An Online Class Attracts 58,000 Students
Tuesday, August 16th, 2011No, this concept is not imaginary: It’s the real-life description of an experimental online course being offered by a pair of Stanford University professors. The instructors are Sebastian Thrun and Peter Norvig, who decided to make their popular traditional course on artificial intelligence available in virtual form to all takers. The astonishing enrollment–despite the fact that the online students will receive no Stanford course credit–signals both the promise and threat that online courses offer to higher education institutions.
On the one hand, elite universities can now try their hand at the same thing: take your most popular courses and offer them online in a similar fashion. They could even charge a small fee–picture a $5 or $10 fee–and earn a serious windfall. On the other hand, what’s to stop the most popular professors from creating their own online courses outside the university system and keeping the proceeds for themselves, a la Pottermore? Also, if this incident heralds the beginning of a new era of online learning that offers something truly transformative, and not merely a survey class taught by an adjunct and put online just to save money, shouldn’t it send warning signals to the myriad colleges and universities that can’t offer anything as compelling as the new Stanford course? Much depends on how this trend develops, but as many people have pointed out, higher education is ripe for reinvention. If this new course is any indication, that reinvention has just entered a new gear.
Leaving aside the future of higher education, I’m interested in this new class for the issues it raises on two other fronts. First, since we publish primarily in the area of history, I wondered this: where is the online history course that could attract 58,000 students? Is there one? I should think that the right professor coupled with the right subject could indeed draw an enormous enrollment: picture the American Revolution taught by David McCullough, or the Lincoln Presidency taught by Doris Kearns Goodwin, or Western Civilization taught by Niall Ferguson. Each paired with the right institution (Ferguson already has the pairing ready-made with his affiliations at Harvard and Oxford), and with the right bells and whistles on the technology front to make for a compelling online experience. Heck, if such a course were freely or cheaply available to all comers, I might enroll myself! What history buff wouldn’t jump at this opportunity?
Second, though, how does this relate to the larger push being made in history departments to offer more online courses? It seems that many institutions are focusing such efforts on the lowest-level courses, like history survey classes. This, it seems to me, is not a winning proposition. It’s the opposite of the star-taught, high-interest seminar. Our Milestone Documents editorial board member Jonathan Rees has been discussing these issues over at his blog for the past month, and I think his skepticism is well-founded. See, for instance, this post: “The Functional Equivalent of Eating through a Tube.”
It will be fascinating to watch how higher education institutions proceed with online education in the next 3-5 years. Will we have more of the compelling Stanford AI scenario, or more of the “eating through a tube” variety?

