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MOOC-Covered Towers? Online Education's Coming Impact on Traditional College | Scott Miller

"When I recently mentioned to some higher-education colleagues my concern about MOOCs, I was astonished that none of them seemed to know what I was talking about.

They ignore MOOCs at their peril. Here's why:

MOOCs, or "massive open online courses," reflect the continuing emergence and influence of consumer demand in the traditional higher education arena, with a technological vengeance."

Peter B. Sloep's insight:

Dr. Scott D.Miller is president of Bethany College, a smallish private school in the US. His blog post expresses the usual worries of administrators that they miss out on an important innovation, ending up as a footnote in history. Miller, however, is not just pessimistic, he sees MOOCs as an opportunity, their rise as an inevitable consequence of higher education using ever more online tools for its teaching. He analyses how the advent of MOOCs changes how a college such as Bethany should goes about things; understandably, wiht an emphasis on financial aspects."..,.significant expansion of distance learning, especially when coupled with continuing education programs, offers increased marketing possibilities for even the most traditional campuses." But,"The challenge is to figure out how to embrace MOOCs and other technological innovations so that they best complement, not replace, that primary and original learning experience." (@pbsloep)

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The pedagogical foundations of massive open online courses | David G. Glance, Martin Forsey & Miles Riley - First Monday

In 2011, the respective roles of higher education institutions and students worldwide were brought into question by the rise of the massive open online course (MOOC). MOOCs are defined by signature characteristics that include: lectures formatted as short videos combined with formative quizzes; automated assessment and/or peer and self–assessment and an online forum for peer support and discussion. Although not specifically designed to optimise learning, claims have been made that MOOCs are based on sound pedagogical foundations that are at the very least comparable with courses offered by universities in face–to–face mode. To validate this, we examined the literature for empirical evidence substantiating such claims. Although empirical evidence directly related to MOOCs was difficult to find, the evidence suggests that there is no reason to believe that MOOCs are any less effective a learning experience than their face–to–face counterparts. Indeed, in some aspects, they may actually improve learning outcomes.

Peter B. Sloep's insight:

The authors focus on the evidence that is currently available on the pedagogical soundness of MOOCs. They see MOOCs as offering opportunities for such forms of learning as online learning, retrieval learning, mastery learning, peer learning; they collected data on their efficacy through a systematic survey of the literature. Unfortunately, they have no direct evidence of, say, the effect of fora in MOOCs, but this does not detract them from concluding that "… MOOCs have a sound pedagogical basis for their formats." 

 

I have some quarrels with this conclusion. By generalizing over all sorts of contexts, the authors effectively suggest that context only introduces error, never systematic bias. However, context does matter both qualitatively and quantitatively. Only recently Tony Bates in a blog wrote (and justified) that wholesale comparisons between various media in an effort to contribute good or ill effects to them is too undiscriminating an approach. Effects of media are context dependent, he argued (http://www.tonybates.ca/2013/01/26/no-1-aha-moment-media-are-different/). That means that the conclusion that MOOCs have built on a solid foundation is premature. All we can conclude is that there is no evidence yet that they have not been built on a solid foundation.That said, the article is a welcome attempt to unearth and assess the pedagogical pillars that many MOOCs have been built on. (@pbsloep)

Bruno De Lièvre's curator insight, May 9, 8:25 PM

Les bases des MOOC... 

MIT OEIT's curator insight, May 10, 9:26 AM

Finally, a literature review.

 

Also see the @pbsloep's commentary on his original scoop.

Maria Persson's curator insight, May 20, 7:15 AM

Need a long rainy day to read all this great stuff.  So wave of the future or tsunami ready to hit and hurt and then leave?

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The World Is Not Flat | Ry Rivard - Inside Higher Ed

The World Is Not Flat | Ry Rivard - Inside Higher Ed | Networked Learning - MOOCs and more | Scoop.it

Online higher education is increasingly hailed as a chance for educators in the developed world to expand access and quality across the globe.

Yet it may not be quite so easy. Not only does much of the world not have broadband or speak English, but American-made educational material may be unfit for and unwanted in developing countries ...

Peter B. Sloep's insight:

It is about time an article like this appeared. Kudos to Ry Rivard and Inside Higher Ed for doing so. Ry summarises and illustrates the case against the simplistic idea that MOOCs will democratise education because everybody now has access to US branded, world-class content. In January this year, I already called this an example of cultural imperialism in a blog post of mine (and argued why, using Michael Sandel's work - http://tiny.cc/igu3vw), Ry talks about cultural neo-colonialism. Same difference.  Not only does not everybody have fast internet connections, not only does not everybody speak English or wish to be educated in a language other than their native tongue, but vast and deep-seated cultural differences make the very notion of educating the world with USA-made courses highly problematic. Ry illustrates this point with a variety of different examples, ranging from not being at ease with the Socratic, dialectic way of learning to preferring to put group interests above individual ones. Even if half of his examples turn out to be wrong, the remaining ones should give more than enough pause for thought. (@pbsloep)

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A hard act to Swallow | Steve Wheeler - Learning with 'e's

Reputation can be bought it seems. But is one's reputation dependent upon online presence only? ... How many of us still take content and personalities at face value when we encounter them online? These and many other questions about online identity, reputation, provenance and trust are still to be answered.

Peter B. Sloep's insight:

Interesting blog post by Steve Wheeler about Santiago Swallow, a faked identity on the social web, who gained quite a reputation for himself. Which is why Steve asks the above questions, including the question of how long the ruse would have held out, had not Santiago's inventor exposed it himself.

