I can see that the required effort would be prohibitive, but after thinking
about this some more I do think there are a couple of nice advantages:

1) Quizzes and graded assignments offer some structure to self study, and
having some form of feedback/validation when you first get started is
helpful. I learned a lot of Haskell by making up my own assignments, but
not everyone is willing to put that kind of time into it.

2) I know several developers with great engineering skills who are taking
the Scala course because it gives them a structured way to get into it and
have something to show for the time on their resume. They're busy
professionals whose skills and expertise in large projects could really
benefit the Haskell community, but I've had no luck convincing them that
it's worth the time spent researching and learning on their own.

Scala already has some appeal for them if they have to work with java code
or have spent years with object oriented programming, so I think the more
the Haskell community can do to bring them here, the better.

Whether or not it's feasible to create the course is another issue. I don't
have an academic background or any academic affiliations to get the ball
rolling, but if anyone wants to make a course I'll volunteer to help proof
materials, test quizzes and assignments, and work on utilities to submit
and grade assignments.

On Tue, Oct 23, 2012 at 7:02 AM, Brent Yorgey <byor...@seas.upenn.edu>wrote:

> On Thu, Oct 18, 2012 at 11:49:08PM +0530, niket wrote:
> > I am a novice in Haskell but I would love to see the gurus out here
> > teaching Haskell on MOOCs like Coursera or Udacity.
> >
> > Dr Martin Odersky is doing it for Scala here:
> > https://www.coursera.org/course/progfun
> >
> > I would love to see Haskell growing on such new platforms!
>
> Just as a counterpoint, putting together a MOOC is a *ton* of work,
> with (in my opinion) not much benefit for a topic like Haskell where
> it is already possible to access lots of quality instructional
> materials online.  I would rather see Haskell gurus put their time and
> effort into producing more awesome code (or into curating existing
> instructional materials).
>
> Just my 2c.
>
> -Brent
>
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