Sunday 28 April 2013

Week 5 Activity 18 - Connectivism - Downes

After reading Siemens' article (sorry - paper) I can't see how Downes can be any worse. I hope not. Of course, it probably will be since 2 years have gone by which is plenty of time to muddy the waters, throw in a load more off-topic ideas and suggestions and wrap it all up as an educational masterpiece.

Downes (2007), What connectivism is
Alas. not much better.

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.
A bit like walking between libraries to get a book then? You can have a network of libraries that communicate with each other and share resources.

The article seems to say the Connectivism is ethereal, doesn't exist in the material world and of course we get to think about the number of Angels you can fit on a pin-head. Later on fairies and pixie dust are introduced into the argument.

I think connectivism is nothing. Just a play on words, trying to mimic some computer networking, brain synapsis functioning and a statement on what takes place already and has done for many years.

Not impressed.

Activity 19 - I considered these points in the previous post. I can see the point of designing a course that allows the learner to follow their curiosity and making what they find part of the experience, but then we may as well just say, this is the topic, go away and investigate it then report back what you found. That covers just about all the "key principles".





Saturday 27 April 2013

Week 5 Activity 18 - Connectivism - Shredding Siemens

5.4 Connectivism

Connectivism has been described by George Siemens, its original proponent, as a learning theory for the digital age. As such, connectivism is often referenced when people talk about MOOCs or learning with OER. Most learning theories were developed prior to the digital, networked age and have been adapted to fit with it, whereas connectivism was developed specifically in response to the possibilities offered by a global network. The question ‘Does this give us anything new?’ is also relevant for connectivism, as some of the criticism about it has been that connectivism repackages existing ideas.

Siemens (2005), Connectivism: a learning theory for the digital age

Connectivism should not be confused with constructivism.   (Papert?)

Social environment should drive the pedagogy - okay. Like schools were created for industrial revolution and so may not match today's needs (Sir Robertson on this).

“One of the most persuasive factors is the shrinking half-life of knowledge. The “half-life of knowledge” is the time span from when knowledge is gained to when it becomes obsolete.

But principles do not become obsolete and a fact does not become half a fact.

Just because the amount of "knowledge" (which has not been defined) may be doubling every 18 months (Moore's law) doesn't mean that it's worth is halving.

This paper is all over the place without any supporting justifications. Too many unsupported statements across many fields and topics.

Know-how and know-what is being supplemented with know-where (the understanding of where to find knowledge needed). - I agree with this point.

Do we gain knowledge through experiences?
Yes, burn your hand (experience) don't touch fire (knowledge)

Is it innate (present at birth)?
No. Instincts are not knowledge, they are pre-wired instincts. Explain an instinct.
 
Do we acquire it through thinking and reasoning?
Yes, it is possible, but that is reflection which was seeded by an experience in the first place. This leads to wisdom.

Is knowledge actually knowable?
No. You need to have processed it first. Only when the experience has been processed does it become knowledge. You cannot force feed someone knowledge, it would be meaningless to them.

Is it directly knowable through human experience?
No, needs to be processed (sorted, searched, linked and filed away in the right place).


Objectivism (similar to behaviorism) states that reality is external and is objective, and knowledge is gained through experiences.
No, reality is internal. No, it's subjective. Yes, knowledge gained by experience.

Pragmatism (similar to cognitivism) states that reality is interpreted, and knowledge is negotiated through experience and thinking.
Yes, reality interpreted. Agree on the knowledge part - I'm okay with this.

Interpretivism (similar to constructivism) states that reality is internal, and knowledge is constructed.What's the difference between "internal" and "interpreted"? I think reality is interpreted to become internal. Knowledge is constructed from the negotiation between experience and thinking.

So, I am either a pragmatic interpretist or an Interpretistic pragmatist. I think the first one needs to happen in that order. So I will henceforth define myself as a pragmatic interpretist. And a hungry one at that - so time to eat something...

