Calgary Herald

WORKING Free online classes show benefit: study

- NATALIE KITROEFF

For all their problems, free online classes may have a net positive effect on your career. A new study shows that most people who took a free massive open online course, or MOOC, say it helped their careers, including by getting them a new job or helping them start a business.

“This type of research illustrate­s the possibilit­ies MOOCs offer to change the educationa­l landscape,” write the authors of the study in the Harvard Business Review.

The study was conducted by researcher­s at Coursera, an online education platform, and professors at the University of Pennsylvan­ia and the University of Washington, who have taught MOOCs. They surveyed 52,000 people around the world who have taken these courses. Seventy-two per cent said their online class helped them profession­ally. Among that group, a quarter of respondent­s cited the classes as a reason they found a new job. Nine per cent credited their MOOC with aiding them in starting a business.

Free, virtual classes have been something of a letdown for education tech companies, which initially marketed the offerings as a weapon against unequal access to learning. Research shows that almost everyone who enrols in a MOOC never finishes it. The vast majority of MOOC customers turned out to be well-educated, employed people.

“Are MOOCs merely an intellectu­al diversion for the well educated and well-off?” asks the study, summing up the skepticism that has trailed the MOOC industry.

The authors, who admit that they have a dog in this particular fight, gamely offer some evidence to contradict the despair. MOOC students from developing countries were more likely to say the courses boosted their profession­al life in tangible ways than people from developed countries, the study showed. Within the developing world, lower-income students were the most upbeat about the career impact of the courses. In general, the courses seem to have the biggest career impact for people who have not finished college.

The study acknowledg­es 80 per cent of MOOC customers have a bachelor’s degree, and 60 per cent come from developed countries. That would suggest those most likely to benefit from free online classes are not the ones taking them.

 ?? JOE RAEDLE/ GETTY IMAGES/ FILES ?? In a survey of 52,000 people around the world who have taken a free massive open online course, or MOOC, 72 per cent said the classes helped them profession­ally, according to a new study published in the Harvard Business Review.
JOE RAEDLE/ GETTY IMAGES/ FILES In a survey of 52,000 people around the world who have taken a free massive open online course, or MOOC, 72 per cent said the classes helped them profession­ally, according to a new study published in the Harvard Business Review.

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