Math professor Gilbert Strang at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology is among educators involved in massive open online courses
This is the VOA Special English Education Report. 
 
Earlier this year, we reported on the growth of massive open online  courses, or MOOCs. These higher education courses are mostly free and,  so far, largely in technical areas like computer science. MOOCs are  usually open to anyone and can have thousands of students around the  world.
 
Entrepreneurs and educators are studying the different business  possibilities. One idea is to make money by offering credits or  certificates to students willing to pay. Another is to charge employers  for connecting them with students who get top scores on online tests.
 
Some top universities are starting to offer their own MOOCs. For  example, this week the University of California, Berkeley, announced it  has joined a nonprofit enterprise called edX. Harvard University and the  Massachusetts Institute of Technology started edX and have each  invested thirty million dollars.
 
This fall, Berkeley will offer two of the seven free courses on the edX  platform: Artificial Intelligence and Software as a Service. Berkeley  will also work with edX to get more universities involved. Schools that  offer courses on the edX platform will be called "X Universities."
 
MIT professor Anant Agarwal is the president of edX, and he helped  develop an electrical engineering course for the fall. He says the goal  is to reinvent education worldwide and on campus. Berkeley Chancellor  Robert Birgeneau made similar comments as he expressed a commitment to  "excellence in online education." He says the goals are to bring higher  education to more people and to enrich the quality of campus-based  education. And he said he believes that working with the not-for-profit  model of edX is the best way to do that.  
 
EdX faces for-profit competitors. One is Udacity, co-founded by  Sebastian Thrun at Stanford University. Another is Coursera, started by  two other Stanford computer scientists, Daphne Koller and Andrew Ng. In  fact, some Berkeley professors have been teaching free courses through  Coursera. Coursera started with four universities and last week  announced a big expansion for the fall.
 
One of the new partners is the University of Virginia. Just last month  its popular president, Teresa Sullivan, had to resign. The governing  board forced her out in part over suggestions that she was not moving  fast enough into this new world of online education. But two weeks  later, after campus protests, the board rehired her.
 
And that’s the VOA Special English Education Report, written by Jerilyn Watson. I’m Steve Ember.
