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Coursera Launches LevelSets to Help Learners Develop Critical Skills Faster

Coursera Launches LevelSets to Help Learners Develop Critical Skills Faster

By Leah Belsky, Coursera Chief Enterprise Officer Rapid digital transformation is increasing the urgency to acquire in-demand skills. However, lack of time and frustration over not knowing what courses to take are major barriers for learners.  Today, we’re excited to launch LevelSets, a new assessment tool designed to help learners determine their current proficiency in…
New for educators: Seamlessly migrate content from your LMS to Coursera

New for educators: Seamlessly migrate content from your LMS to Coursera

By Jyoti Motwani, Senior Product Manager, Coursera  Today, we’re excited to announce that educators can now seamlessly import content from select learning management systems (LMS) directly to Coursera. This new feature supports scalable content creation, enabling educators to quickly migrate large amounts of content between an LMS and Coursera. It is enabled via an integration…
Announcing new products, tools, and features to support learners, educators, and institutions with their rapidly evolving teaching and learning needs

Announcing new products, tools, and features to support learners, educators, and institutions with their...

By Shravan Goli, Chief Product Officer, Coursera   Today, we’re excited to share new innovations that support learner goals, educator efficiency, and skill-based learning within institutions. Learners, educators, and organizations can use these tools on Coursera to develop in-demand skills and scale learning programs in a rapidly changing world.   Improving learner success and accessibility  Of the…
Ready for retention: Presenting a unified note-taking experience

Ready for retention: Presenting a unified note-taking experience

Ken Sun, Director of Product Management, Coursera What did you learn in your last course on Coursera? What were the important concepts presented each week? Could you draw one graph the instructor used? If recalling these facts feels tough, you’re not alone. Humans tend to lose 40% of information within the first 24 hours after…