A review of the research literature from the Fall 2015 Journal of Economic Perspectives:
Online Higher Education: Beyond the Hype Cycle by Michael S. McPherson and Lawrence S. Bacow.
Abstract: When two Silicon Valley start-ups, Coursera and Udacity, embarked
in 2012 on a bold effort to supply college-level courses for free over
the Internet to learners worldwide, the notion of the Massively Open
Online Course (MOOC) captured the nation's attention. Although
MOOCs are an interesting experiment with a role to play in the future of
higher education, they are a surprisingly small part of the online
higher education scene. We believe that online education, at least
online education that begins to take full advantage of the
interactivity offered by the web, is still in its infancy. We begin by
sketching out the several faces of online learning—asynchronous,
partially asynchronous, the flipped classroom, and others—as well as how
the use of online education differs across the spectrum of higher
education. We consider how the growth of online education
will affect cost and convenience, student learning, and the role of
faculty and administrators. We argue that spread of online education
through higher education is likely to be slower than many
commenters expect. We hope that online education will bring
substantial benefits. But less-attractive outcomes are also possible if,
for instance, legislators use the existence of online education as an
excuse for sharp cuts in higher education budgets that lead to
lower-quality education for many students, at the same time that richer,
more selective schools are using online education as one more
weapon in the arms race dynamic that is driving costs higher.
For those with access to American Economic Assn. publications: http://pubs.aeaweb.org/doi/pdfplus/10.1257/jep.29.4.135
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