General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: College Professors Are About to Get Really Mad at President Obama [View all]mike_c
(36,890 posts)Few, if any. Look, I'm deeply involved with the online ed movement in California, and the reason the real emphasis is on for-profit online course development is that a lot of money passes through higher ed and corporate America has set its sights on a piece of that pie, just like it invaded the prison industry fifteen or so years ago. Who profits? I can only speak for the corporations that are trying VERY hard to break into the California State University's curricula, but they're companies like Pearson E-College, Udacity, and Coursera. Western Governor's University is non-profit, but it's call center work is at least partly farmed out to commercial venders, maybe wholly by now. There is presently a bill in the California legislature to REQUIRE the CSU and UC universities to contract with commercial venders, at market rates, to offer lower division courses for credit through those online venders-- that one is dead in the water, I think, but you know how that goes. They always come back and try over and over. And we're talking about non-subsidized online courses-- students are charged the full freight for taking those courses, twice to four times as much as they pay for classroom instruction from experienced professors.
Make no mistake-- this is not about access to higher ed. It's about tapping the pockets of students, parents, and taxpayers for corporate profit.