M. Komaraiah’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


A Case for MOOCs in Indian Higher Education System
  • Article

July 2015

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45 Reads

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8 Citations

Journal of Engineering Education Transformations

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M. Komaraiah

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P. Narasimha Reddy

Massive open online courses (MOOC) have started in 2008 but the interest has really exploded since 2012. The proliferation of MOOCs happened because of the maturing of many of the technologies such as the wide availability of low cost broadband, cheaper laptops, tablets, and smart phones, expanded cellular network, cloud storage and computing and social networking. The need for low cost education for masses has been felt and MIT started the open courseware movement, which has been followed by many other big universities. This has naturally progressed into MOOC and a large number of MOOCs have been made available. Because of the openness and online,eager students particularly from developing nations have lapped up MOOCs. India also followed with the IITs and IIM providing themin a smallway.Therewere also efforts to make the MOOCs for credit by some universities. The structure of a MOOC is slightly different from traditional classroom based courses in order to keep the attention of the online student with the course. Therefore, it is necessary to follow the best practices that have proven successful with theMOOCs that are already available. For Indian higher education system, MOOCs actually would provide a very convenient model to impart quality education across a large number of private institutions. It is important to consider a viable model for offering MOOCs as part of regular university curriculumand offer credit at the same time having the flexibility of taking free courses. This paper offers such amodel for Indian universities.

Citations (1)


... Indeed, India's higher education system is the third largest in the world, next to that of the United States and China. In the decade from 2000-01 to 2010-11, the Indian higher education system has grown at a fast pace by adding nearly 20,000 colleges and more than 8 million students, with women making up 24-50 per cent of higher education enrolment (Sharma, 2018). However, women had to wait until the twentieth century to be adequately considered in policy plans for the tertiary sector. ...

Reference:

Women and Higher Education Development in Post-Colonial Societies
A Case for MOOCs in Indian Higher Education System
  • Citing Article
  • July 2015

Journal of Engineering Education Transformations