Trong chúng ta chắc là không ai là không có ước mơ được học tập tại những trường ĐH hàng đầu thế giới như Harvard, Học viện công nghệ Massachusets(MIT, đây là trường đại học nổi tiếng đi đầu trong ngành khoa học máy tính). Nhưng có thể các bạn sẽ không có được cơ hội đó, lý do thì các bạn chắc cũng biết rồi. Ngoài đầu vào ở đây rất cao thì mức phí phải trả ở đây là quá lớn đối với hầu hết chúng ta.
Nhưng giờ đây, với chương trình học trực tuyến EdX, cơ hội để học với các giảng viên giàu kinh nghiệm tại những ngôi trường nổi tiếng trên toàn thế giới đã mở ra. EdX là một nền hệ thống cung cấp các Khóa học trực tuyến được thành lập bởi Học viện Công nghệ Massachusetts và Đại học Harvard nhằm tổ chức các khóa học trực tuyến miễn phí cấp độ đại học trong nhiều chuyên ngành khác nhau cho mọi đối tượng trên thế giới.
Các bạn hãy truy cập https://www.edx.org, sign up một cho mình một account và enroll một khóa học trong bất kỳ lĩnh vực nào mà các bạn yêu thích nào !
Chương trình học tại các trường đại học hàng đầu thế giới
Đúng rồi :)). Nhưng có cái đáng, có cái không nhé. Tôi đã phí vài củ trên Coursera và giờ nhìn lại nó lãng phí quá.
I have to chuckle… Do you really believe that everyone who gets the chance to study at Harvard, MIT, or Stanford will become famous or intellectual?
Did Einstein, Planck, or Bohr study at Harvard or MIT? The truth is painful, but it must be spoken: What you’re spreading and promoting here is nothing more than legalized scam and the deception of naive young people.
To become intellectual or famous, you have to be born with a certain talent, not with a rich or aristocratic background. Money can buy many fancy things, but not intelligence. Otherwise, the world would consist only of tofu-brained aristocrats and the wealthy…
Do you really think this rambling proves anything? I don’t give a sh*t about your speech—it violates this community and it’s full of lazy thinking. What you’re saying is sloppy, arrogant bullshit dressed up as intellectual honesty.
I like debating, but your words are so contemptible that they’re not even worth arguing against.
Ranting doesn’t change the fact that you advertise here as a freeloader.
Hard work pays off also
Yes. I fully agree. But hard work doesn’t require paid lectures from Harvard or MIT. A good book is more useful and effective than a clip from a “famous” professor.
Why pay for a lecture that’s no better than a good book written by an expert? You know, Einstein was undoubtedly a genius, but his lectures were terrible (not because his English was very “Swabian”).
@Joe
The reason is that not everyone enjoys reading or is suited for it. A book written by an expert is still a tool for storing knowledg of only that expert. A lecture is also highly systematic, curated by a professor. The different is a book can contain too much information while someone (for example a beginner) may neither need nor have enough time.
At a time when books were the most efficient means of storing information (compared to human memory), reading was the most effective way to acquire knowledge. However, (1) the explosion of accessible information and (2) algorithms that grant instant access to specific data have made acquiring information through books far less efficient (even though much information remains accessible only through books)
As the half-life of facts decreases rapidly, spending that much time reading in such a manner will make someone more likely to fall behind in the future.
As a result, the scales of knowledge today no longer toward those who are book readers, but who effectively utilize internet data repositories and possess strong analytical and synthetic minds
For studying/learning, I think it is more important to make questions rather than the platform. To ask a good question is to move in the right direction, it is the prerequisite for grasping the foundation of a problem.
If you prefer reading a book, then just do so. I personally also enjoy reading many books, because I like it.
if we can reach the level where wisdom reigns, there is no conflict over which knowledge-storing tool we use, I believe
Do you know why almost all inventors/scientists make bad professors? Because there are many types of intelligence: human intelligence, social intelligence, scientific-technical intelligence, communication intelligence, and so on. Scientific-technical geniuses usually have weaknesses in communication and social intelligence, which is why they are often called “freaks” or “nerds.”
The ability to explain complex topics in a way that even laypeople can understand requires high human, social, and communication intelligence. The famous “MC” Tran Thanh, for example, can present complex topics so simply that everyone understands them, whereas a professor often fails to do so. Professors at MIT or Harvard are not the type like MC Tran Thanh; they are more like “nerds.” Their lectures require above-average intelligence from the audience to grasp the core of the content. If learning these lectures were as easy as child’s play, there would be no need to attend these prestigious universities. Instead, one could simply take the lectures “online,” as @Skyfall’s advertisement suggests, given that tuition fees exceed $60,000 per year. Wouldn’t it be foolish to go to MIT or Harvard then?
Asking questions is a high art. Not every question is a question, because context determines whether it’s good or stupid. To ask a question, one must generally have already engaged with the topic long enough to even be able to ask one. For example, if I were to ask in this forum, “Why do I need Java or C++ for software development?”, I would be stoned by the readers because that would reveal my lack of knowledge in software development and thus be considered a stupid question.
83% thành viên diễn đàn không hỏi bài tập, còn bạn thì sao?