I see knowledge as a connection of inter-connected and intertwined facts with subjective and emotional weighting. That was my thought when answering the above, so therefore disagree with
"All of these learning theories hold the notion that knowledge is an objective (or a state) that is attainable (if not already innate) through either reasoning or experiences."
I didn't assume that when thinking about the above.

So my best learning system for the student would be:
1. Provide many examples that allow for the reality to be interpreted
2. Have the student think and reflect on the examples
3. Let them construct their own example (to demonstrate learning) or provide a slightly modified example requiring demonstration of understanding

Which is what I do, although the reflection time could be longer and more guided.

I disagree with Behaviorism - internal activities are more important then observable behavior. It isn't all about simple stimuli and responses. Learning is not just about behavior change.

Cognitivism is too basic and takes no account of emotion and subjectivity or instinct.

Constructivism - okay. But there is more to it than creating knowledge from understanding experiences. This is the closest I agree with.

So I am now a pragmatic interpretistic constructivist, cool! Also a less hungry one now.
(I'll have to work this into a report somewhere).

"These theories do not address learning that occurs outside of people (i.e. learning that is stored and manipulated by technology)." - Err... Look over there, there's some learning going on outside of any people!

 i.e. learning that is stored and manipulated by technology.
What crap is this? A.I? Are we at that point yet?

How on earth can you quantify the value of what is learned. It is totally subjective.

"the very manner of information that we acquire is worth exploring." - What is that supposed to mean? It's meaningless.

"The need to evaluate the worthiness of learning something is a meta-skill that is applied before learning itself begins." Yes, but also it's a continuous process during learning, and explains why people change their direction or drop out of a MOOC.

All over the place again - ramblings of a mad man. And this got peer reviewed and published?

"new sciences (chaos and networks)" and goldfish and cheese. I mean, lets just bung any old topics together, what about "string theory"? Indeed. Let's talk about bio-mechanics.

"How are learning theories impacted when knowledge is no longer acquired in the linear manner?" Oh come on! Since when did knowledge become acquired in a liner fashion, err. never.

Okay, the introduction is a poor hotchpotch of ideas, off topic suggestions and biased unsupported statements. The editor must be a very close friend or more.

"chaos is “a cryptic form of order”" so  stability is a "random form of disorder". Which it is if you wait long enough or take one event/snap shop from the random form of disorder.
I say, that's darn profound, or is all bollocks?

"Alterations within the network have ripple effects on the whole." It all depends upon the type of network topology

Connectivism -  this is bullshit. It's definition is too undefined and consists of a few known ideas strung together.

Learning and knowledge rests in diversity of opinions.
Not new. Better to check with multiple sources when finding out about something. We call it, taking a second opinion.

Learning is a process of connecting specialized nodes or information sources.
We call this research or looking things up that may be related.

Learning may reside in non-human appliances.
Like my toaster. Is it really there when I leave the kitchen, that's the question. Of course, everything is made of atoms and so it's just a case of re-arranging them to form some learning.

Capacity to know more is more critical than what is currently known
We call that being curious or inquisitive.

Nurturing and maintaining connections is needed to facilitate continual learning.
This is known as not getting Alzheimer's. Also known as moving primary learning into long term learning (storage).

Ability to see connections between fields, ideas, and concepts is a core skill.
We call this creativity and imagination.

Currency (accurate, up-to-date knowledge) is the intent of all connectivist learning activities.
And also everyone in the world.

Decision-making is itself a learning process. Choosing what to learn and the meaning of incoming information is seen through the lens of a shifting reality. While there is a right answer now, it may be wrong tomorrow due to alterations in the information climate affecting the decision.
Oh God. Come on, get some perspective man "Shifting reality", only after a few too many beers. "Information climate" - do me a favour!  So, to sum up, we call this changing your mind.

Data resides in a database. It is interpreted to form information, and from information you derive knowledge, having gone through a process described at the start above, from which learning may take place. Knowledge does not reside in a database. Knowledge may one day reside in a A.I. self-aware computer, but not yet.

"Quantum theory of trust" - Is this similar to the relative theory of reliability or the Newtonian theory of honour, or is that all bollocks also. Clearly some ones mind is in a spin in the wrong orbit.