 

All of these questions are of the kind 'what would happen if ..". These counterfactuals become factuals, statements the truth or falsity of which is determined by empirical research, by actually carrying out the experiments. But people are hesitant to do so for another reason, the ethical question of whether it is ok to have a faked (alternate) online identity in the first place. Santiago's inventor went some way along the line of experimenting with faked identities and so did Steve Wheeler himself. But how unethical is it really to adopt a fake identity, to act as if you are someone else? I have no real answer to that question and, actually, I am sure there is no simple answer. At this stage I have one thought to offer, though.

 

I would think that faking identities is much worse offline than online, that under a set of restrictions (moral imperatives) it might even be a good idea to have several online identities. This is the reason. Our offline identity is always and durably tied to our individuality, to us as individual persons who each takes up a position in space-time, with an origin and a history and a future, even if that is finite. Although people whom we meet necessarily only see particular aspects of us an indivividual, they expect consistency in our behaviour on the basis of the fact that the aspects they experience are aspects of that individual. So if between meetings we act as a different person, our psychology goes haywire.

 

What we see of someone online is not an aspect of someone, the aspect is all there is. An online person is at best a set of observations, connected, but only because they ostensibly emerge from the same account or from several connected accounts. There is no individual these observations are aspects of, although we may surmise there is one. So faking an online identity does not upset our psychology for it does not threaten expectations of continuity and consistency. Whose continuity, would be the question. That is, if someone were to write a persona for an online identity and behave consistently with respect to that persona, people seeing facets of that persona are in no way fooled or misled. Perhaps the person they learn to know online is a bit shallow, but that goes for many characters in novels  too ...

 

I am interested in exploring the ethics of alternative identities because such identities may be a means to fight the threat to our privacy (as an offline individual) that the web poses. If we were able to adopt data management policies on our online data (see my blog of May 2012 for more on this http://tiny.cc/ubtwvw), effectively every one such policy would constitute an alternative identity. And that would be a good idea, I believe.  (@pbsloep)

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Despite courtship Amherst decides to shy away from star MOOC provider | Ry Rivard - Inside Higher Ed

Despite courtship Amherst decides to shy away from star MOOC provider | Ry Rivard - Inside Higher Ed | Networked Learning - MOOCs and more | Scoop.it

Amherst professors voted on Tuesday not to work with edX, a nonprofit venture started by Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to provide massive open online courses, or MOOCs. In interviews, professors cited a wide range of reasons for rejecting edX -- which currently works with only 12 elite partner colleges and universities -- starting with edX's incompatibility with Amherst’s mission and ending with, to some, the destruction of higher education as we know it.

Peter B. Sloep's insight:

This is an interesting turn of events. The MOOC platform providers - Coursera, Udacity, edX - all want to promote their brand by hitch-hiking on the brandnames of several elite universities. They have tried to accomplish the seemingly impossible, that is marrying mass education with the exclusivity that people associate with the elite universities. Thus far, this has worked pretty well, perhaps because universities did not want to be seen missing in this exquisite group. So there were enough applicants and MOOC platforms could afford to turn many of them down. However, things seem to have changed. 

 

Amherst is a school that prides itself in its 'mission to provide 

education in a "purposefully small residential community" and "through close colloquy”.' For the details you need to read the article, but basically Amherst faculty decided that this mission was incompatible with the mass education that MOOCs provide. It seems they spotted the paradox and were not impressed by the fact that many other universities were lining up to join edX and its ilk. The question of course is whether this marks a turning point or remains a unique action. (@pbsloep)

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Dyads & Triads — The Smallest Teams | Christopher Allen - Life with Alacrity

Dyads & Triads — The Smallest Teams | Christopher Allen - Life with Alacrity | Networked Learning - MOOCs and more | Scoop.it

… I've seen how groups of people act differently at different sizes. As I discussed in my previous blog post on Group Thresholds …, there are pros and cons associated with different group sizes. However, the smallest group that I spoke of in that article was the 'working team size', which is a group of four to nine members (but ideally about seven). I didn't talk about groups consisting of less than four members-specifically dyads (a group of two people) and triads (a group of three people) ... .

Peter B. Sloep's insight:

Networked learning is about learning as an individual in punctuated interaction with various fellow network members (peers). In the course of doing so, groups of people may be formed, either at the behest of the learner him or herself, or through the intervention of teachers themselves or of tools that act on the teacher's behalf. An example of the latter is research my colleagues and I did on ad-hoc transient groups, groups that are formed on the fly to answer a question some fellow network learner is unable to answer (cf. Sloep, 2009). An important question for designers of such networked learning environments is the most appropriate size of such peer groups. In the ad-hoc transient community experiments, we settled for a size of three. Our choice was based on a mix of considerations. One of them was that large groups would rapidly diminish peer willingness to answer questions as they got too many turns. Another one was that large groups would foster social loafing. A third one was that the limited knowledge available in small groups would increase the chance of giving mistaken answers. 

