Many people think that massive open online courses, or MOOCs, are the future of higher education in America.
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moocs are controversial, and debate has grown louder in recent weeks. In mid-April, the faculty at Amherst voted against joining a mooc program. Two weeks ago, the philosophy department at San José State wrote an open letter of protest to Michael J. Sandel, a Harvard professor whose flagship college course, Justice, became JusticeX, a mooc, this spring. “There is no pedagogical problem in our department that JusticeX solves,” the letter said. The philosophers worried that the course would make the San José State professor at the head of the classroom nothing more than “a glorified teaching assistant.” They wrote, “The thought of the exact same social justice course being taught in various philosophy departments across the country is downright scary.”