Granting Credit for MOOCs: ACE Weighs in and Endorses Five Coursera Courses!

Dear Commons Community,

The Chronicle of Higher Education has an article in its online edition reporting that the American Council on Education yesterday endorsed five MOOCs for credit.  The article states:

“Two of the approved courses, “Introduction to Genetics and Evolution” and “Bioelectricity: A Quantitative Approach,” come from Duke University. Two others, “Pre-Calculus” and “Algebra,” come from the University of California at Irvine. The last, “Calculus: Single-Variable,” comes from the University of Pennsylvania. All five are offered through Coursera.

The council, an association that advises college presidents, operates a credit-recommendation service that evaluates individual courses. If a course passes muster, ACE advises its 1,800 member colleges that they can be comfortable conferring credit on students who have passed that course.

Whether colleges take the council’s advice, however, is an open question. “Ultimately, the degree-granting institution decides what credits to accept,” said Cathy A. Sandeen, the council’s vice president for education attainment and innovation.

The article also cites:

“John Ebersole, president of Excelsior College, who said his institution would not accept transfer credits from a Coursera MOOC, notwithstanding the council’s recommendation.

Excelsior, a pioneer of “competency-based” learning, is sympathetic to the notion of granting credit for learning that occurs outside the traditional classroom. But Mr. Ebersole said he was not impressed by Coursera’s assessment methods.

“We would hope that ACE would support a more rigorous process, as is the case with other forms of noncredit instruction, whereby those seeking credit would complete a psychometrically valid assessment in a secure testing facility,” Mr. Ebersole said.

The discussion of MOOcs goes on!

Tony

 

Fox News Credibility at an All-Time Low: New Public Policy Poll!

Dear Commons Community,

Fox News’ credibility has fallen 9 percent since three years ago, according to new Public Policy Polling (PPP) results released yesterday.

The annual poll asks participants to rate their trust in multiple networks including Fox News, MSNBC, CNN, PBS, Comedy Central, ABC News, CBS News and NBC News. According to PPP’s press release:

“Just like its actual ratings, Fox News has hit a record low in the four years that we’ve been doing this poll. 41% of voters trust it to 46% who do not. To put those numbers into some perspective the first time we did this poll, in 2010, 49% of voters trusted it to 37% who did not.

… researchers also found that Fox News is both the least trusted and most trusted network when compared to the other networks in the survey. Thirty-four percent said they trust Fox News the most, while 39 percent said they trust it the least.

Other news outlets are not entirely better off. Thirty-five percent of respondents said they trust MSNBC, while 44 percent said they do not. When it comes to CNN, 38 percent of voters said they trust the network, but 43 percent said they trust the cable network the least.

PBS is the only outlet that respondents trust more than distrust, with 52 percent of voters saying they trust the network, and 29 percent saying they do not.”

Tony