LONDON, Dec. 12 (Xinhua) -- An international conference on online education and massive open online courses (MOOC) opened in London on Thursday, drawing hundreds of educational professionals from across the globe to discuss the transformative potential of online learning and artificial intelligence (AI) in shaping the future of higher education.
BEIJING: Countries should promote open educational resources and develop quality massive online open courses (MOOC) to offer opportunities for learning to new audiences, education officials and experts said.China is committed to further opening up its MOOC resources and sharing them with other regions, education minister Chen Baosheng said on Friday at the first Global MOOC Conference, held online and offline at Tsinghua University in Beijing.
STARTING next month, students from an alliance of four government-linked universities (GLU) have the option of enrolling for courses from its member universities.
WILL the world’s top companies compete with business schools as more and more of them are launching online learning degree programmes? The answer is more than a simple “yes” or “no”.
TOMORROW marks the start of a new year, bringing with it the opportunity to enhance Malaysia’s education sector.
THE world is changing in more ways than one and all this is putting into question the reliance of the larger community on the existing education system.
THE transitional nature of the workplace has grabbed headlines for several years, with its importance to human capital gaining significant traction during and after the Covid-19 pandemic.
THE emergence of ChatGPT, an artificial-intelligence (AI) chatbot, will be a game-changer for the education space globally and, no doubt, in Malaysia too.
AS SOON as Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin announced the movement control order (MCO) in March 2020, the lives of every Malaysian were completely changed.
THERE are no two ways about it; educational technology is the future for tertiary education.
IN a bid to upskill and reskill Malaysians, Universiti Malaya (UM) will be introducing flexible, industry-relevant courses.
Despite online learning being part of Malaysia’s education system, the Covid-19 crisis has shown that educators need to step up
FROM PROFESSOR DR MOY FOONG MING (Epidemiology) & DATUK PROFESSOR DR AWG BULGIBA AWG MAHMUD (Public Health Medicine and Epidemiology), Department of Social and Preventive Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Universiti Malaya
It is skills that will matter in the uncertain times.