Why is Coursera's headline still 'Free Online Courses From Top Universities' even though...

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Joe Martins


Coursera has abandoned what was once its core principal and mission. Frankly, the organization has lost its way in its more recent quest to further monetize its offerings.

You'll notice they've changed their introduction too. It only reads "Take the world's best courses, online." Free is no longer mentioned. You may have also noticed that Coursera email notifications which used to offer dozens of completely free courses now displays 100% paid and subscription bundles.

For a while, users were still able to sign up for individual courses for free. Now that too has been stripped away. You'll find that a very large majority of "courses" offer 3 options:

  1. buy the bundle of which it is a part
  2. buy the individual courses "with access to graded material"
  3. "audit" the course with no access to graded materials or grading.

A "free course" that does not offer free access to graded materials or any sort of grading is not a free course, nor should it even be referred to as "a course". Materials without grades/grading....well that's called reading books and you can still do that for free at your local public library and a variety of online resources.

I had wondered if Coursera eventually found itself up against a wall. Was it Coursera's plan all along to eventually monetize all "courses" and only permit rather useless free auditing once it grew its base? Or was it the result of pushback from educators/institutions unwilling to continue to provide free access and grading? No matter what the motivation....Coursera has officially failed. That Coursera now heavily markets "financial aid" where once it marketed "free" is, to me, the legacy of that failure.



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