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NCU Yak Attack Team Member Finishes Race in 3rd Place

The results are in for the Northcentral University p/b Nepali Tea Traders Cycling Team that tackled the 2013 Yak Attack in Nepal.

• 3rd Place: Aayman Tamang (Nepali team member)
• 7th Place: Robert Burnett (USA team member and NCU student)
• 11th Place: Thor Leochell (USA team member and NCU student)
• 17th Place: Rajan Bhandari (Nepali team member)

Pictures from the award ceremony and the race are available online.

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Expanding Your Education Through MOOCs

In a previous post, we explained what MOOCs are and what makes them unique compared to other forms of higher education. In this post, we’re going to talk about how you can actually use MOOCs to expand your education and training. Whether you are interested in simply gaining new knowledge, learning a new skill or further developing your professional abilities, MOOCs offer an accessible (open online courses) and affordable (usually free) way to accomplish this.

Currently, the top players in the MOOCasphere are Coursera, Udacity and edX. These MOOC providers have roots in some of today’s top colleges and universities (e.g. MIT, Harvard, Stanford) and can provide access to courses and/or professors from these schools (and others) without forcing you to become a student there first.

According to a New York Times article back in November 2012, common MOOC subjects include mathematics, computer science and business. However, courses can address everything from physics and electronics to medicine and the humanities—it all depends on which MOOC provider you use. Course offerings are most extensive at Coursera, which is currently the largest MOOC provider.

Dr. Skip Maffei, a business faculty member at Northcentral University sees MOOCS as a great opportunity for today’s students, especially non-traditional students who are experiencing increased educational opportunities through the Web.

“In the past 15 years or so, students mostly had the option of taking in-class courses,” notes Maffei. “However, today’s student has a range of options, including in-class courses, fully online, or a hybrid mix of in-class and online courses.”

MOOCs of course, fall into the “fully online” category, and offer an array of benefits for today’s non-traditional student. “The benefits include flexibility and a learning environment that can be adapted to students’ individual needs for a balance between work, family and academics,” continues Maffei. “Many students appear to have really grasped the opportunity and have made the academic experience more rewarding by embracing the options presented to them.”

Despite the ease of use, there are a few things you should keep in mind if you decide to enroll in a MOOC. First, if you are the type of student interested in MOOCs for potential credit, you will need to work very closely with your school to find out whether or not you can get transfer credit for your efforts. Second, if there is a way to get any semblance of credit (certificate, take proctored exam) you will probably have to pay for it. Nonetheless, MOOCs have certainly expanded the possibilities of online education, and everyone seems to have their own idea of what the MOOCasphere will look like in the future.

NCU education faculty member Dr. Renee Aitken, for example, believes MOOCs will become more widespread in higher education with students taking MOOCs for credit. “Currently, the decision to turn experience into credit (when available), or not, is decided by the learner,” says Aitken. “In the future, however, I see students bringing credits from a variety of courses and institutions to their degree granting institution and enriching not only their own understanding of the field but sharing those ideas with the faculty and their peers.”

Whether MOOCs continue to cater to students interested in higher education, become a standard source of college credits, provide a supplement to secondary education, or any of the other dozens of potential possibilities, for now at least, they are here for the taking in all their massive, open, online glory.

Happy MOOCing!

MOOCs Explained

Unless you’ve been living under a rock for the past year or so, you’ve probably heard of a little thing called MOOCs. In order to explain what MOOCs are, the most logical place to start is to decipher this odd, bovine-sounding acronym. Quite simply, MOOC stands for Massive Open Online Course.

Massive refers to the fact that these courses can serve large numbers of people, sometimes accommodating thousands of students in one course. MOOCs are not constricted by classroom walls and fire codes like traditional campus courses or by limited enrollment numbers and faculty-student ratios like many other online courses. In the majority of cases, the number of students in a course simply depends on how many sign up.

MOOCs are also open, which means virtually anyone can sign up. As Northcentral University education faculty member Dr. Renee Aitken puts it, “MOOCs give anyone access to a systemic learning environment designed by a field expert.” In other words, you no longer need to be a student at Stanford to take Machine Learning with Professor (and Coursera co-founder) Ng, or study at M.I.T. to get an introduction to computer science and programming from Professor Eric Grimson. You simply register and sign up for whatever course you are interested in online (preferably checking that you meet any prerequisites beforehand for an ideal education experience) and you’re ready to go.