 

Our considerations at the time were based on little more than common sense arguments. We could not find any hard evidence on optimal group sizes. Although Christopher Allen's piece does not site much scientific evidence either, he has amassed a lot of personal experience that can be used to inform optimal group size choices in different circumstances. I am glad to see that, after the fact, his experience supports the choice we made at the time. (@pbsloep)

 

Sloep, P. B. (2009). Fostering Sociability in Learning Networks through Ad-Hoc Transient Communities. In M. Purvis & B. T. R. Savarimuthu (Eds.), Computer-Mediated Social Networking, ICCMSN 2008, LNAI 5322 (pp. 62–75). Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/1820/1198

Patricia Daniels's curator insight, April 16, 3:37 AM

Patricia Daniels's insight:

H817 students this is a good contrast to Siemens and Downes insights on connectivism. There have been a few forum and blog postings about some of our learners feeling slightly isolated within this MOOC and commenting about what they perceive to be inactivity. Others are still having navigational problems so perhaps a case of the technology getting in the way of communication. What can we do? Should we be paying more attention to getting ourselves involved in smaller but distributed groups? I have had a few interesting discussions via the forum and via blogs which have taken my thoughts a step further. So out of the masses the most intense dialogue I have had, has been through connecting with groups of twos and threes i.e. dyads and triads respectively. In contrast, the content being produced by the cohort has been a rich source of information and has made me think more critically. What have your experiences been to date?

 

H817 MA students, the points in this paper may be worth reflecting on in view of our Block 3 group work.

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Costs of Teaching Online Classes | Andrew Erlichson - 10genEducation

There are two sets of costs to running online classes: the capital cost of buying the equipment and the variable cost of the labor. In this analysis, I am going to look at first year cash costs. The capital equipment can be amortized over multiple years in a true accounting analysis.  

 

The economics of online education are amazingly good. There is at least an order of magnitude improvement over the costs of teaching in person.

Peter B. Sloep's insight:

For everybody contemplating to get into the business of teaching online, using a MOOC-like set-up with videotaped lectures, this is a must read. Although lots of things may be done differently - more cheaply  or more costly, with a different way of amortising the capital equipment, with different numbers of students, with different equipment - the figures amassed here are very useful. But it is not just the figures themselves that are useful, so are the choice of equipment and the kinds of activities that have been taken into account (@pbsloep)

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MOOCs and Intellectual Property: Ownership and Use Rights | Joan Cheverie - Educause

MOOCs and Intellectual Property: Ownership and Use Rights | Joan Cheverie - Educause | Networked Learning - MOOCs and more | Scoop.it

Some commercial MOOC platforms have highly proprietary terms and conditions that claim ownership of course content and prohibit sharing or remixing of material. … Looking at the Terms of Service for Coursera, edX, and Udacity revealed some licensing language that colleges and universities should be cognizant of when contemplating joining a MOOC.

Peter B. Sloep's insight:

Two very important elements of all licenses are that i) it is the platform provider owns the content, which then users my access under very strictly regulated conditions; ii) any user-generated is also owned by the platform. The first point matters to universities, the second to the students, who basically seem to handover the rights on the texts they themselves have produced. So much for openness …. Educause promises to "continue to monitor and report on this [licensing] issue" (@pbsloep)

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MOOCs as community?? | Terry Anderson - Virtual Canuck, Teaching and Learning in a Net-Centric World

Here at Athabasca University we’ve finally begun serious talk about our approach to MOOCs. 

We are working through two models, trying to decipher the pros and cons of each or both. These are:

1 Run one of more of our own MOOCs, based in whole or part on our current online courses. In order to be a MOOC, the courses should be free and that creates some challenges. Obviously a revenue or substantial service model needs to be developed for sustainability.

2 Cherry-pick a few MOOCs, offered by others, and after asserting that they are equivalent to an AU course allow and promote students to challenge the course for AU Credit.

Peter B. Sloep's insight:

Dedicated distance teaching universities ('open universities') arguably have always been in the MOOC business even though it did not go by that name. As to massiveness, it always has been their intention to achieve economies of scale by investing much effort in the design of a course and little in their deployment (that is, lecturing, tutoring, etc.). Similarly, they always have intended to be open, though not so much in the sense of having free enrolment, but much more in the sense of eliminating formal access thresholds and leaving it to the student to decide on the pace, place and timing of their studies. And, indeed, many are also involved in experiments with Open Educational Resources, struggling with the same sustainability question that the xMOOC platform providers: if you provided the content for free, where does your revenue stream come from? And finally, although most started off with correspondence learning as their teaching model, these universities were the first to see the opportunities online learning offered and have experimented with it even before the Internet took off.  However, none of them achieved the massiveness that current MOOCs do, none of them offered content fully for free. But then again, none of them could feed of the lavish kind of funding venture capital (or rich alumni) have made available to the current MOOC platforms. 

 

In the face of the MOOC craze, distance teaching universities have also started thinking about the question of where they fit into the higher education landscape, of whether business remains as usual or they should adapt. Terry Anderson addresses this question in his blog post and comes up with tow models: keep on doing what you have been doing thus far, but relabelling it as MOOCs and making a few changes; or getting into the business of assessing and crediting prior learning. In the first case, you remain a genuine university, in the second you specialise in only one service that universities offer. Terry doesn't make a choice, wisely so, it seems to me. The two alternatives do not exclude each other, nor do they exhaust all the options. So you could do both or invent yet other kinds of responses. One would be to work with a mixed services model: the basis content is free, you may acquire access to peer tutoring for a small fee and to personal tutoring by a teacher for a large fee,  you may acquire access to the exam for a fee and receive credits for a larger fee (as this requires that the exam be assessed by a teacher), etc. But there are no doubt other options to be explored.

