Free Classes, Open to the Masses, Seek to Generate Revenue From Content Licensing, Exams or Job-Referral Services
By MELISSA KORN And JENNIFER LEVITZ
Professor Jeremy Adelman has taught a world-history class at Princeton University for several years, but as he led about 60 students through 700 years of history on the ivy-covered campus this past fall, one thing was different: Another 89,000 students tuned into his lectures free of charge via Coursera, an online platform.Those kinds of numbers, and their potential for remaking higher education, have generated plenty of excitement about massive open online courses—dubbed MOOCs. They've also lured venture investors and universities, who have put millions of dollars into companies like Udacity, Coursera and edX, which partner with schools or instructors to offer these courses.
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While backers say the short, digestible lessons are nothing short of revolutionary, MOOC providers are still figuring out how to keep basic course access free while generating revenue.
Sebastian Thrun, a Stanford University professor and co-founder of Udacity, which launched in 2012 with a $21.5 million bankroll from such prominent backers as Andreessen Horowitz, says his fledgling industry is in "a state of experimentation."
Some of the Partner Schools
Coursera: Princeton University, Duke University, Stanford University, University of Pennsylvania, Emory University, Mount Sinai School of MedicineedX: Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, University of Texas system, University of California, Berkeley, Georgetown University
"Nobody has any idea how it's going to work," says Dave Cormier, manager of Web communications and innovation at the University of Prince Edward Island, who was involved in earlier iterations of MOOCs a few years ago and has been credited with coining the term in 2008. "People have ideas of how to monetize it, but simply don't have any evidence."
Coursera, another firm with Stanford founders and $22 million in funding from Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and others, recently began notifying students that they can opt in to a job-placement service, where recruiters can access details of their class performance. But the company matched only a handful of students in its months-long pilot and is still determining the fee structure.
While he declines to provide dollar figures, co-founder Andrew Ng acknowledges "it's still a business model that we're fleshing out."
MOOCs are "an innovation looking for a business model," says Kevin Kinser, an associate professor of higher education policy at the State University of New York at Albany. Online courses may be valuable supplements to regular classes, but Mr. Kinser, whose research focuses on nontraditional higher education models, says it's hard to see how they can be more than altruistic endeavors.
Venture investors seem undaunted. New Enterprise Associates Inc. put $8 million into Coursera just weeks after NEA general partner Scott Sandell learned that the company's founders were still debating whether to proceed as a nonprofit or for-profit venture.
"The business model was fairly unclear, but there were some plausible ideas about how Coursera could turn into a sizable company," Mr. Sandell says.
About 350 companies have signed up to access Udacity's job portal in recent months, though it has placed just about 20 students so far. Recruiters pay for successful matches, and Mr. Thrun says Udacity charges "significantly" less than Silicon Valley headhunters, whose cut he says can be two to three months of a candidate's starting salary.
Udacity earns additional money from courses created by talent-hungry technology companies including Google Inc. and Autodesk Inc. Mr. Thrun says that with money from job referrals and sponsored classes, "we will be able to survive quite well," though the company, like other course providers, declines to provide financial projections.
EdX, a nonprofit founded with $30 million each from Harvard University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is also letting companies use its platform to offer their own training courses.
With thousands of students in any one class, the varied quality of student work is a barrier to widespread acceptance of MOOCs. But proctored exams, which could help ensure academic rigor, may also offer a revenue opportunity.
Udacity and edX have both joined with Pearson PLC's Pearson VUE to offer fee-based proctored exams at the company's 450 test centers world-wide. Udacity charges $89, while edX's president, Anant Agarwal, expects his to be under $100 when the first exam is announced soon. Coursera is considering similar plans.
With completion rates for most MOOCs usually falling below 10%, the earning potential is limited. If 10,000 people take a course, and 1,000 finish, early trials suggest just a fraction of those students are likely to pay for verified exams. At $89 a head, a successful course might net just a few thousand dollars in proctor fees.
Content licensing is showing some promise, with schools signing on to use MOOCs for large survey courses, which they'll complement with in-person discussion groups and supplemental assignments. Antioch University, which enrolls about 5,000 students over five U.S. campuses, announced in October that it would allow students to take some Coursera classes for credit.
Neither side disclosed the terms of the deal, though Mr. Ng says Coursera received a "modest" fee and is in similar talks with other schools.
Several school administrators admit they're teaming up with course providers mainly because they fear missing out on something big. So far none of the elite schools that provide content for companies like Coursera and edX offer credit for those classes, though attitudes may be shifting.
