| By David Smith | Article Rating: |
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| March 14, 2013 12:34 PM EDT | Reads: |
561 |
by Joseph B. Rickert
It is difficult to imagine that there is anyone on the
planet with an internet connection and a desire to learn something new who has
not at least looked into taking a massive open online course (MOOC). Last Fall,
in an 11/4/12 article, the New York Time
declared the Year of the MOOC and quoted one of Coursera’s founders, Andrew Ng, of Stanford Machine Learning
fame, as boasting that with over 1.7 million students “Coursera was growing faster
than Facebook”. This year with both Udacity and Harvard and MIT backed edX offering interesting and challenging courses the growth of MOOC enrolment must
be astounding indeed. I think this is all good and I have written about it
before .
Being the perpetual student, I have looked over the syllabi
of quite a few courses that seem to be pretty exciting, but I am struggling to
carve out the time to devote to them. MOOC
courses are “free”, but for a working professional they not without opportunity
costs. In fact, it is not clear that a course designed to add value to 100,000
plus people at one time is the most effective way for professionals working in
or around data science to make progress.
Tony Ojeda of the R-users-DC saw the interest professionals have in
learning more about data science, and realized that even with the prevalence of
MOOC courses there are educational needs that are not being met. In a recent
email Tony wrote:
I started attending
data meetups like R Users DC and Data Science DC about a year and a half ago … and
these events really made me realize that there are a bunch of people out there
who, like me, wanted to learn more about data science, machine learning, and
analytics. However, I noticed that there isn't really a set path for
people that want to get started learning data science. It all depends on
your current context and learning how to apply the methods and tools to what
you're currently doing.
Tony also noticed that many of the people attending the
meetups were very knowledgeable about statistics, programming or other aspects
of data science. And, as he describes
it:
I'm sort of an
efficiency freak, so I automatically thought, “It would be awesome if I could
just find someone who knew more than me about whatever I'm trying to do so that
I could get past these hurdles and get my work done."
The result of Tony’s musings was that on January 9th
of this year he announced www.sagebourse.com
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Published March 14, 2013 Reads 561
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More Stories By David Smith
David Smith is Vice President of Marketing and Community at Revolution Analytics. He has a long history with the R and statistics communities. After graduating with a degree in Statistics from the University of Adelaide, South Australia, he spent four years researching statistical methodology at Lancaster University in the United Kingdom, where he also developed a number of packages for the S-PLUS statistical modeling environment. He continued his association with S-PLUS at Insightful (now TIBCO Spotfire) overseeing the product management of S-PLUS and other statistical and data mining products.< David smith is the co-author (with Bill Venables) of the popular tutorial manual, An Introduction to R, and one of the originating developers of the ESS: Emacs Speaks Statistics project. Today, he leads marketing for REvolution R, supports R communities worldwide, and is responsible for the Revolutions blog. Prior to joining Revolution Analytics, he served as vice president of product management at Zynchros, Inc. Follow him on twitter at @RevoDavid
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