 

Distance teaching universities should really seize the opportunity to advertise themselves, now that MOOCs have put online learning in the public eye. Actually, because of their historical development, they are in a much better position to address the challenges posed by the for-profit MOOCs than traditional universities. (@pbsloep)

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US Mooc platforms’ openness questioned | Chris Parr - Times Higher Education

US Mooc platforms’ openness questioned | Chris Parr - Times Higher Education | Networked Learning - MOOCs and more | Scoop.it

Massive open online courses could be hindering the development of open educational resources because they do not allow everyone to contribute to the innovation of content …

 

Peter B. Sloep's insight:

THE reports on the recent Open Educational Resources conference held at the end of March in Nottingham, UK, in particular on a speech by the OU's (that is, OU UK) Patrick McAndrew. Speaking of Coursera and Udacity, he claimed they were creating a 'closed community in the open' because of the way these platforms were operated, unlike such initiatives as the Peer to Peer University or the Open Courseware Consortium. So, how come they failed to attract the attention that Coursera and Udacity do?  According to Patrick, what they offer and universities do not is complete courses that you can 'pick up off the shelf'. 

 

This is an interesting observation. I believe online educational resources (OERs), of which MOOCs are an example, are descendants of learning objects. The leading paradigm behind learning objects was that they could be mixed and matched in all kinds of different arrangements, as the teacher pleased. This was their strength. Since the number of users per object now increased more effort could be put in their quality without raising costs. If Patrick is right, it seems we've come full circle. Perhaps, the shift in focus of attention, form fellow teachers for learning objects to students for OERs, is the reason behind this. Whatever the case may be, Patrick is of course absolutely right that this shift in our thinking about the best use of OERs does not imply the ideal of openness should be abandoned. (@pbsloep)

 

Patricia Daniels's curator insight, April 5, 5:09 AM

H817 students, interesting criticism here relating to the openness of MOOCS. Something to think about.

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Stanford teams up with edX | Ry Rivard - Inside Higher Ed

Stanford teams up with edX | Ry Rivard - Inside Higher Ed | Networked Learning - MOOCs and more | Scoop.it

Stanford University, the epicenter of the modern massive open online course movement, said this week that it will develop online learning software with the only one of the three MOOC providers not founded by a Stanford faculty member. … Mitchell  [Stanford's vice provost] said the university’s “initial interest” in the edX software is so Stanford can offer material to current students on its campus or to students who take Stanford classes for credit online. … "I  expect that we ourselves or other partners will offer the edX platform in a software-as-a-service model,” he  [Agarwal, the edX president] said. In other words, universities would pay if they or their faculty wanted to use edX’s software.

Peter B. Sloep's insight:

This is all about business models, about how the large sums of money can be recouped that are being pumped into developing platforms for MOOCs and in creating the courses that these platforms run. It seems that two approaches are emerging. The first one is attempted by Coursera and Udacity, which follow a traditional closed-source model for their platforms. Course developers who want to offer their MOOCs through these platforms pay in terms of a share of the future revenue (see also http://sco.lt/7IoKZN). This is the Apple iTunes model, as I argued earlier in a blog of mine http://tiny.cc/ralyuw). The other way is followed by edX and now Stanford (the university, in contrast with the for profit companies Coursera and Udacity that are run by Stanford professors or ex-professors). The source code is open for any one to use, revenue streams are generated by offering services around the code (installation, fine-tuning, additional plug-ins, etc). 

 

This model allows the MOOC-providing university much more freedom, it is the model Stanford now has decided to favour. Crucially, even though the software that drives edX's and the future Stanford MOOCs, is open for other universities to use - after all that is what 'open' here means, they do not become part of the edX family of MOOCs or the planned Stanford family of MOOCs. Ultimately, therefore, the move to open source the platform code by Stanford and Harvard is mainly a means to avoid diluting their brand by associating it with a mere platform provider (to wit, Coursera or Udacity). (@pbsloep)

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All my scoops in March 2013| Peter Sloep

All my scoops in March 2013| Peter Sloep | Networked Learning - MOOCs and more | Scoop.it

As a service to my scoop.it followers and readers, a blog post of mine containing the publication date, title, author and source of all my scoops in March, 2013. There are hyperlinks to the scoops as well. 

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Network technology, disruptive innovation and the future | Mark Smithers

This is the presentation I gave to the SAFFIRE launch festival at the University of Canberra on Monday 18 March, 2013

Via Ana Cristina Pratas, Anne Whaits
Peter B. Sloep's insight:

The 'I' in the above is Mark Smithers. Although you really miss the voice that goes with the slides, the slides themselves already provide a lot of food for thought. There's one comment I would like to add to what Anne already said.

I am starting the feel uneasy about the term 'disruptive innovation'. As a descriptive term of past events it probably makes good sense, but as a label for current events, such as the mushrooming of MOOCs, it almost takes on a prescriptive guise. Its use almost implies that universities should stop thinking about their future, there is no point doing so as there is none.  MOOCs being a disruptive innovation are bound to take over from them. To be sure, Mark doesn't say so, indeed, he discusses reactions universities should have. However, pictures like the one of a huge, grounded ship easily evoke an image of inability timely to change course. Before you know it, such descriptions become self-fulilling prophecies (something which of course some people are only too keen to emphasise, as is evidenced by another one of this week's scoops of mine: http://sco.lt/89vrjF) (@pbsloep)

Anne Whaits's curator insight, March 20, 5:36 AM

For me the affordances of technology and the associated potential disruptive innovations possible in higher education are exciting indeed! I am not sure that DI spells the demise of the brick and mortar university as we know it ... for many the face-to-face contact and engagement is key to success while others prefer the total online experience. It is my view that different blends will emerge in different contexts and significant shifts from old models of teaching to new models of learning will be made. I really like the notion of the "multiversity".

