Online Learning Pitfalls Underscored by Woz U Troubles
Woz U, the online learning platform endorsed by Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, is again under fire. In a new CBS report, one former employee (an “enrollment counselor” charged with signing people up for the program) says the program's management has been pushing sales above all. In retrospect, he likens signing up for Woz U to “rolling the dice” with online learning and a career choice. Also speaking to CBS, Woz U president Chris Coleman acknowledged errors in course curriculum, and said the platform was implementing a system to catch those errors. He also said Steve Wozniak reviews curriculum, and denied students were pressured to enroll. The "curriculum errors" Coleman alluded to were mentioned in the CBS report, with one student claiming there were typos in the code that prevented it from compiling. That student also said one of his courses didn't have an instructor. CBS poked through the Woz U Slack channel and found other complaints of typos in code, out-of-date lectures (pre-recorded), and unqualified "mentors." “I felt like this was a $13,000 e-book,” the student told CBS. When Woz U launched in October 2017, we sounded the alarm. Things just didn’t stack up; students weren’t told what a course might cost, and Woz U's affiliation with existing schools and online learning portals now seems like a means to legitimize itself, leading students to sign up for loans to complete the program. In our original article, the comments section is filled with people claiming Woz U was just not worth it. One commenter claimed an online “help-out meeting” is only 30 minutes long (and may be where the aforementioned ‘mentors’ come into play). They called Woz U “a scam, in short.” Another commenter deemed it “the worst coding program ever.” [caption id="attachment_144382" align="aligncenter" width="1000"] Steve Wozniak's new Woz U platform begs a lot of questions[/caption]