The American Council on Education, an influential association of university presidents, is considering for-credit status for some Coursera courses. And some schools are designing their own for-credit offerings, creating potential competition for Coursera and its peers. In November 10 colleges, including Duke University, joined forces with another company to launch a series of credit-bearing courses for students at those schools.
Venture funders are optimistic the math will work out eventually. Andreessen Horowitz partner Peter Levine, a Udacity board member, acknowledges that revenue plans are hazy right now, but says he expects "some real direction" on business plans within the year.
At least some providers of MOOCs may decide that nonprofit status is the way to go, taking cues from Carnegie Mellon University's decade-old Open Learning Initiative, which has nearly 45,000 students enrolled across its free and fee-based classes. While it relies mainly on grant funding and offers classes free to independent learners, it has begun charging $15 to $25 per student for the academic versions of some courses—used at schools such as University of California, Berkeley—to ensure the initiative could sustain itself.
Candace Thille, the project's director, says the new course providers have a lot to learn, especially because they'll have to answer to investors. "You can't just cross your fingers and hope money flows in at some point."
More on MOOCs
Company | Number of unique
users* | Number of course enrollments | Number of courses offered | Course completion rate | Sample courses |
Coursera | 2.09 million | 7 million | 210 | 9%** | Think Again: How to Reason and Argue; Introduction to Finance |
edX | 525,000+*** | 462,000+ | 21 | 4.6%** | Circuits and Electronics; Foundations of Computer Graphics |
Udacity | 460,000 | 975,000 | 19 | 5%-14% | HTML5 Game Development; Artificial Intelligence for Robotics |
Udemy | 500,000 | 800,000 | 6,000 | 18% | An Entrepreneur's Checklist; Advanced Excel Training |
**At Coursera, 30% of students who attempt the first assignment ultimately complete the course. EdX figure is based on spring 2012 Circuits course only. Twenty-four percent of students who completed the first problem set actually passed that edX course.
***Not all edX users who have created usernames have registered for a course.
Source: the companies
Coursera's Popular Courses
Course Title | Number of Students Enrolled | Instructor Affiliation | Course Description |
Think Again: How to Reason and Argue | 150,158 | Duke University and University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill | Learn how to identify, analyze and evaluate arguments by other people, including politicians and salespeople, and how to construct good arguments of your own. |
Introduction to Finance | 126,523 | University of Michigan | Learn and apply the concepts of time value of money and risk, using both theory and real-world examples, to understand the major determinants of value creation. |
Model Thinking | 100,824 | University of Michigan | Learn how to think with models, such as tipping points and the wisdom of crowds, and use them to make sense of the complex world around us. Algebra is required. Course includes lectures, quizzes and a final exam. |
Udacity's Popular Courses
Course Title | Number of Students Enrolled | Instructor Affiliation | Course Description |
Introduction to Computer Science | 230,000+ | University of Virginia | Learn key concepts in computer science and learn how to write computer programs in the context of building a web crawler. |
Introduction to Statistics | ~70,000 | Stanford University | The course covers visualization, probability, regression and other topics. |
How to Build a Startup | ~70,000 | Steve Blank, entrepreneur | Learn the key tools to build a successful startup, or at least reduce the risk of failure. Learn the steps of Blank's "Customer Development" process. |
Web Development | ~70,000 | Steve Huffman, cofounder of reddit.com | The class teaches how to build your own blog application and scale it to support large numbers of users. |
Udemy's Popular Courses
Course Title | Number of Students Enrolled | Instructor Affiliation | Course Description |
Excel Training for Beginners* | 19,800 | InfiniteSkills.com, a Canadian e-Learning company | An introduction to Microsoft Excel 2010, with topics including data entry, formatting and running calculations. |
Build. Measure. Learn. Lean Startup SXSW 2012 | 17,700 | Eric Ries, author and creator of Lean Startup methodology | Recorded at SXSW Interactive 2012, the course covers agile development, business case studies customer development best practices. |
Karl Taylor's Free Photography Course | 17,600 | Karl Taylor, professional photographer | Learn SLR photography, including lighting, portraiture and shutter speed settings. |
edX's Popular Courses
Course Title | Number of Students Enrolled | Instructor Affiliation | Course Description |
Circuits and Electronics | 155,000 | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | Introduction to engineering in the context of the lumped circuits abstraction. |
Introduction to Computer Science | 135,000 | Harvard University | Based on Harvard's introductory computer science course, it teaches the art of programming for majors and non-majors alike. |
Introduction to Computer Science and Programming | 100,000 | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | An introduction to using computation to solve real problems, aimed at students with little or no prior programming experience. |
A version of this article appeared January 2, 2013, on page B8 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: Online Courses Look for a Business Model.
Source: WSJ
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324339204578173421673664106.html
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