Will Stewart's curator insight, March 21, 6:48 AM

In terms of most HE institutions, DI would really only enable them catch up with 30 years of using technology to do what they have always done, and resisting any significant changes.

Patricia Daniels's curator insight, March 28, 11:24 AM

H817 students. A lot of points made that are relevant to what we are doing at the moment. I share the same sentiments as Anne Whaits and feel that we'll be seeing more diversity in the future, or as Smither's terms it 'Multiversity'.

 

I heard an interesting comment from one of my advanced English language students today in response to the topic, 'Young people have too many opportunities nowadays'. Her reply was, 'No that's not true, we have choices. We have more choices now that suit different learners. I think it's great.'

 

Perhaps we need to listen more intensely to the student voice?

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Surviving Disruptive Technologies | Hank C. Lucas - Coursera

Surviving Disruptive Technologies | Hank C. Lucas - Coursera | Networked Learning - MOOCs and more | Scoop.it

The purpose of this course is to help participants and the organizations they encounter survive the waves of technological disruptions facing business, government, education and their daily lives.

 

Peter B. Sloep's insight:

I normally do not list MOO Course announcements in these scooped pages. There are just too many of them and it would divert attention from my main purpose, providing resources to inform our thinking about networked learning in general and, at present at least, MOOCs in particular. However, I want to make an exception for the present course announcement as it promises to do exactly what I just described as my purpose. Although the focus here is narrower, to wit the disruptive potential of technologies such as MOOCs, it is their disruptive potential that instills so much fear in university admins and is a source of hope and joy for so many others. (@pbsloep)

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All my scoops in April 2013 | Peter Sloep - Stories to TEL

All my scoops in April 2013 | Peter Sloep - Stories to TEL | Networked Learning - MOOCs and more | Scoop.it

As a service to my scoop.it followers and readers, a blog post of mine containing the publication date, title, author and source of all my scoops in March, 2013. There are hyperlinks to the scoops as well. 

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Learning in the Workplace 2013 survey results | Jane Hart

Learning in the Workplace 2013 survey results | Jane Hart | Networked Learning - MOOCs and more | Scoop.it

The Learning in the Workplace Survey has now been taken by over 600 people, and although it is still open if you want to cast your vote, I am going to release some interim findings here today as the results has been pretty stable for some time now.

Peter B. Sloep's insight:

Very interesting result, though hardly surprising, of a survey held by Jane Hart about learing in the workplace. The main conclusion is that professionals do not like company-based training or e-learning and do like self-organised and self managed learning, preferably with team collaboration. The question now is how to organise this from an instructional perspective, after all, self-organised and self-managed should not mean 'you figure it out yourselves'.

 

My answer to this is to set up clever ways of providing peer support, using trust enhancement, recommender systems, etc. I have furhter detailed this in a fortcoming book chapter in Littlejohn, L. & Margaryan A. (Eds.) Technology-enhanced Professional Learning: Processes, Practices and Tools. London: Routledge, which is still in the works however (expected publication date early 2014) (@pbsloep)

uTOP Inria's curator insight, April 24, 7:47 AM

(Learning at workplace - 23 avril 2013)

Louise Lewis's curator insight, April 24, 9:30 PM

On track

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MOOC Mania: Debunking the hype around massive open online courses | Audrey Watters - School Library Journa

MOOC Mania: Debunking the hype around massive open online courses | Audrey Watters - School Library Journa | Networked Learning - MOOCs and more | Scoop.it

MOOC mania taps into powerful narratives—both true and false—about the relevancy of the curriculum, the cost of college, and the adaptability of education institutions. Many institutions are joining MOOCs, hoping that the mania pans out and that these free online classes will, if nothing else, keep their brands up-to-date. But the questions about who exactly they’re serving with these classes will have to be answered sooner or later as having tens of thousands of students sign up for a class is hardly the right metric upon which to build the future of education.

Peter B. Sloep's insight:

Audrey Watters discusses the familiar history of xMOOCs, the rhetoric surrounding that (Thrun: in 50 years there'll be only 10 universities left on the entire planet), the towering attrition rates, and the fears of many university admins to be left behind if they don't junp on the MOOC bandwagon (but see my yesterday scoop on Amherst http://sco.lt/8p5Ig5). And then she discusses the distinction between cMOOCs and xMOOCs, something not everybody knows about. Now you could argue that cMOOCs might just as well be left out of the discussion, being such an entirely different beast than the xMOOC that the only thing they still seem to share is their name. But Audrey makes an interesting use of the contrast. 

