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University of Florida guts computer science department in budget-cutting move

Contrary to some reports, Florida is not eliminating its computer science department. Instead, it is proposing a radical restructuring that will kill the research arm of one department, scattering its faculty and leaving any left behind with an expanded teaching burden and fewer teaching assistants. Whether it would be better to simply kill it isn't clear.

The University of Florida, as with many state institutions, has seen its financial support plummet over the past decade (Forbes indicates it's down 30 percent over the last six years). This has triggered a number of cuts to academic programs; this year, the cuts fell on the Computer & Information Science and Engineering Department, which is home to an active research program. Under the plan proposed by the Dean, a bit less than half of the faculty will be the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department, and a few others will be spread among three other departments.

The faculty that's left in Computer & Information Science and Engineering will be converted into teaching only. All teaching assistants in that department will be eliminated, and their duties will be taken up by the remaining faculty. Realistically, most faculty who are actively engaged in a research program are unlikely to accept that sort of change, and will probably look for work elsewhere. Although this plan would seem to gut the department and leave its remains in chaos, the Dean concludes by stating, "this new mission would allow us to devote more faculty time to grow both the size and excellence of the Computer Science degree program."

The students remaining in the department have organized various protests, from a letter-writing campaign to demonstrations.

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MIT launching certificate program based on OpenCourseWare, open source platform

A decade after MIT began to put its teaching materials and lectures online via the OpenCourseWare platform, the university has announced that it will leverage these materials to provide an online certification program, currently termed MITx. Although these certificates won't have the same weight as an MIT degree, they will indicate mastery of specific subject areas. The whole system will be built on top of an open-source software platform, which may enable other universities to follow in MIT's footsteps.

The system will provide a complete online learning environment, with labs and the possibility for interactions with other students. After completing a set of course materials, students will get the chance to demonstrate their mastery of the topic, presumably through a test or interactions with MIT staff. You'll have to pay for the resulting certificate, but the preliminary noises suggest that they'll be a whole lot cheaper than an MIT education. Both OpenCourseWare and the MITx teaching materials will remain free—it's just the certificate that will cost money.

The first test of the system will launch in the spring. Once the kinks are worked out, more courses will follow, and the underlying technology will be open sourced.

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