Of course, the controversy surrounding MOOCs seems to be less about the fact that they are massive and open, and more about the fact that most of them are free and do not count for academic credit. In a world where a college degree is practically a prerequisite for a job interview, how can you prove that you learned something in a MOOC if you don’t earn credit, or that it was really you and not silly (but brilliant) Uncle Earl passing all those MOOCs? Granted, the practice of awarding certificates of completion – for a small fee of course – is becoming more common, but it’s not quite the same as showing someone a copy of your unofficial college transcripts just yet, is it?

While the hypothesized pros and cons of MOOCs and their potential to alter the education landscape in the next five to ten years extend well beyond the confines of this blog post, it will certainly be interesting to see how things unfold, and whether or not MOOCs truly live up to their hype.

We’ll be following up this post with one on expanding your education through MOOCs so be sure to check back soon!

Yak Attack Update, Following Stage 7

Hello fellow NCU students and alumni,

Greetings from Manang! So far the race is going great. We have finished through stage 7 and are on our rest day now. The team is certainly tired, but we are in a great position to attack these last few stages. Aayman Tamang, one of our Nepali riders, has finished on the podium in several stages and is sitting in third place overall. He has a great shot at the overall podium and we will be working hard to keep him in that position.

I am currently sitting in 8th place overall and I am the 3rd best non-Nepali. I am hoping to improve my position over the next few stages as the altitude should play to my advantage over some of the other competitors. Thor is having a solid ride, finishing in the top 10 yesterday and holding on to 12th overall. His strong hiking skills and comfort at altitude should help him improve on that position.

Rajan, our other sponsored Nepali rider is the youngest in the race, and is gaining great experience. Despite his young age he is right on Thor’s heels in 13th overall.

We are really happy with our results so far.

Cheers, Rob

5 Big Technology Trends

According to NCU faculty member Dr. Pamela Carter, big data, cloud computing, social media, smart machines, and mobile computing are the five big technology trends of the moment.
“The impact of just these five trends is overwhelming,” notes Dr. Carter. “Businesses now really have to focus on how to leverage these technologies.”

• Big Data – We’re currently overwhelmed by the amount of data being produced. According to Eric Schmidt, Google’s former chief executive officer, the world creates five exabytes of data every two hours, which is roughly the same amount created between the dawn of civilization and 2003! Carter believes the secret is for companies to be able to know what data they need to pay attention to, analyze this massive amount of data, and then use it to their advantage according to business priorities.

• Cloud Computing – or the use of computing resources (hardware and software) that are delivered as a service over a network (typically the Internet) entrusts remote services with a user’s data, software and computation. Carter notes that the trend has the potential to save companies money by increasing their computing power and reducing IT operational costs, but it also breeds a new generation of hackers trying to gain unauthorized access to the cloud provider’s server.

• Mobile Computing – Computers are on the move and our mobile devices give us the capability of workplace computing anytime, anywhere – and this huge trend seems to have the potential to get even bigger. And of course, with the proliferation of mobile computing, smart apps appear daily, helping companies manage and optimize their mobile workforce. Dr. Carter notes that manufacturing companies are analyzing supply chain data and risks with real-time insights via mobile technology.

• Smart Machines – We now speak into our iPhones and Siri reschedules appointments for us. While companies like GE Healthcare are using robotic modular manufacturing technologies to stay even more agile in the bioprocessing field and reduce research to market timeframes. Advanced applications of artificial intelligence and highly sophisticated machines, while replacing some jobs, are adding new knowledge-based jobs to the workforce. Finding people with the skills to take on these new jobs is already recognized as a growing problem.

• Social Media – People are becoming more connected through the use of social media. While large social media outlets such as LinkedIn and Twitter continue to evolve, more specialized social media are being used to create micro-networks that enable focused attention and interaction on specific topic areas. Businesses can create, follow, participate in, or analyze data from large and micro-networks to strengthen relationships with stakeholders and gain insights into important trends.

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