 

She rightly points out what nobody to my knowledge seems to have highlighted so far, that xMOOCs are designed by computer scientists and cMOOCs by education scholars. As it happens, their approach to teaching is as different as it imaginably can be and it is this difference of approach that is responsible for the contrast between xMOOCs and cMOOCs. Which brings up the following question: do we want to place the fate of (higher)  education in the hands of a number of entrepreneurial computer scientists or do we entrust it to education professionals? Put this way, the question is not so hard to answer. (@pbsloep)

suifaijohnmak's comment, April 20, 11:42 PM
Great insights Peter. I will respond to this. People are "buying" in with the xMOOCs for reasons as simple as: branding and easier to learn (as all information are already curated for them), and that a strong belief still with the instructivist approach reigns best, at least, that is what institutions want to see - a complete control under an institutional framework of education. Is that xMOOC sustainable? From a historical perspective, this fate would be like cMOOCs being "decimated" and "replaced" by xMOOCs (to some extent". But then this trend would appear in the K-12 sector soon, when automation of education and gamification, mobile learning takes their foothold in changing the education arena into "commercial minefield". Mobile technology could and would help in improving digital literacy, though it might not be reflected easily in improving the basic literacy on Science, Maths, Reading and Writing in the K-12. As I have shared, we are now in the Lord of the Ring game, where those who win takes all. Education is now a game, not as much as the once enlightenment or passion sort of education vision, but a pragmatic sort of education of whether one could get a job after taking a course of study, or getting famous through "educating" others in MOOCs. It is the media that would likely determine who is the winner, not the test anymore, as no one could objectively test or examine what is really "competent" or "capable" under those framework, mainly because they are producer driven, not user driven. John
Peter B. Sloep's comment, April 21, 2:46 AM
Thanks for this, John. Future gazing is hard. I would hope you're wrong, but the US seems to be falling into the trap you describe without even realising it. I am of course referring to the initiative in California to set up a credit award system for xMOOCs.
suifaijohnmak's comment, April 21, 10:19 AM
Thanks Peter. As you said, I do hope that wouldn't happen, though when institutions are seeing a few millions students registering with the MOOCs, wouldn't they think that is what the future lies? Here is my consolidated post http://suifaijohnmak.wordpress.com/2013/04/21/why-c-and-x-moocs-are-attracting-different-number-of-participants/ As you said, the initiative in California is just the start of the game. More will come along, when the k-12 MOOCs start to take its turn. I don't have the crystal ball, but I reckon this would attract more Venture Capitalists to invest in that area, as it is a multi-billion education business that no one wants to miss. Privatization and monetization based on a MOOC model has already started and would snowball with more institutions joining in.
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Stanford’s Venture Lab MOOC Platform Goes Private, Relaunches as NovoEd | Matt Enis - Library Journal

Stanford’s Venture Lab MOOC Platform Goes Private, Relaunches as NovoEd | Matt Enis - Library Journal | Networked Learning - MOOCs and more | Scoop.it

Stanford has become a hotbed of activity in the MOOC field, with NovoEd now the third MOOC platform to emerge from the university during the past two years following Udacity and Coursera. According to Stanford professor and NovoEd founder Amin Saberi, this latest platform is unique in the way it facilitates and emphasizes interaction between students, encouraging the formation of groups and collaboration on projects. Students also rate the work and participation of others within their groups, creating a system of accountability to one’s peers.

Peter B. Sloep's insight:

This is an interesting development in that this new platform tries to introduce social learning into MOOCs. Admittedly, the course is still very much content led, unlike cMOOCs, but this xMOOC developer is starting to make the right noises: “It’s actually a social experience. You’re working with a team, and some of these teammates are people that you have recruited or people you know. It makes you more committed. You feel like you have to get to the end.”

 

Apparently, this increased commitment is reflected in the numbers. Of the 80,000 that started Saberi's course on technology entrepreneurship, 37,000 hung in long enough to start a collaborative project. 10,000 did indeed finish the course. With 12.5% this is an unusually high completion rate for MOOCs. All the more regrettable that, although the course may be open, the NoveEd platform isn't. I would have like to see an independent (that is by someone not the platform and course developer) confirmation of this low drop-out figure. And if it is as good as it purports to be, other should be given the opportunity to profit from the platform's superior design too. (@pbsloep)

Peter B. Sloep's comment, April 16, 4:46 AM
Glad to be helpful (again apparently ;-)
Parke Muth's comment, April 16, 5:03 AM
Great information. Thank you.
JohnRobertson's curator insight, April 18, 10:10 AM

I can't help wondering how this compares to other efforts. For example, @openstudy who run social structures and support around opencourseware such as some of MIT's OCW. As a clear example I'm still struck by how the Mechanical MOOC ( @MOOC_E ) pulled together 3 or 4 services (including openstudy) to provide a framework around OCW. I'm not sugesting their approach would work for every discipline but I'm a little surprised at the fanfare NovoEd has got in the press. 

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Humans and Machines. The role of people in technology-driven organisations | The Economist

Peter B. Sloep's insight:

Although the focus is on the interaction between machines (technology) and humans in various areas of societal activity, in the present context the chapter on teaching and learning (pp 17-19) is the most relevant one. It doesn't hold much news for a reader of these Scoops, noting the advent of MOOCs and flipped classroom, wondering about teaching without teachers, and exploring the power of (serious) games in education. But perhaps that is what makes this contribution so interesting, that the discussion is still couched in terms of the purported contradiction between classroom teaching with teachers and content pushing with MOOCs. In defense of the article, I should add that ultimately it concludes that the role of technology in teaching will increase without diminishing the role of the teacher. So some sort of marrage between the two is anticipated. Unfortunately, what that marriage looks like remains unclear. This is as much a lack of education-specific knowledge of the technology pushers (e.g. Khan was a financial analist before he started his academy) as it is a lack of imagination of education professionals (many teachers are proud to be technology ignorami). (@pbsloep)

Helena Capela's comment, April 18, 6:54 AM
Very good comment.
Peter B. Sloep's comment, April 18, 7:41 AM
Thanks Helena!
Maria Persson's curator insight, May 20, 7:58 AM

Need more time to read with depth...reserving my right to not comment :-)

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My MOOC Tech Ecosystem | Martin Weller - The Ed Techie

My MOOC Tech Ecosystem | Martin Weller - The Ed Techie | Networked Learning - MOOCs and more | Scoop.it

On my open course H817Open I use a mixture of technology, and thought it might be useful to describe these here, and also to indicate what I'd like to do beyond this. …

 

What I would like is an open course DIY toolkit. You come along, select which functions you want and it recommends a bunch of open technologies (although not necessarily open source) with examples of where they've been used, and hey presto, you roll your own MOOC.

