What got me was the part near the end where it's talking about MIT's
OpenCourseWare project and says, "But it costs the university between
$10,000 and $15,000 to put the material from each course online because
the materials have to be properly licensed and formatted."
I'm sorry, what? I'm racking my brain trying to figure out how they
could possibly spend fifteen grand just getting course materials from a
professor's PC to their web server. I mean, yes, they package things as
zip files and everything, but fifteen grand?! The only thing I can
think of is that they have to buy these materials from their own faculty
members, is that the case?
(By contrast, imagine what WE could do with thirty million dollars!)
-=Steve=-
--
Stephen H. Foerster
http://hiresteve.com
http://hiresteve.com/blog
http://wikieducator.org/steve
I'm definitely just as excitable over this topic as everyone else.
There's so much to get excited about! The first thing that came to my
mind about the cost is that they probably tallied up every
microscopically detailed expense; that's what US schools do, afterall.
Also, some of the expenses may actually overlap with other work MIT
does. I was unsure, though, if that 10-15k was a per year expense, or
per course. The wording in the article was vague, and journalists are
notorious for using statistics at odd angles for their shock value.
Jesse
http://www.wikieducator.org/User:Jesse_Groppi
skype: jesse.groppi
| Level | FTE | APA Data Fee |
| 1 | Up to 2,499 | $575 |
| 2 | 2,500–4,999 | $850 |
| 3 | 5,000–9,999 | $1,100 |
| 4 | 10,000–14,999 | $1,425 |
| 5 | 15,000–19,999 | $1,925 |
| 6 | 20,000–24,999 | $2,750 |
| 7 | 25,000–59,999 | $3,450 |
| 8 | 60,000+ | Contact APA |
|
Notes: | ||