Укр Eng

Press about us

24.01.2013

Will ‘Moocs’ bring down price of the Ivy League?

Will the rise of higher education in the US and elsewhere be curtailed by the expansion of Massive Open Online Courses (Moocs) that allow people to study digitally rather than attend lectures and classes? Some surprising people think so.

One of them is Rafael Reif, president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He told a panel in Davos organised by the Victor Pinchuk Foundation, that he didn’t think institutions such as MIT could keep charging $40,000 a year for tuition in the digital world.

Mr Reif said the costs of undergraduate education split into board and lodging, lectures and seminars, and project and laboratory work. The lectures might be replaced in future by online education.

“Once classes are replaced by online courses, will they still be able to charge £40k for projects and labs. The answer is I don’t think so,” he told the panel.

The panel included a 12-year old Pakistani girl, Khadija Niazi, who had taken an astrophysics course, offered online by Udacity, a start-up founded by Sebastian Thrun, a research professor at Stanford university and former Google executive.

Lawrence Summers, former president of Harvard and a former US Treasury secretary, said that Moocs could be “profoundly transformative”. It was “insane for calculus to be taught 10,000 times in 10,000 different classes. We are on the way to it being taught by fewer people better”.

But Bill Gates, whose foundation funds some Mooc courses, was more sceptical. He said participation rates were still very low, despite them being offered free and the knowledge they offered had always been available through textbooks.

Author: John Gapper
Share |

Back to the list

Video

RSS All video
27.02.2026

Can Ukraine Count Only on Itself?

27.02.2026

Closing remarks of the YES Special gathering February 24, 2026

27.02.2026

The Politics of Ending the War: Voters, Vibes, and Leadership

27.02.2026

Innovation & Pragmatism UA Style – Vital for Europe.Sanna Marin, Oleksandr Kamyshin

Pages 1 2 3 4 5 ... of 5
 

News

RSS All news

The Victor Pinchuk Foundation has provided support to three ‘Cradle of Hope’ partner centres in Sumy, Zhytomyr and Chernivtsi

21.04.2026

The Victor Pinchuk Foundation has paid for equipment repairs and purchased components for the neonatal intensive care units of three ‘Cradle of Hope’ partner centres based at the Sumy Regional Clinical Perinatal Centre, the Zhytomyr Regional Perinatal Centre and the Chernivtsi Regional Children’s Hospital, at a total cost of 420,000 hryvnias. 



Victor Pinchuk Foundation Launches First International Leadership Program for Ukrainian Veterans

21.04.2026

The Victor Pinchuk Foundation is launching the Ukrainian Veterans Leadership Program (UVLP), the first international leadership program specially created for Ukrainian veterans, designed to develop leadership capacity through access to world-class educational practices. The program is a cornerstone of the Foundation’s long-term commitment to fostering leadership in Ukraine.

A mental health center of the RETURNING network, founded by Victor and Olena Pinchuk, has opened in Odesa

20.04.2026

The RETURNING (ukr. ПОВЕРНЕННЯ) mental health center in Odesa will provide free, professional psychological support to more than 4,000 service members, veterans, and their family members each year. The RETURNING project was founded by Victor and Olena Pinchuk to support the mental health of Ukraine’s defenders, veterans, and their families affected by the psychological consequences of the war caused by Russian aggression. 



Pages 1 2 3 4 5 ... of 5
Created and supported by: «Art Depo» Creative Agency