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Google: 1 Million Education Users

In a July 30 post on the company blog, Google announced over one million users worldwide are using its online education suite of email, calendar, and docs. As we mentioned before, it is unlikely that Microsoft will be able to match this level of market penetration any time soon, although the battle is far from being won by Google. The real challenge lies in how Google will monetize this user base unaccustomed to commercial services. Nevertheless, this is an important milestone for learning technologies, especially due to the global reach of these services. We expect to see these online platforms continue to experience robust growth, especially as universities in the developing world begin to uncover their potential. With the market growing at such a rapid pace, it is primed for the entrance of a new major player. Will Microsoft or another company occupy this new space? Or will Google simply consolidate its dominance?

TextbookTorrents.com Returns, Re-igniting Textbook Price Debate

After a month of down time, embattled textbook tracker Textbook Torrents is now back online, although still without access to its domain name. The site, which can be reached via its IP address 85.17.226.223, received widespread press coverage at the beginning of July, which brought legal pressure in the form of take-down requests served on its host and domain registrar. The resulting fiasco was typical of the murky legal waters surrounding linking to copyrighted content but not hosting the content itself: the site was booted by its host and, most unusually, locked out of its domain. After scrambling to move to a new hosting service, Textbook Torrents is now back up with heightened privacy measures in place. Most significantly, it no longer records users’ IP addresses to protect user privacy should their server logs be compromised.

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Online Schools Top Veteran Enrollment Lists

The University of Phoenix and American Intercontinental University top veteran college enrollment lists, according to a Seattle Post-Intelligencer article appearing yesterday. As the first batch of post 9/11 veterans begins re-assimilating to civilian life, many are taking advantage of the Montgomery GI Bill to acquire degrees. The bill provides a stipend that covers the cost of most community colleges and online schools but falls short of most public university tuition levels.

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Campaign Update: Obama Opposed to Public Online Education

The July 30 edition of Education Weekly reveals a troubling Obama campaign memo that maligns publicly-funded online learning solutions. The memo reflects an unsophisticated perspective on online education, referring to most online schools as “for-profit” organizations that would squander taxpayer money.

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Microsoft and Google Compete to Offer Higher Ed Freebies

As internet giants Google and Microsoft jockey for dominance in the realm of web-based services, institutions of higher learning have benefited from this competition in the form of free services. Google so far leads Microsoft by a wide margin: roughly 2000 institutions worldwide have outsourced some aspect of their web services (generally email) to Google since 2006. This September, Google will be touring the country in an environmentally-friendly bus as part of the aptly-named “App to School” tour. The tour aims to promote Google’s portfolio of web-based applications as well as solicit feedback from student end-users.

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Google Launches Public Beta of Wikipedia Pseudo-Competitor Knol

  Knol screenshot, courtesy of Wikipedia

Google’s recently-acquired reference site, Knol, entered into public beta on 23 July. The site is similar to Wikipedia in that it relies entirely on user-submitted content, but the similarities end there. Instead of encouraging collaboration between users, Knol emphasizes individual authorship, and encourages users to verify that their username is their legal name via credit card or phone. As such, each entry is controlled by a single person, although other users may suggest edits. Knol aims to incentivize contribution by paying authors a share of the ad revenue generated by their content.

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Leaked List Shows Top Government and Law Enforcement Officials Possess Bogus Degrees

A list featuring the names of over 9,000 degree mill “graduates” was released today by the Spokane, WA Spokesman-Review. The list, which the Justice Department refused to release, was apparently leaked to the paper. Upon researching the names on the list, the paper found several shocking clients: a CIA contractor and an employee of the National Security Agency (both with top-secret clearance), an employee of a nuclear power plant, a NASA engineer, two US Marshals, a senior White House staffer, Army officers, and numerous police officers and municipal employees. The eight people who set up and ran the degree mill have been indicted and convicted of federal offenses, and ringleader (and high-school drop out) Dixie Ellen Randock faces three years in prison.

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EU-funded program creates “intelligent” online learning platform

European researchers participating in the European Learning Grid Infrastructure (ELeGI) project recently completed an online learning platform that automatically responds to individual students’ learning styles as well as teacher input. The ELeGI promises to revolutionize online pedagogy by rendering the online learning platform fluid: instead of adapting to the platform, teachers have the platform adapt to them.

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Driving School Merges Onto the Information Superhighway

 

The actual driving portion of driver’s education courses remains offline, for obvious reasons.

One of America’s most enduring but least celebrated institutions of “higher” learning is the driving school. Affectionately referred to by ennui-filled teenagers as “driver’s ed,” the educational experience generally consists of dozens of hours of lectures and a couple behind the wheel lessons with a chain-smoking instructor. It is no surprise then that the entrepreneurs at DriversEd.com have taken this cherished institution into cyber-space, and have even received DMV accreditation in several states.

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Online Education and the 2008 Election: A Look at the Candidates’ Positions

John McCain is thus far the sole candidate who has discussed online education.

 

As the presidential campaign nears a fever pitch, candidates have been expanding, revising, and flip-flopping their positions at an ever increasing pace. In fact, one would be hard-pressed to find a subject upon which either candidate has not opined. Yet, the campaign discussion surrounding online education is barely a whisper—surprising neglect for a topic that directly affects millions of Americans. Hit the jump for our assessment of both candidates’ positions.

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