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by mjn 4713 days ago
This one isn't much different from the perspective of someone wanting to expand to another field. You need a bachelor's in CS from an accredited 4-year program to enroll, or else you have to go through the usual placement-testing/remedial-course process if your degree is in a different field, as with the regular Georgia Tech CS Masters.

I don't see MOOCs as offering anything in particular that would make it easier to lift that kind of requiement. Large courses (whether in person or online) rely on incoming students coming from a standardized background, to allow the courses to assume a lot of things and minimize tailoring to individual students' varying needs. And MOOCs by their structure rely on instruction in (very) large courses.

1 comments

The real change is price for degree, and price to attend. You will have to go through the same placement-testing or remedial coursework, yes, but will have only $6600 to pay for the masters on the other end, and are able to take the courses on your own schedule, in your own geography. Keep your day job and all that.

If you're already in a college town with an affordable & flexible CS program that you stand a chance of getting into, then this probably doesn't offer much. But then, how does it stack against the Georgia Tech name? MOOC or not, that's got to look nice at the top of the certificate.

I understand this isn't for everyone, but I think there is some new-to-market value in these programs.