What's with all the quotes at the end. Is this supposed to be supportive evidence to the paper or was it tacked on to fill out a few extra words?

Well, this paper just severely reduced the status of Mr. George Siemens in my opinion as well as the
"International Journal of Instructional Technology & Distance learning". I see the current issue on the home page is Sept 2012. I am not surprised.

Thursday 18 April 2013

Week 5 Activity 17- Pedagogy in open learning - NOTES and Activity

Week 5 Activity 17 - Pedagogy in open learning

After studying this week, you should understand:
  • the impact of abundant content
  • connectivism as pedagogy for online courses
  • rhizomatic learning
  • how to take into account learner experience when designing a connectivist course
  • the advantages and disadvantages of specified pedagogies.

Activity 17: The role of abundance

Timing: 4 hours
  • Read Weller (2011), A pedagogy of abundance. In the conclusion two questions are posed: ‘The issue for educators is twofold I would suggest: firstly how can they best take advantage of abundance in their own teaching practice, and secondly how do we best equip learners to make use of it?’
  • Post a comment to contribute an answer to one of these questions, drawing on your own context and experience. For example, you might suggest that we could best equip learners to make use of abundant content by developing their critical analysis skills.
Read Weller (2011), A pedagogy of abundance.

The shift to abundant content has as profound implications for education as it has for content industries
.
My ideas:
  • Time spent finding the best
  • Having found it and begun using it, only to have to disappear or get "updated" and changed so that it no matches how one used it
  • Overload and then despondency
  • Reliance on one single search engine results (i.e. Google) and then only from the first page
  • How to teach the searching (Use the Google Power Search MOOC)

Work for a Uni then publish or die?

But when goods become digital and available online then scarcity disappears.
They are non-rivalrous in nature, so if you take a copy, it is still available for others.

Why non-rivalrous? - I think any digital artifact is in competition with others, unless its a first original.

ri·val·rous  

Prone to or subject to rivalry: "rivalrous presidential aspirants".
Characterized by or given to rivalry or competition

DRM is often backed up with strong legal enforcement, for example the recent case of torrent sharing site Pirate Bay being fined 30 Million Swedish Kronor and receiving a jail sentence for encouraging illegal file sharing.
How much did they pay?
How many of them are in jail?
Has the site been taken down?

Resource Based Learning
In a world of abundance the emphasis is less on the development of specific learning materials than on the selection, aggregation and interpretation of existing materials.

Problem based learning
(know by the rest of us as "solving a problem")
As with RBLit may need recasting to fully utilise the new found abundance of content, where there is greater stress on finding and evaluating resources from a wide range, and the utilisation of social networks as a resource.

The intention of this article is not to set out a guide for teaching with abundance or even to evaluate the effectiveness of these theories,
Clearly true.

The issue for educators is twofold I would suggest: firstly how can they best take advantage of abundance in their own teaching practice, and secondly how do we best equip learners to make use of it?
Yes, it's a pity this wasn't a paper addressing these issues.

Post a comment to contribute an answer to one of these questions, drawing on your own context and experience. For example, you might suggest that we could best equip learners to make use of abundant content by developing their critical analysis skills.

How can I best take advantage of abundance in my own teaching practice

Having read over the posts here, what I suggest is basically the same, namely filtering content for students. Only recently, in the last year or so, have we (my computing faculty and I) begun to give our KS3 students a choice, out of two options. For example, they could use a text based resource or a set of training videos. Or they may use either this web based tutorial or another different tutorial. In higher years KS4 and 5, they take on greater responsibility for their own learning and have a greater choice, presented by us and/or of their own choosing if we agree to their choice..

