Author: uclafaculty

Rethinking Professor Snodgrass

A recent posting on this blog replayed President Yudof’s comment that online courses have to be more than putting a camera in the back of the room and letting Professor Snodgrass drone on. You can replay his comments below for your listening pleasure.  But maybe the Snodgrass approach has merit at this time. Note that UC-Berkeley, among other universities, has put courses that essentially are video recordings of courses on YouTube for free. Anyone can view them.  It’s a relatively costless production method. You can find one such course at:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QMV45tHCYNI&list=EC4BBB74C7D2A1049C At a modest cost, those now “taking” such courses could…

The Wrong Kind of Hike

CalPERS enrollees receive notice of long-term care rate hikes 2/20/13, Sacramento Bee, Jon Ortiz [excerpt] With an 85 percent premium hike looming, government workers and retirees covered by CalPERS’ costliest long-term care insurance policies face a crucial decision: Swallow the increase or get out of a program they have been paying into for years. The reality of the increase literally came home this week as letters from CalPERS hit the mailboxes of 148,000 policyholders. The fund’s board last year voted to raise premiums for the 90 percent of insured members who bought the top-tier plan – lifetime coverage and inflation protection for…

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The Less the State Pays, the Better Our Credit Rating

From the UC-Berkeley Daily Californian: Fitch Ratings announced Thursday that bonds issued by the University of California have been rated AA+.The UC Board of Regents has issued $1.7 billion of AA+ bonds with a stable rating outlook to be sold by negotiation the week of Feb. 25. Fitch cites the university’s exceptional reputation and successful fiscal management as primary reasons for the bonds’ high rating…  In addition to (other) positive indicators, Fitch has stated that it regards the university’s diverse revenue base as a favorable credit factor. Decreasing reliance on state funding has provided a measure of safety against future…

Blame It on Professor Snodgrass

New York Times editorial:…Online classes are already common in colleges, and, on the whole, the record is not encouraging. According to Columbia University’s Community College Research Center, for example, about seven million students — about a third of all those enrolled in college — are enrolled in what the center describes as traditional online courses. These typically have about 25 students and are run by professors who often have little interaction with students. Over all, the center has produced nine studies covering hundreds of thousands of classes in two states, Washington and Virginia. The picture the studies offer of the…

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Quick! Somebody Tell the Governor!

From the Chronicle of Higher Education: Professor Leaves a MOOC in Mid-Course in Dispute Over Teaching Students regularly drop out of massive open online courses before they come to term. For a professor to drop out is less common. But that is what happened on Saturday in “Microeconomics for Managers,” a MOOC offered by the University of California at Irvine through Coursera. Richard A. McKenzie, an emeritus professor of enterprise and society at the university’s business school, sent a note to his students announcing that he would no longer be teaching the course, which was about to enter its fifth week. “Because…

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A Different Kind of Grade Inflation

From the Orange County Register: When Jose Carrillo went through medical school at Dartmouth College a decade ago, students would have thick books weighing down their white coats with reference information in case they needed it while making rounds… Today, Carrillo is helping third-year medical students understand neurology at UCI Medical Center in Orange… (L)oaded on the iPads in the pockets of the medical students’ coats is every textbook, note, flash card and question from their first two years of medical school – so much information that its equal in printed copies once covered entire tables. All that information sits on…

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Not All Presidents Are Celebrating Today

Emory President James Wagner President Yudof may be celebrating his impending liberation (in August).  According to Inside Higher Ed, however, Emory University President James Wagner may not be celebrating this Presidents’ Day: Emory University President James Wagner has infuriated many on his campus and scholars elsewhere by using the president’s letter in the new issue of Emory Magazine to say that the “three-fifths compromise” of the U.S. Constitution was a model for how people who disagree can work together for “a common goal.” Following an explosion of social media criticism Saturday as word of Wagner’s letter spread, he released an…

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Why the Lt. Governor Favors Online Higher Ed at the Regents (Maybe)

Lt. Governor Newsom appeared on The Colbert Report on Feb. 14 to promote a book that seems to have something to do with online government participation: C The Colbert Report Update from Sacramento Bee Capitol Alert blog: Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom was describing his new book, “Citizenville: How to Take the Town Square Digital and Reinvent Government,” on Comedy Central’s “The Colbert Report” on Thursday when the host, Stephen Colbert, asked him, ‘What the (bleep) does any of that mean?” Newsom had been talking about the “broadcast model of governing” and about how “big is getting small and small is…