Demand for High Quality Online STEM Education: Georgia Tech’s Online M.S. in Computer Science...

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Demand for High Quality Online STEM Education:

Georgia Tech’s Online M.S. in Computer Science

Joshua GoodmanAmanda Pallais

Harvard University

Julia MelkersGeorgia Tech

APPAMNovember 7, 2014

Motivation• MOOCs have been heralded as having the potential to

transform higher education, particularly in STEM.

• Promise of increased access to disadvantaged students, of lifelong learning, etc.

• To date, most MOOCs have yielded disappointing results:

• Extremely high attrition rates.

• Most who enroll already have degrees.

• High failure rates when replacing on-campus courses.

• Some of this may be driven by most studied MOOCs being:

• Free or low-cost

• Of unclear quality

• We study the only MOOC equivalent to a prestigious STEM degree.

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Our study• We study GA Tech’s new Online M.S. in Computer Science

(OMSCS).

• GA Tech’s computer science department, one of the top 10 in the nation, announced last year it would offer

• A fully online version of its prestigious master’s degree

• For one-seventh of cost that out-of-state students pay for its on-campus degree ($7,000 vs. $45,000).

• Now open to all with relevant B.A. and GPA of 3.0 or higher.

• Extensive media attention because it’s first with high quality institution, low cost and degree that won’t say “online”.

• Department is staking its reputation on making the educational experience a serious one.

• In first year, N~1,800 makes it 3X larger than largest on-campus C.S. program in the U.S. (Carnegie Mellon has ~600 graduates per year).

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Research questions• Who does demand for high quality online STEM ed come

from?

• We compare characteristics of applicants to OMSCS and GA Tech’s on-campus master’s program.

• Does it increase access to any groups of students?

• Conditional on acceptance, who enrolls in the online program?

• For accepted students, what characteristics predict enrollment?

• What are the educational (and labor market) impacts? [SOON]

• What educational programs, if any, does OMSCS replace?

• For capacity constrained early cohorts, we estimate this with regression discontinuity on applicants’ GPAs using NSC data.

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The Student Experience: Dashboard

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The Student Experience: Video Lectures

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The Student Experience: Lesson Slides

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The Student Experience: Problem Sets

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The Student Experience: Final Project

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Data• Full application, admission and enrollment data from

applicants to:

• OMSCS’ first two cohorts (spring and summer 2014)• On-campus program (fall 2013 and 2014)

• For each applicant, we know:

• Race, gender, age, residential location, citizenship• College attended, major, GPA (non-US colleges

complicate this)• Current employer (if any)• Admissions and enrollment status (re GA Tech)• Will soon have NSC data on enrollment anywhere in the

U.S.

• On-campus program : 3,086 apply, 15% get in, 9% enroll (N = 271)

• Online program : 3,951 apply, 51% get in, 45% enroll (N = 1,768)

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USA India China Other0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

On-campus Program

Applied

Admitted

Enrolled

Citizenship

Perc

ent o

f poo

l

Citizenship (On-campus Program)• For on-campus program:

• Only 10% of applicants and 25% of enrollees are from the U.S.

• India (and China) account for nearly all of the remaining pool.

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Citizenship (Online Program)• For online program:

• Nearly 80% of applicants and enrollees are U.S. citizens• India (and China) account for half of the remaining

pool.

USA India China Other0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

Online Program

Applied

Admitted

Enrolled

Citizenship

Perc

ent o

f poo

l

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Age Distribution (On-campus Program)• Applicants to the on-campus program are 24 years old on

average.• Very few are older than 30.• Most are in college or early employment (50% list

employers).

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Age Distribution (Online Program)• Applicants to the online program are 35 years old on

average.• Many are in their 40s and 50s; even some in 60s and

70s.• Nearly all are employed (90% list employers).

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Other Measures of Diversity• Major: On-campus – 62% CS, 27% engineering, 11% other

Online – 40% CS, 27% engineering, 33% other

Online applicants have more diverse set of majors (somewhat less so if limited to U.S. citizens).

• Gender: On-campus – 25% female applicants (16% in U.S.)

Online – 14% female applicants (13% in U.S.)

Gender imbalance due largely to non-U.S. applicants.

• Race : Among U.S. citizens, about 17% of applicants are black or Hispanic in both programs.

• Online - 17% of applicants, 14% of enrollees from AT&T

(partner).

• Conditional on admission, GA residency is strongest (and nearly only) predictor of enrollment (6 pp for online; 56 pp for on-campus).

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PRELIMINARY Implications• Average on-campus applicant : 24-year old Indian

recent college grad

• Average online applicant : 35-year old employed American

• These PRELIMINARY descriptive findings suggest that a high quality, low cost online graduate STEM program

• Generates large demand from mid-career workers of various ages, particularly from U.S. citizens;

• Attracts those who look similar to on-campus applicants in terms of race and gender, at least among U.S. citizens;

• Attracts large numbers of applicants, nearly all of whom enroll if admitted.

• Strong evidence of unmet need for mid-career STEM education that’s flexible, relatively low cost, but of serious quality.

• Next steps: measuring student quality; estimating what alternatives, if any, OMSCS replaced; labor market outcomes (3-5 years from now)

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