Context: A typical example is locating a resource to teach the Java programming language. Google "Learning Java Programming" gives 13,500,000 hits. Below, apart from point 1 which I haven't done yet, is my system for dealing with the abundance of Computer Science related resources available today.
  1. Do the Google Power Searching and Advanced Power Searching MOOC  http://www.powersearchingwithgoogle.com/
  2. Set a fixed amount of time to search for, find and obtain suitable resources using peer & student suggestions and top rated site (from your own experience) recommendations.
  3. Gather 3 resources that might be suitable.
  4. Examine them and pick the best in your opinion.
  5. Change your mindset and understand you may not have selected the best or most perfect resources for your class and so will need to live with that fact.
  6. Use the resource and stick with it through thick and thin. Do not dump it for another 1/3 or less the way through. Otherwise, you may form the habit and become one of those people who jump from one resource to the next and do not get anything done.
  7. At the end of the course/learning with the resource used, evaluate it, re-use it or start again at point 2 and use one of the other resources short-listed
The above is my advice to myself.




Tuesday 16 April 2013

Activity 16: Examining a definition

Activity 16: Examining a definition

A PLN consists of people we have physically met, and studied with, and continue to engage with over time exchanging resources, ideas and information via the Internet irrespective of the communication tool or media used.   
Now you have a definition of PLN, the question you need to answer is:
  • ‘Does this offer anything new?’
No. Apart from the method of communication and swapping resources may be new, but essentially it's nothing more than meeting and discussing with a group of people, many of which will become educational friends if there views and understanding reflect ones own.

Will try to watch the OU live session of 11 April. - Didn't work.

Write a blog post setting out a position statement on what PLNs are and whether it is a useful term or not.
I think I answered that here: http://davidbrettell-h817.blogspot.com/2013/04/week-4-activity-15-defining-pln.html
I do not think it is a useful term. I think having a Peer Learning Network or just a Professional Network is better, but then this just becomes two different phone lists, one called friends and another called work or learning.


Week 4 - Activity 15: Defining a PLN

Week 4 - Activity 15: Defining a PLN NOTES

VLE = Virtual Learning Environment / LMS = Learning Management System
Institution server hosted, structured, tool - like Moodle
AKA - school whiteboard and teacher notes

PLE = Personal Learning Environment / PLN = Personal Learning Network
Student initiated use of tools and collection of peers
AKA - pen and paper with friends

PLN = Personal Learning Network (or perhaps Peer Learning Network)
A PLN emphasises that it is the people in the network that are significant
Which is great if the peers aren't a bunch of dummies i.e. in secondary school environment bird of a feather flock together and so the peer network would need to be teacher assigned.

Is this not over-rated? what happened to the master-pupil relationship? PLN could be too nebulous. You may have 10,000 FB friends, or 1,000 Twitter followers but how many of them would actually help? Still a bit cynical over this.

Timing: 2 hours (2 days then!)
As with many new terms, PLN is used in a variety of contexts. The Wikipedia entry defines it as:
‘an informal learningExternal link  network that consists of the people a learner interacts with and derives knowledge from in a personal learning environmentExternal link . In a PLN, a person makes a connection with another person with the specific intent that some type of learning will occur because of that connection.’ (Wikipedia, 2012External link )
  • Use search tools and the discussion in the forum to formulate your own, one-sentence definition of a PLN.
Week 4 forum - http://www.open.edu/openlearn/ocw/mod/forumng/view.php?id=13741


Perhaps it's just me but do we need a PLN? For example, over the last year or more I have been studying and reading up on Climate Change. This was initiated from early discussions with a friend involved in this field, and proof-reading his environmental studies textbook. My far-more-than-I knowledgeable friend acts as a mentor for me and discussion with him, exchanging links and papers is more than sufficient.

I do not need, want or have the time to devote to maintaining a PLN. I see it more as an encumbrance requiring the taking up of my time. Just exchanging resources and ideas with one person, a more knowledgeable person (a mentor, guide, "master") is sufficient. Since I am involved in secondary education I like to think how secondary students could form a PLN. Some of my older classes, IB level, form private FB pages for their class and that works well they say. Although their PLN consist of the people they meet in their class. I do not think a middle school student, KS3 or 4, is able to form an effective PLN. In particular the weaker student is most likely going to form a PLN consisting of his/her friends, also perhaps the weaker students in the class/year group. Likewise, the high flying students PLNs will consist of their own upper level group. I don't see PLNs working in secondary school, particularly with concerns for eSafety if they are open to the public. So, back to PLNs in further and adult education. Who has the time to maintain meaningful online relationships to further their learning? I do not. For me then, a PLN consists of people we have physically met, and studied with, and continue to engage with over time exchanging resources, ideas and information via the Internet irrespective of the communication tool or media used.    