Peter B. Sloep's insight:

Such a toolkit would indeed be very useful, not necessarily for MOOCs only, but more for networked learning in general. The tools that Martin discusses - e.g.  Wordpress for blog aggregation, Twitter, Google Plus - certainly suggest a wider applicability. 

 

From my point of view, the interesting thing about such toolkits is that they support a view of learning that embraces the idea of personal learning networks (PLNs), yet allows one to organise learning in courses. The course sets the topic, time period as well as interaction and communication structures, the tools used to make the course happen are a selection of the tools that people already use anyway to sustain their PLNs. To the extent that students do not use any such tools already or a limited subset of them only, the course also introduces them to their use and in doing so helps them to start building their own PLNs. This kind of course set-up amounts to a view of education that not only seeks to enlighten students on the course topic, but also prepares them for a career as a lifelong learner (or helps them sustain that career). It amounts to a shift from an institution-centric view to a genuinely student-centric one. This is good news for students, now we only need to convince educational institutions that it is also good news for them.

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MOOC: Every letter is negotiable | Mathieu Plourde - blog

MOOC: Every letter is negotiable | Mathieu Plourde - blog | Networked Learning - MOOCs and more | Scoop.it
Just a visual representation of intepretations of what MOOCs are.
Peter B. Sloep's insight:

Exactly what it says it is, but it nicely highlights the variety that underlies MOOCs and our talk about them (@pbsloep)

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Productive MOOCs | Colin Milligan - Learning in the workplace

Productive MOOCs | Colin Milligan - Learning in the workplace | Networked Learning - MOOCs and more | Scoop.it

Wouldn’t it be great if cMOOcs could be made more ‘productive’ – instead of advancing many people’s knowledge a little by re-creating the same (or similar) new knowledge again and again, can MOOCs be structured to stimulate the creation of new knowledge in a more coordinated way. Can you bring the learners together to produce something entirely novel as they learn? This is in the true spirit of connectivism.

Peter B. Sloep's insight:

I think this question could be made more precise by introducing Margaret's Boden's distinction between psychological and historical novelty (I am not sure about the exact wording and haven't got the book at hand). The former refers to something I discover which may not be new in a generic sense but is novel to me. Historical novelty refers to something that is novel to everybody (as far as it is humanly possible to establish that, but that's another matter). What Colin seems to refer to here is psychological novelty at the group level. So if someone in a company discovers something that is psychologically novel to her, she might share it with her co-workers whom she knows to be unfamiliar with this. That way, there is knowledge production at the company level. If everybody does their share, you get a multiplier effect, which is the effiency Colin refers to. This is an interesting thought, something which would certainly be in the interest of companies (or other organised groups of people).

 

First of all, this thought has no bearing at all on xMOOCs, which really aren't about knowledge production but about knowledge consumption. And even if new insights happen to be produced that go beyond that what the teachers intends to transfer, the individual character of such MOOCs guarantees it is the individual and only the individual whose knowledge gets increased. So we definitely are talking cMOOCs here. Then, I guess it depends on the question of how the cMOOC is organised whether Colin's suggestion makes sense.

 

Suppose, a cMOOC-like setup would have been followed within the confines of some company which sets up a professional development exercise this way. Even if the exercise is open in the sense that non-company participants may join in, it still should be possible to arrange for a mechanism that ensures that novel knowledge gets shared. Content curation is a way to do so, blogs are another. Even in situations of self-organised groupings, such mechanisms could be put in place, as long as someone takes the trouble to do so. I think Stephen Weber's in his The Succes of Open Source has revealed such mechanisms, certainly for the Linux developers community. A big question is whether people will _want_ to share their flashes of novel insights this way. After all, the novel knowledge gives them an advantage over their colleagues, which may come in handy in many ways. But that is a problem for all instances of sharing knowledge among co-workers, not just for cMOOCs.

 

So, I see no reason why psychological novelty may not also occur at the level of closely interacting individuals. I am not sure, though, that you need interdisciplinarity in particular. It is well known that creativity thrives in the presence of heterogeneity, all kinds of heterogeneity, not just of the disciplinary kind although it does help. So, when contemplating measure to foster psychological group novelty, we should focus on a more general kind of heterogeneity of such groups. (@pbsloep).

Patricia Daniels's curator insight, April 8, 2:40 AM

H817 students, this blog and Sloep's response are worth thinking about. It's something we can directly relate to within our own MOOC. Are you satisfied with the learning effect and production of knowledge? Are blogs and forum postings mainly reiterations or are novel ideas coming to the fore and being developed in further discussions?

