I am generalizing it based on my experience so far. There three companies.
Coursera (coursera.org)
EdX (edx.org)
Udacity
I have never taked a MOOC from Udacity.
The reason I took Coursera and EdX courses is they mimic the regular university courses. They start and end on specific days, there are homeworks, quizzes, exams, etc. just like in college courses. I like this discipline. There are grades and one may or may not be able to earn a certificate. Most courses just give pass/fail (if fail, you don't get a certificate). Few courses do offer certificate with distinction.
Coursera, currently, offers lot more courses than EdX. But EdX is catching up. You have a bigger choice of subjects with Coursera currently.
In terms of standards and quality, both are far superior to colleges I have attended. But, in general, at least so far, EdX courses have lot more rigor and higher quality professors.
Two toughest and highest quality MOOC courses I have taken so far are both EdX courses (Classical Mechanics and Intro to Biology - Secret of Life), both offered by MIT.
Coursera (coursera.org)
EdX (edx.org)
Udacity
I have never taked a MOOC from Udacity.
The reason I took Coursera and EdX courses is they mimic the regular university courses. They start and end on specific days, there are homeworks, quizzes, exams, etc. just like in college courses. I like this discipline. There are grades and one may or may not be able to earn a certificate. Most courses just give pass/fail (if fail, you don't get a certificate). Few courses do offer certificate with distinction.
Coursera, currently, offers lot more courses than EdX. But EdX is catching up. You have a bigger choice of subjects with Coursera currently.
In terms of standards and quality, both are far superior to colleges I have attended. But, in general, at least so far, EdX courses have lot more rigor and higher quality professors.
Two toughest and highest quality MOOC courses I have taken so far are both EdX courses (Classical Mechanics and Intro to Biology - Secret of Life), both offered by MIT.
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