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Published byElizabeth Jenkins Modified over 9 years ago
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MEET THE MOOCS
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MOOC Massive Open Online Course Arguments about each part of the definition http://infocult.typepad.com/infocult/2008/07/connectivism-course-draws-night-or-behold-the-mooc.html
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WHERE DO MOOCS START? Bryan alexander coined the term (Senior Fellow for the National Institute for Technology in Liberal Education) Part of a course on Connectivism
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CONNECTIVISM “At its heart, connectivism is the thesis that knowledge is distributed across a network of connections, and therefore that learning consists of the ability to construct and traverse those networks. Knowledge, therefore, is not acquired, as though it were a thing. It is not transmitted, as though it were some type of communication”
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“…And while it is convenient to talk as though knowledge and beliefs are composed of sentences and concepts that we somehow acquire and store, it is more accurate -- and pedagogically more useful -- to treat learning as the formation of connections.” http://www.huffingtonpost.com/stephen-downes/connectivism-and-connecti_b_804653.html
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THE CONNECTIVIST MOOC OR CMOOC Aggregation/distribution Remixing/Repurposing Lack of boundaries, except maybe time
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Emphasis on social Producing information, tied usually through hashtags
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IMPLICATIONS OF CONNECTIVISM Large number of participants is actually a feature, not a bug “Sage on the stage” is less important because they represent only one connection The process of navigating the course is just as important as the course itself
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CHALLENGES/CRITIQUES Lots of education or meta courses Validity of knowledge Coherence Eschewing of assessments (Can you drop out of a MOOC?)
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RISE OF THE “XMOOCS” These are the most well-known of the bunch So named because of edX Difference between cMOOC and xMOOC can be problematic
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DEFINITION OF AN XMOOC Massive Video Automated tasks Discrete begin and end points(?) Centered around a list of materials “Crowd-sourced” feedback (some courses)
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THE MAJOR PLAYERS Udacity EdX Coursera
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UDACITY Started from Stanford AI class Class was essentially offered as an xMOOC Professor left Stanford; started Udacity Focus on Math and Computer Science Some high school courses offered as well
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FEATURES OF UDACITY Videos with quizzes Automated testing Discussion forums Optional certification test for a fee Resume passed on to “partner companies”
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EDX Cross-institution platform includes MIT, Berkeley and Harvard Each site is an “_____x”
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COURSERA For profit started by Andrew Ng and Daphne Koller from Stanford University Initially a focus on Math and Computer Science
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CANVAS.NET Instructure launches its own blogging platform Aimed at being a more egalitarian MOOC
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CONTROVERSY
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THE PLACE OF THE PROFESSOR Focus on Performance Big credentials Abuse
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LEARNING Cary Nelson, the outgoing president of the American Association of University Professors, said that online models such as Coursera – an online entity offering free courses from Stanford University, Princeton University, University of Michigan and the University of Pennsylvania – can be terrific for delivering educational materials to retirement homes, “where folks are unlikely to assume any social responsibilities for the ‘knowledge’ they have acquired.” Read more: http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2012/05/23/faculty-groups-consider-how-respond- moocs#ixzz1zZj2iaXo Inside Higher Ed http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2012/05/23/faculty-groups-consider-how-respond- moocs#ixzz1zZj2iaXo
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PEDAGOGY Little person-to-person interaction What is there is students teaching themselves “Sage on the stage” returns
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GRADING Peer or automated grading What’s the value? Research is ongoing
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CERTIFICATES Number awarded up 800% in the last 30 years Concern about gender discrepancy What do they mean for an employer?
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ACCESS Survey of Machine Learning course 20% were graduate students Many white and male* Many already had familiarity with the topic Developing nations can’t afford the fees *Some criticism that applies to instructors as well
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CONTEXT Helter-skelter catalog Prior learning Cultural imperialism Misconceptions (11 year old and Game Theory)
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SUSTAINABILITY High dropout rates (varies; around 80-90%) What is the financial model for MOOCs? Credits? Certificates? Large up-front costs for delivery
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WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?
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QUESTIONS?
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