiative are extremely important to the future of high-quality, affordable, accessible education.”

Anant Agarwal: hosting a virtual community of learners
MIT will make the MITx open learning software available free of cost, so that others — whether other universities or different educational institutions, such as K-12 school systems — can leverage the same software for their online education offerings.

“Creating an open learning infrastructure will enable other communities of developers to contribute to it, thereby making it self-sustaining,” explains Anant Agarwal, an MIT professor of electrical engineering and computer science and director of MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL). “An open infrastructure will facilitate research on learning technologies and also enable learning content to be easily portable to other educational platforms that will develop. In this way the infrastructure will improve continuously as it is used and adapted.” Agarwal is leading the development of the open platform.