Professor Tries To Sell His Lectures Online For Those Who Miss Class
from the one-idea dept
While it's become quite common these days for professors to put recordings of their lectures online for students who missed class, one professor at North Carolina State decided that if the students were going to miss class, they might as well pay. John points us to the story of Dr. Robert Schrag who has been told to stop selling his lectures online, while the new department dean decides if it's okay or not. The professor had uploaded the lectures to an independent music site that charges for downloads, though he claims he's not profiting from any downloads. What's most interesting, though, is the idea that the school administrators aren't sure they like the idea (though, it's not clear if they'd prefer him to give away the audio tracks, or not offer them at all).Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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good idea
Actually I think this is a very good idea, frankly the 'lecture' portion of the course is a small part, its the tutorial support thats worth the cash, so let anyone who wants them get the lectures (and why not charge a small fee?)
if it was common it could be a good way to see if a course was worthwhile or not too.
kudos to the guy for trying it.
but then what do I know.. 30kbps mp3s and all.. :-p
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RTFA - he previously had permission
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Re: RTFA - he previously had permission
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Obsolete Professors
Why pay teachers to endlessly repeat their classroom lectures/presentations every semester ... to new groups of students ? (.. or force students to sit thru them?)
Record the teachers' standard 'presentation' in some form
(print, audio, video, etc) and give it to the students.
Any words that a professor/teacher can ever utter in a classroom
can be easily recorded -- the 'in-person/face-to-face' classroom
format is a very old & unnecessary format now.
Well-edited recordings are better substitutes for 90% of standard classroom presentations... right thru college graduation.
But then we would need much fewer pompous pedagogues --
Bonus!
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Re: Obsolete Professors
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ha...
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Re: ha...
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Re: Re: ha...
In fact that's generally why in school they are called teachers but at uni they are called lecturers....because they lecture at you, not teach you.
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Making them obsolete
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Such sharp academic minds here...
Despite what may believe, information relative to any particular subject changes over time. Besides, you can't direct comments to nor ask a recording to clarify a point.
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Re: Such sharp academic minds here...
Having expereinced both classroom and "non-interactive" learning I would not recommend removing the personal interaction. Some of the best classes are the ones where the lecture is very little but the discussion that it creates is where the bulk of actual understanding comes from.
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though this could possiably be part of some minor classes i guess for MUCH cheaper
PS. i plan to get into IT so if i realize how bad it could be it shouldn't be too difficult for others too.
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It depends on the course - and it's NOT a new idea.
I took a basic Astronomy course for a science requirement. There were 500 people in the course and it was in a lecture hall. It could have been easily recorded - and would have probably been much more interesting as I couldn't see the professor's face very well any way. There certainly weren't any opportunities for questions anyway.
Anyone who's taken courses online knows how interactive some classrooms can be - with discussion groups and chances for questions and answers. Some lectures could easily accomodate this format.
I took a Mid-East politics class that WAS a recording - I had to go to the library and watch the class and then there was scheduled time with the Professor to go by their office during the week for questions etc. (this was before the Internet and wide spread use of email).
However, other classes - more specialized and much more intimate would suffer from recording. These classses or seminars are much more discussion driven and are typically very small - say 10-12 students and everyone sits together in a discussion group and the discussions flow freely guided by the Professor.
I suspect what the University was more concerned about was liability issues, lack of the University controlling the content of the course and not having edited the content, and possibly losing a revenue generating opportunity.
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Scam
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Dyslexics and the blind...
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Turn back now
by hoeppner on Sep 18th, 2006 @ 4:31am
haveing a machine as the sole teaching device is a very bad idea. also part of school is socializing, and that includes people not your age, and in college possiably meeting the teachers that were part of the industry.
though this could possiably be part of some minor classes i guess for MUCH cheaper
PS. i plan to get into IT so if i realize how bad it could be it shouldn't be too difficult for others too.
If you are planning to get into IT at this point you better have a couple back up plans. The IT industry is heavily saturated by people that believe it is all just fun and games. Back in the day before bosses knew what a keyboard was this may have been true, but now it is all over-expectations and dreams of magical valleys where there is no such thing as virii or spam or DMCA.
Damn you Sarbanes-Oxley!
DAMN YOU ENRON!!
Ahem. On topic for a moment: Professors have their place in the world and they are not obsolete. Recordings cannot convey or adapt to the invidual, and students can't sleep with them for better grades. Besides, the last thing we need is for Hollywood to come in teaching teachers how to act to increase their revenue by making presentations more theatrical!
