The Coursera terms of service say (among other things):
All students participating in the class must agree to abide by the following code of conduct:
- I will register for only one account.
- My answers to homework, quizzes and exams will be my own work (except for assignments that explicitly permit collaboration).
- I will not make solutions to homework, quizzes or exams available to anyone else. This includes both solutions written by me, as well as any official solutions provided by the course staff.
- I will not engage in any other activities that will dishonestly improve my results or dishonestly improve/hurt the results of others.
There are a reasonable number of explicitly-[coursera]-tagged questions (45) (20 overlap with [r], which is my main focus), and presumably a lot of untagged ones (searching on "coursera" alone (not the tag) gives 692 hits; there are probably even more that don't mention it).
I believe the general answer to questions about the ethics of answering homework questions is that it's up to the individual answerer to decide how they feel about answering, and up to the student to abide by the rules of their institution.
Is Coursera large/prominent enough that it's worth considering as a special case?
update: to answer the four votes to close as "unclear what you're asking": the coursera
tag is different from the generic homework
tag in that (1) it is not ambiguous what it means, and (2) the policy of Coursera on external resources seemed by my reading to prohibit SO questions (I have updated my belief on that point based on the experience-based statement below that appropriate SO questions are in fact explicitly encouraged in Coursera courses). So I was asking whether coursera
could in fact be considered significantly different from homework
, to the extent that the tag would be useful/could be kept. (I think I have the community's answer ...)
Just curious.
homework
tag (there's much less ambiguity), and there's a somewhat better argument for it. I also think I'm in the minority in thinking that I, personally, would like to know whether a question is Coursera homework when deciding whether to answer it or not.homework
discussion who are sick of this topic. I'm reluctantly convinced, by @Joe's answer below and by the depth of feeling here, that we are headed for burnination.