First course offered by MITx begins today
MITx, a new online-learning initiative launched by MIT and announced in December, begins in earnest today with its first course: 6.002x (Circuits and Electronics). More than 90,000 people have signed up for the experimental prototype course since registration opened in February, and today, those students can begin their study.
This is an exciting day, said MIT Provost L. Rafael Reif, who has led a concerted MIT effort over the past four years to investigate the educational possibilities afforded by online technologies, and who has led the establishment of MITx. MITx is designed to allow MIT students and faculty to explore ways to use technology to augment the MIT education: We are eager to see how MITx courses can add even greater value to our traditional, time-tested approach to teaching. MITx will also offer MIT teaching to people beyond our campus, widening access to education and offering new connections between the Institute and learners around the world.
The creation of 6.002x, and the technological platform on which it rests, has been led by MIT Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS) Anant Agarwal, who is also the director of MITs Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL). Modeled after MITs 6.002 an introductory course for undergraduate students in EECS 6.002x will introduce engineering in the context of the lumped circuit abstraction, helping students make the transition from physics to the fields of electrical engineering and computer science. Agarwal has taught 6.002 for more than 10 years.
The launch of our experimental prototype course is step one in a process we hope will lead to an innovative and effective online learning experience, Agarwal said. We have built MITx in such a way that we will be able to release the software to the world as open source and to invite developers everywhere to help us improve the features weve created as well as invent new ones. 6.002x will be an energetic exploration of online learning.
http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2012/6002x-mitx-begins-today-0305.html