Now if you'll excuse me I'm missing the Quake tourney.
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Missed the Boat
Come on, the school is struggling with the idea that if the courses are posted online.. even for a fee, students and potential students may just take the course online and never come into class. They are concerned about loosing revenue... and who wouldn't? It's their job! You would be concerned too.
Now, of course there is the whole thing of having a degree... which would require someone to attend a college in the first place, but many courses are offered completely online... so having a recorded lecture is not a bad thing. My wife has taken several of her classes online and she really enjoys them. She still has the option of driving to the school to meet with the professor is she wants.
Again, back to the topic. Whether to allow the material to be posted online is a question of "Who's going to benefit from it?". What makes a school great is the professors and the school... what you get out of it. If I could go to Baker College and Listen to Harvard lectures, I would pass my class and have a better education WITHOUT HAVING TO PAY HARVARD. Then everyone would be doing it and we wouldn't need to pay huge dollars for those schools and so on an so forth.. you get the idea.
If you let it happen, what does the future hold?
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This is the beauty of capitalism
For others they prefer the traditional methods of classroom instruction.
The beauty of the free market is that it will adapt to offer choices that people want. Which is why there's such a huge influx of online degrees now, and schools that offer the traditional settings are also learning of new, innovative ways to teach.
As to the point of this article I really don't care one way or the other if this professor can charge for his lectures. It's up to the school. So whatever you or I think doesn't matter, it's their school and they'll make the final decision. I kinda think his approach is humorous though, but I understand the school's trepidation with this. Some kids will just skip all classes and just buy the lectures, listen to them at their leisure, and go in for the tests. But if they're learning the material then who cares?
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Ummm...
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matthew reply:
only idiots go into ANY industry for fun.
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Professor Tries To Sell His Lectures Online
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MIT has made their classes available on the net fo
But as an fyi, MIT has been delivering much of their courses for free on the net for 2 years or so now. Check it out: http://ocw.mit.edu/index.html
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TAs
There were excellent exceptions of course, but they were few and far between.
Given my experiencem, I think recorded lectures could be better if they were recorded edited and tweaked. They could replace the professors altogether.
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seriously people.
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Wife
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Nothing new under the
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Nothing new under the
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Nothing new under the
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I already paid for that lecture
Screw that.
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Either Way
I for one would like them to be free. The more people who slack and watch/listen from home the less people i have to compete with for questions and 1on1 time with the prof.
The less everyone else works, the eaiser it gets for me.
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Lectures
"Those who can't do, teach. And those who can't teach, teach college."
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My First IT Job
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besides unless something in the teachers contract say that he cant give class outside the school/uni he is working at then he should be able to sell them independantly.
but that the educational institutions will not like cause if you can just buy your classes online you wont have to pay for college although you wouldnt get a degree
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Those who can..
There IS a reason teachers are not all excellent: Almost all Airline Pilots are exceptional: The rationale is the same. There is a great deal of competition for pilots jobs, there isn't for teachers. You really want better Teachers? Quit dissing on the profession. Do your part to make it an attractive carreer, and the worst teachers can start being weeded out by the better teachers coming up.
If your griping, start recognizing the real problem(yourself), if you want a better education system, quit blaming the teachers, give them compettition.
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Podcasting is official in many universities
http://www.merit.edu/mn/events/mjts-0605/abstracts.html
Students can review the lecture at their leisure.
Biggest use? Reviewing the lectures on the hardest topics.
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School wants money for itself
This school will do a cost-benefit analysis to see if it can make enough money by selling (really renting) CDs and mp3s/mpegs of the lectures to be worth doing it.
Many schools already video lectures and charge "remote" students an extra fee above tuition for not using a physical classroom. Then the students have to return the CDs at the end of the semester so they can't sell them to next year's students.
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Our view
Dr. Schrag is in his legal to do with IP as he sees fit. He chooses to put it up for sale in our store, as opposed to giving it away for free. We've had interest from people that are NOT students at NCSU being able to buy these materials from Dr. Schrag as well.
I realize that this is annoying to some students who feel they should get it for "free" because they paid tuition, but since Dr. Schrag is the copyright holder, he determines what can be done with his IP. From his point of view, the tuition pays for the "concert" but not the "CD". Another point to remember is that he doesn't require the students to purchase these lectures, as they can always choose to go to class and get what they paid for. I'm 3 years removed from being in college myself, but will 2 dollars and 50 cents really break the bank?
I'm confident that the University will give him the ok soon.
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