Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by pizza234 2152 days ago
The author has a surprisingly naive vision of education, in spite of being a hiring manager.

I've recently finished a well-known online course, with almost maximum grade, and even if the quality of the course is good, there is definitely no comparison with a real-world college course.

Due to the nature of online courses, grades are automated, and definitely don't match the dynamics of a real-world course (eg. better solutions = better grades). It's also practically impossible not to pass.

Cheating is also a factor. I joined purely for learning, but I don't doubt that there is plenty of people taking shortcuts. I've witnessed somebody blatantly cheating exams without even recognizing it was cheating, and against the honor code.

Maybe, in a future where people must take the exams in qualified centers, with the papers/projects reviewed by professors, the points above would change - but the price would necessarily rise considerably.

Other aspects: as somebody wrote, top universitory teacher doesn't imply best teacher; forums are polluted with garbage/trivial questions due to mass (free) enrollment, causing valid questions to drown in the noise; face time, community, college life, structure are all one big package, which I think it's fundamental for the average young adult.

Finally, I'm very skeptical about the impressiveness of the DIY degree. I have the suspicion that only a few "learning freaks" (I don't mean it in a derogative way) would end up taking it - motivated people who decided not to take a degree [in their past], within constraints of limited time, would likely choose different, but still valid, learning routes.

All in all, I'm actually a big fan of MOOCs (loved the course I took), but they shouldn't be compared to traditional education.

1 comments

What course did you take?
NAND2Tetris, Part I :-)

The difference I mention between real-world and MOOC is that in the former, [I suppose that] the teacher(s) will give better grades to students who come up with better chip designs.

I paid the course for financial support, and challenge, but it can be finished identically without certification; as I wrote, specifically for this course, grades are practically - but not theoretically - binary: the projects work, or not.