Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. News

Coursera wants users to learn through shorter, faster content

Coursera wants online learning to feel more like TikTok

Add as a preferred source on Google
Coursera
Coursera Unsplash

Online learning platform Coursera is taking a page straight out of TikTok’s playbook. The company has launched a new AI-powered feed designed to serve short-form educational content in a scrollable, personalized format, signaling a major shift in how digital learning platforms may try to keep users engaged.

The feature introduces bite-sized video lessons, clips, and explainers curated through artificial intelligence based on a user’s interests, learning habits, career goals, and previous course activity. Instead of committing to hour-long lectures or full certification programs upfront, users can now discover short educational snippets designed to make learning feel more casual, accessible, and addictive.

Recommended Videos

And honestly, that may be exactly where online education is heading.

Coursera is turning education into a personalized content feed

The new feature works similarly to recommendation-driven social media platforms. Users scroll through a feed of short educational videos and AI-curated learning moments covering topics ranging from coding and business to AI, productivity, data science, and personal development.

Coursera says the AI system continuously adapts recommendations based on engagement and learning behavior, attempting to surface content that users are more likely to finish or explore further. The company hopes the shorter format lowers the barrier for people who feel intimidated by full-length courses or lengthy certification programs.

The strategy also reflects a larger shift happening across the internet. Younger audiences increasingly consume information through short-form video content rather than traditional long-form education models. Platforms like TikTok, YouTube Shorts, and Instagram Reels have already changed how people discover everything from cooking tips to financial advice.

Now educational platforms want to capture that same engagement style. Coursera says the short-form feed is not meant to replace full courses entirely. Instead, it acts more like an entry point into deeper learning experiences, helping users discover subjects they may eventually want to study in more detail.

The company is also betting heavily on AI personalization. Rather than offering the same homepage to everyone, the feed evolves based on individual goals and viewing habits.

Why this shift matters

Online learning platforms exploded during the pandemic, but many companies have struggled with retention and course completion rates afterward. A large percentage of users start courses but never finish them.

Short-form educational content may help solve part of that problem by making learning feel less overwhelming and easier to fit into daily routines.

At the same time, the move raises important questions about whether education itself is becoming increasingly optimized for attention spans shaped by social media. While short-form content can improve accessibility and discovery, critics argue it may also oversimplify complex subjects that require deeper study and concentration.

Still, Coursera’s move reflects a much broader industry trend: AI is increasingly being used not just to create content, but to shape how people consume information altogether.

The bigger question now is whether AI-powered educational feeds can genuinely improve learning outcomes – or simply turn education into another endless scrolling experience competing for user attention.

Moinak Pal
Moinak Pal is has been working in the technology sector covering both consumer centric tech and automotive technology for the…
Your future AR glasses might finally stop making the real world look weird
Researchers have developed a new display technique that keeps virtual objects realistic without dimming the real world.
Samsung AR Glasses

One of the biggest promises of augmented reality is blending digital objects seamlessly into the real world. Ironically, today's AR glasses often make the real world harder to see. Researchers at the Shibaura Institute of Technology (SIT) in Japan, led by Assistant Professor Xiaodan Hu in collaboration with Dr. Yan Zhang and Professor Xubo Yang from Shanghai Jiao Tong University in China, and Professor Kiyoshi Kiyokawa from Japan's Nara Institute of Science and Technology, have developed a new AR display technique that aims to make virtual objects look realistic without reducing visibility of the real world. The study was published in IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics.

The biggest AR problem isn't virtual objects; it's everything around them

Read more
Anti-surveillance clothing is getting cheaper, but don’t expect an invisibility cloak
Affordable shirts now claim to confuse facial recognition, although their protection depends heavily on the camera and software watching you
Chart, Plot, Adult

Anti-surveillance clothing is starting to look less like an art-school experiment and more like something you could actually wear outside. Shirts designed to confuse facial recognition systems now cost about as much as ordinary streetwear, although buying one won’t make you disappear.

The Guardian reports that designers are using face-like prints, unusual cuts and infrared lights to interfere with computer vision. These techniques target specific weaknesses, so their success depends on what happens to be watching you.

Read more
This spinning drone hides in plain sight using a visual illusion
This drone doesn't turn invisible. It tricks your brain into thinking it has.
Phantom Twist

For decades, engineers have chased the dream of an invisible drone. The usual approaches have involved transparent materials, camouflage coatings, or complex optical systems that bend light around an object. Researchers at Northwestern University decided to take a completely different route. Instead of hiding the drone itself, they chose to fool the human eye.

The result is Phantom Twist, an experimental drone that spins so rapidly it almost disappears into the background. It's not technically invisible, but to anyone watching, it looks more like a faint blur than a flying machine.

Read more