Patricia Daniels's comment, April 8, 2:41 AM
Thank you for this interesting response.
Peter B. Sloep's comment, April 8, 4:03 AM
My pleasure ;-)
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Fight the MOOC-opalypse! | Fred Martin - presentation at CSERC 2013

Fight the MOOC-opalypse! | Fred Martin - presentation at CSERC 2013 | Networked Learning - MOOCs and more | Scoop.it
Peter B. Sloep's insight:

 

Keynote presentation given at the third Computer Science Education Research Conference (CSERC) (http://www.ou.nl/cserc) at Arnhem, Netherlands today by Fred Martin. Fred gave an overview of recent MOOC developments. He acknowledged that there are good points, such as MOOCs often being taught by famous professors and the idea to cut up the material taught in bite-sized chunks. But he also identified four serious problems: i) MOOCs embody an information transfer driven pedagogy; ii) it is a fallacy to believe that, since they come out of elite universities, MOOC quality is uniformly high; iii) they promise access for underprivileged people but can't really deliver on this; and iv) finally they are viewed by US politicians as a means to lower the cost of education.  Even though it is something that particularly, perhaps even uniquely, applies to the USA, I find the fourth point particularly worrying. If you legally forbid tax hikes so they can't even keep pace with compensation for inflation, as is done in California, then inevitably students at universities and community colleges (or their parents) will have to foot that bill themselves. Hailing MOOCs as the solution to this problem of the rising cost of education almost, as one Californian senator does, is misleading at best as you refuse to identify the real problem, it would seem to me. (@pbsloep) 

uTOP Inria's curator insight, April 5, 2:28 AM

(Fred Martin - presentation at CSERC 2013)

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MOOC Manifesto | Conecta 13

MOOC Manifesto | Conecta 13 | Networked Learning - MOOCs and more | Scoop.it

MOOCs are one of the hot topics in e-learning and Higher Education at the moment. The number of institutions designing their own MOOCs is growing exponentially and, thus, collective, academic reflection upon this new meme is required to guarantee we understand each other and we agree on some key issues concerning MOOCs

Peter B. Sloep's insight:

What follows - the manifest - is a list of 23 items which can best be seen as individual statements about what MOOCs are (or not) and what you can do with them (or cannot). It is not an (extensive) attempt to define MOOCs or a call for action on what we should do with MOOCs. Keeping that in mind, the list is useful as a summary of the many items that are raised in discussions on MOOCs (orginal in Spanish) (@pbsloep)

Cathleen Nardi's curator insight, April 5, 7:37 PM

add your insight...

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Does Europe need its own Mooc? | Alex Katsomitros - The Guardian

Does Europe need its own Mooc? | Alex Katsomitros - The Guardian | Networked Learning - MOOCs and more | Scoop.it

What is missing from the equation is an institution that would not just bring together individual universities in Europe, but would be European in essence. … Moocs constitute a one-in-a-lifetime opportunity to create a truly European university. But it will have to be something substantially bigger than a simple online version of the Erasmus programme, and perhaps more complete than Coursera and Udacity. … A European online university is also necessary to boost the nascent European identity. Umberto Eco recently argued that a whole new generation of Europeans will be needed to build a nationalism-free Europe. … Finally, a European version of Coursera might spark in Britain a debate similar to the one about the UK's membership in the European Union. A European university without a few reputable UK institutions would be a halfway house. Chances are that some of them would be glad to join a partnership including Sorbonne, Freie Universitat and the like. Would this create a split across the UK sector between Europhile and Futurelearn institutions?

Peter B. Sloep's insight:

Are MOOCs in the USA often portroyed as a means to save money and beat the towering tuition fees, in Europe they could help create a European identity. And why not? What is missing from the discussion are the elite universities. There is no doubt in my mind that a large part of the reason for people to enrol in a MOOC is the chance to learn from the best in the field. So this must somehow be taken into account. But an interesting thought nevertheless, one that for once is not so much about money as it is about improving education and instilling a (European) civic identity. (@pbsloep)

Pieter de Vries's curator insight, April 4, 3:13 PM

No doubt we need a European perspective to savour the context of diversity we enjoy so much. So maybe this diversity will help us to overcome the idea that we need a European online university. There must be better ways to create a truly European dimension that will favour innovation and transformation in HE in a timely manner.

Le Page Gilles's curator insight, April 5, 2:43 AM

Extrait  (trad libre):

"Les Moocs, solution de survie pour les petites universités, constituent une occasion unique pour créer une université véritablement européenne. Mais il faudra que cela soit différent et bien plus ambitieux qu'une simple version en ligne du programme Erasmus, et la slution devra être plus compleète que Coursera et Udacity."

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MOOC provider EdX goes open source – with an interesting choice of licence | Scott Wilson - OSS Watch team blog

MOOC provider EdX goes open source – with an interesting choice of licence | Scott Wilson - OSS Watch team blog | Networked Learning - MOOCs and more | Scoop.it

Earlier this month EdX, the nonprofit organisation set up by MIT and Harvard to provide a MOOC platform, released part of its code under an open source licence – the Affero GPL.

Peter B. Sloep's insight:

What is special here, Scott Wilson argues, is the subtle but important difference between free of charge and open. Many platforms may be used free of charge - Facebook, Google+ - but few are open in the sense that the software that drives them is freely available. edX's XBlock code is not only open in this sentence, but the AGPL code ensures that improvements made to it by users of the code have to be made available to all other users, including of course edX. (@pbsloep)

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