Android101 is an android programming course that is conducted by Coursera.
Taught by Prof. Adam Porter from University of Maryland.
This course is about 8 week long. And student is given weekly-quiz and programming assignment each week. Student who complete 70% and above receive basic certificate of completion.
I completed this course and here are some statistics By Prof. Adam Porter:
1. Android101 course had a total enrollment of over 220,000 students. This is the 2nd largest single session enrollment that Coursera has ever had.
2. Signature Track Signups appear to be around 8,000. This is the largest signature track enrollment Coursera has ever had by a factor of about 2.5x.
3. The total number of students accessing the course web pages appears to be over 158,000. Apparently, there are some different ways to measure this, but this is the lowest number.
4. Our student's come from all over the world. Specifically, they hail from over 200 different countries (based on IP addresses). One incredible number is that almost 40% of our students come from countries with emerging economies. Broken down by gender, the course has an estimated 85/15 male to female ratio. An estimated 76% of our students have bachelor's degree or higher.
5. Over the course of the class, students watched over 1,815,000 unique videos. The number of students watching at least one full video was over 126,000.
6. Over 51,000 students submitted at least one quiz and the total number of quiz submissions exceeded 356,000. Another interesting statistic is that the average number of quiz submissions per week per student was only around 2.
7. Over 45,000 students submitted at least one assignment and over 5,000 students submitted the course project.
8. Our forums were buzzing with total forum views exceeding 1,670,000. The total number of active forum participants was over 14,500.
9. It appears that around 7100 students will receive a basic certificate of completion, while another 4800 or so will receive a certificate of complete with distinction.
10. All told, that means that over 25% of the students who submitted at least one assignment were able to finish enough work to receive a certificate, and that roughly 65%-70% of the course's Signature Track students received a certificate of some kind. Unfortunately, there was a group of students who didn't submit assignments 6-8 and thus ended up just missing the cutoff for a certificate.Hopefully, we can improve that in the next round of the course.