"I believe that Harvard plans to make a relationship like the one MIT has over the next couple of years," Abelson says.
Despite Harvard's proximity to MIT, the two colleges have no current plans to work together on I-Campus. Abelson says this kind of inter-faculty cooperation is rare between universities.
According to Abelson, when collaboration happens among institutions, it is usually "spontaneous" and based upon "common interests."
"Universities are very complicated kinds of beasts," he says. "Both MIT and Harvard have very different kinds of faculty."
Still, already MIT and the National University of Singapore are cooperating to offer classes over the Internet.
"Why should an undergraduate be at only one university?" Abelson says.
In the future, he says, the technology of distance learning may make it possible for Harvard to share facilities and students with universities down the river and across the world.
Read more in News
Mayor Advocates Wage IncreaseRecommended Articles
-
Fatal System Error?Microsoft antitrust decision a positive step in freeing industry On Nov. 5, U.S. District Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson delivered a
-
LettersCrimson Neglects Positive Aspects of MIT Fraternities To the editors: Your editorial about MIT fraternities, "Mistake after Mistake"(Editorial, Nov. 5)
-
MIT Receives Pledge of $350 MillionMIT received a pledge for $350 million yesterday to create a new institute on brain research, the largest single gift
-
Breaking Microsoft's MonopolyThe decision by U.S. District Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson to find Microsoft guilty of violating antitrust laws was a positive
-
A Harsh, but Reasonable, SplitThe breakup of Microsoft proposed by the Justice Department and the attorneys general of 17 states would be a positive
-
No Slap on the WristAlthough it still claims its innocence on antitrust charges, the software giant Microsoft on May 10 presented Judge Thomas Penfield