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Programming Education

Rupert Murdoch Won't Be Teaching Your Children To Code After All 57

theodp writes: Plans for Rupert Murdoch & Co. to teach your children to code just hit a bump in the road. Murdoch's News Corp. last week announced it plans to exit the education business as it announced a $371 million write-down of the investment in its Amplify education unit, which aimed to reinvent education via digital tools, tablets and curriculum reinforced with snazzy graphics. The news may help to explain why Amplify MOOC, the entity that offered online AP Computer Science A to high school students, was re-dubbed Edhesive ("online education that sticks") a couple of months ago. Tech-backed Code.org, whose $1+ million "Gold Supporters" include the James and Kathryn Murdoch-led Quadrivium Foundation, announced a partnership with Edhesive to bring CS to schools in June, around the same time Edhesive LLC was formed.
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Rupert Murdoch Won't Be Teaching Your Children To Code After All

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  • I didn't want that bastard teaching kids anything at all. I don't need any immoral cutthroat bastards in the family, thank you very much.

  • I'm a life-long learner. I can't get enough of learning. I have three college degrees, a couple of diplomas from community colleges, plus some IT certs. I try to attend conferences and training sessions whenever I can to afford to, time-wise and cost-wise. I've also taken several MOOC courses.

    The MOOC courses have been, by far, the worst out of all of them. It isn't the quality of the lessons or the material that's the problem. Those actually tend to be top notch. It's the social aspect of MOOCs that are ab

    • by Anonymous Coward

      That's what forum moderation is for. Without it, forums are useless, even with a restricted user base. At least the forums weren't public which would have allowed spam bots. Hooray!

      But uh the whole idea that learning is about interacting with other students seems to be a pretty subjective viewpoint. There are plenty of folks out there that can (and do) learn just as well, if not better, alone. Talking to anyone other than the instructor can be counterproductive for some.

      The worst thing about MOOCs is t

    • So many of the other forum participants were from India, China, or some African country, asking for their certificate PDF even before the course had started! I mean, the course videos, assignments and exam weren't even available yet, but these people demanded that the professor leading the course send them the certificate that they had not earned right away!

      I'm not sure it's a "foreign" thing.

      When I was teaching, I had one student come up to me at the start of the semester asking if I would write him a recommendation (he turned out to be of the same stripe as those you described above). Gave me no indication that he was an immigrant.

      What I think you're describing is someone who needs the certificate to secure something else. They put on the overconfidence front (and generally are lousy students to boot...this young man certainly was: he needed the class to g

    • So many of the other forum participants were from India, China, or some African country, asking for their certificate PDF even before the course had started! I mean, the course videos, assignments and exam weren't even available yet, but these people demanded that the professor leading the course send them the certificate that they had not earned right away!

      And people wonder why outsourcing to India isn't always such a great idea.

    • It wouldn't surprise me if these forum members were just a few people hired by the education industrial complex (Pearson, et al) to intentionally spoil the experience for others.

    • Also the bad people were probably brown and not Christian, and you could hear their stupid accents through their ascii characters.
  • Why wait 20+ years for cheap workers when you can bribe Congress to give you all the H1B's you want RIGHT NOW?

  • A $371 M loss on an education program that never even got off the ground would have the GOP in the House and Senate calling for heads on platters. But if it's a big business, hey - it's a just a writedown.

    And before you rank and file tea party start talking about "your money" vs "corporate money" you need to make sure that none of your 401k/IRA/retirement/investment holdings include this large cap stock (or any iteration of the S&P500) because if you do - it *is* your money.

    • Well, I guess that depends ... if they get a tax break for this write down, then it's not just a write down.

      If they do get a tax break, then expect a slew of corporations to start meddling in education, failing, and then taking their tax break and leaving.

      If corporations are risking their own money, great. If they're just passing the buck back to the taxpayers, all they're really doing is diverting money for their own purposes.

  • Totally misread that initially as, "Rupert Murdoch won't be touching your children after all".

    I was a bit disappointed when I reread it, not gonna lie.

    • by umghhh ( 965931 )
      Looking at some of do-gooders one has to wonder if the world were not better if they kept making more money and being generally asshats instead. This is how far our societies came.
    • He actually will still be doing that. It is how he is able to transfuse youth into himself and achieve immortality.
  • What really happened was that they found out that coding has a strong liberal bias.
  • It has a host of psychological,political, economic, and sociological factors which cannot be addressed by technology alone. Anyone who thinks that throwing a bunch of technology at the problem and then snapping their fingers to find everything fixed overnight is, to be charitable, arrogant or stupid.

    There is no magic bullet.

  • I must have misunderstood this "education" business completely, despite about a decade or so of teaching experience! If I had only known it was all about "snazzy graphics" and the right technology, maybe I would have been more successful at teaching!

    Or not. This may be the most pathetic large-scale fail in the the history of teaching.

  • This is stunning news! Stunning! I am literally stunned, as I type this.

    By the way, AP Pascal in a high school in upstate New York in the '80's had you programming recursive descent parsers in a Pascal environment on Apple 2 (II, //, //e, etc) computers and would have put you ahead of what most colleges were teaching in Freshman CS at the time. So, way to take a step back, nation's educational system.

Beware of Programmers who carry screwdrivers. -- Leonard Brandwein

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