Battery gone, this rushed post is basically why Ireland appears very different to the rest of the world (I knew this, but I've more to discuss when I get back around here)
Yup, I agree. When it comes down to it, its all about making money. If you publish all your lectures and classes on the web for free to be accessed by anyone anywhere, then what really is the point of going to that school?
Is it all about making money?
I actually came to this idea thinking about how I ended up in my course. I chose
business studies when I was in my final year of leaving cert (our A levels or equivalent in america). I got enrolled into university in a BS class, and switched to maths on day 1 because I was lead to believe studying maths in college was extremely intense (due to olympiad training I attending a few years before), but in fact it is easier than I ever thought and I could tell just by looking at the timetable on day 1.
So, I was thinking about a website where secondary students could learn more about the degree choices and make better informed decisions, and it seems like the best way to do this is by engaging with the students who are studying that course. There are websites with lots of information about course content but they have no user or student involvement, and the best way to get all of that is if you are the college moodle/blackboard system.
This could be an idea that seems to work much better here in ireland than for example in america. In ireland (there's actually been serious talk of abolishing this system, but currently its probably gonna stick) students dont pay fees (except if theyre not Irish or northern irish citizens (not sure if that applies to all of uk)), The government pays 15k or whatever it is for every student enrolled in every college every year. I'm not sure if the sum varies from college to college, but I'm pretty sure it doesnt.
So essentially, we've got different institutions with different policies, priorities and characteristics but they're all government funded about 85%.