China Daily

PLA taps online power with Dream Class

- By ZHAO LEI zhaolei@chinadaily.com.cn

The People’s Liberation Army has harnessed the power of massive open online courses as part of efforts to educate and train its troops.

Dream Class, an intranet platform developed and operated by the National University of Defense Technology, has registered more than 320,000 officers and soldiers since its launch three years ago.

The service offers about 170 online courses that are designed by the college and 13 PLA institutes. They cover a wide range of subjects, from military equipment and operationa­l tactics to ballistic missile research and combat maneuvers.

Around 400 PLA teachers and researcher­s are involved in the program, said Wang Huaimin, deputy head of education at the university, which is in Changsha, Hunan province.

“We initiated this program in response to President Xi Jinping’s request that the university use special measures to train profession­als badly needed by the military,” Wang said. “It has proved successful in fostering officers who have interdisci­plinary knowledge and are able to carry out joint operations.”

He said all the courses combined last more than 1,000 hours and feature a total of nearly 10,000 videos and 30,000 test questions.

Wang said the operation team for the massive open online courses has handled more than 100 million pieces of data, including 420,000 questions from students and 190,000 answers from teachers.

The two largest user groups are from the Western Theater Command and the Central Theater Command, he said.

The massive open online courses concept was created in 2008 by two Canadian researcher­s who designed an online platform on which

people can register for free and gain access to courses provided by universiti­es.

The open online course concept became popular in 2012, when many top universiti­es in the United States launched such platforms. Like an offline course, online courses have assessment­s and examinatio­ns. Users can participat­e in video discussion­s, submit assignment­s and take a final exam.

Once a course is completed, users receive an electronic certificat­e or a paper copy.

Dream Class, which enables PLA personnel to obtain knowledge and skills anywhere and anytime, was launched in August 2013, becoming the first massive open online courses program on the Chinese mainland. In June 2014, the number of users reached 100,000, and by August that year the number had doubled.

Soldiers with an unidentifi­ed combat unit in the Southern Theater Command adopted knowledge they learned from Dream Class to improve drone reconnaiss­ance tactics, according to Lei Yongjun, an officer at the university who oversees training affairs.

Another example, he said, was that technician­s from a communicat­ion regiment in the Western Theater Command used methods learned from Dream Class to upgrade their signal equipment vehicle, resulting in better efficiency.

Fu Qiang, a professor with the university’s School of Electronic Science and Engineerin­g, said one of his Dream Class students is a staff officer from a missile brigade who asked Fu to help solve a problem affecting a type of missile.

The professor visited the brigade and investigat­ed the problem. He then worked out a solution that helped the unit clear up the difficulty. The problem and its solution were included in his Dream Class course so that other users having similar issues can learn to handle them, Fu said.

Wu Yi, a senior communicat­ion engineer from the Western Theater Command, said he has registered for almost all of the Dream Class courses because “they will significan­tly expand my horizons and knowledge and will be very useful to my work”.

 ?? CHEN BIN / XINHUA ?? A newborn baby is taken care of at Gansu Provincial Maternity and Child-care Hospital in Lanzhou in February.
CHEN BIN / XINHUA A newborn baby is taken care of at Gansu Provincial Maternity and Child-care Hospital in Lanzhou in February.

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