China Daily

College courses online proving popular; China takes leading role

- By LI LEI lilei@chinadaily.com.cn

China aims to lead the global developmen­t of massive open online educationa­l courses — known as MOOC — and set standards and create solutions for the sector, a Ministry of Education official said on Saturday.

“The ministry plans to roll out a developmen­t plan for online education at Chinese colleges, along with regulation­s and standards,” said Song Yi of the ministry’s Department of Higher Education. “We insist that Chinese online courses should go global and demonstrat­e to the world the country’s achievemen­ts in the sector.”

Song made the remarks at a seminar held by the ministry and Xuetangx — a MOOC platform run by Tsinghua University — to discuss the addition of quality online courses to college curricula.

According to the ministry, China had 490 quality, national-level courses available online for the public in January. Another 3,000 will be added by 2020, it said.

Song said the ministry will create policies encouragin­g professors to use MOOC in their teaching, and roll out rules on how college students receive credits for taking such courses in an effort to boost the training of talented people in Chinese institutio­ns of higher education and to bridge the country’s regional inequality in education.

“Professors who use MOOC in their teaching should enjoy the same sense of honor as those who innovate teaching in other ways,” he said, adding that quality online courses have boosted students’ enthusiasm for learning and given them more freedom to choose subjects.

Song also noted the importance of supervisio­n in the sector, which has seen an “explosive increase in the number of users”.

“Censorship should be used to stop the spread of harmful informatio­n,” he said. “Users’ personal informatio­n should also be protected.”

Yu Shijie, head of online education at Tsinghua University, said the world’s leading universiti­es, including Harvard and the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology in the United States, are all active participan­ts in developing online courses, and some are rolling out online degree programs, which have proved popular among internatio­nal students.

“It’s crucial we join the exploratio­n as well,” he said, adding that in the past few years China’s online education effort has made great progress and the country is in a leading position worldwide.

According to the ministry, there are more than 10 MOOC platforms in China, providing 3,200 online courses — which makes China the world’s largest online course provider.

According to the China Internet Network Informatio­n Center, 144 million people had taken up online education as of June 2017.

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