I can support this definition a little further by explaining that a group of teachers at my school began the Bath Uni MA together (with support from the school) and we formed a weekly study group. Over time this became less necessary but we stay in touch via email, asking questions and sending resources. Is this a PLN? Or is it just a group of colleagues meeting up now and then to chat and swap ideas on how their MA is going?

"Rajagopalet al (2012) explain that we are in control of how we network and who we network with and have the ability, supported by technology, to develop the relationships that will further our own development: “An individual can therefore create and orchestrate ties to effectively support learning needs and potentially use technology to support this network, effectively making it a personal learning network (PLN)” (see Ian Luxford, 9 April 13, posting above)

To me this seems to be stating the blindingly obvious. Aren't we all in control of who we decide to be friends with, online or off? Is your phone list your PLN?  I must be missing the bigger picture here because I can't helping thinking that this PLN term and idea is over-rated.

Week 4 - Activity 14: Comparing MOOCs

Week 4 - Activity 14: Comparing MOOCs
Please scroll down a few lines for the start of  the activity post proper, thank you.

Compare either DS106External link  or the Change MOOCExternal link  with offerings from UdacityExternal link  or CourseraExternal link .
(You may not be able to access a course on these sites without signing up – there is no need to do this but you do need to ascertain what you can from the information around the course and the approach of the providers.)

Write a blog post comparing the courses with regards to:
technology
pedagogy
general approach and philosophy.

Remember to tag your blog post with #h817open and to read and comment on some of the posts of your fellow students.

DS106: Digital Storytelling (also affectionately known as ds106) is an open, online course that happens at various times throughout the year at the University of Mary Washington... but you can join in whenever you like and leave whenever you need. This course is free to anyone who wants to take it, and the only requirements are a real computer, a hardy internet connection, preferrably a domain of your own and some commodity web hosting, and all the creativity you can muster.

Change MOOCExternal link 
This course will introduce participants to the major contributions being made to the field of instructional technology by researchers today. Each week, a new professor or researcher will introduce his or her central contribution to the field.
Date: September 12, 2011 - May 2012
Technologies Used: Through out this "course" participants will use a variety of technologies, for example, blogs, Second Life, RSS Readers, UStream, etc. Course resources will be provided using gRSShopper and online seminars delivered using Elluminate.
Facilitators: Dave Cormier, George Siemens and Stephen Downes will co-facilitate this innovative and timely course.
 
Both of these are cMOOCs. DS106 looks the more creative and still active, but I will select The Change MOOC and Udacity. Udacity because it mainly offers CS type courses.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Introduction
At an initial glance we can see the Change MOOC is classed as a cMOOC (connectivism) not least of all because of the key facilitators of this MOOC being Dave Cormier, George Siemens and Stephen Downes. All of whom are the founding fathers of the MOOC, later classified as the cMOOC. Udacity is one of the"fixed" xMOOCs (including EdX, Coursera). Both Udacity and Coursera are for profit companies. So, with The Change MOOC we have an Open free MOOC compared with a for profit, closed (although still free to students) fixed MOOC. I also chose Udacity over coursera for this comparison as I originally signed up for their CS101 course in May 2012.

Technology
The Change MOOC platform looks like Moodle although is running off  Downes' gRSShopper software. The MOOC itself offers MP3 audio, Elluminate recordings (which was bought by Blackboard and renamed to Blackboard Collaborate - a Java run video, audio and workspace collaboration and discussion tool). PowerPoint attached slides,  blogs, RSS feeds, Google calendar, a daily email and most likely Google Docs and they ran a backchannel. In essence the MOOC lives up to it's networking name and social participatory sharing, networking founding MOOC principle. Participants are welcomed and encouraged to make use of any technology to communicate their ideas and reflections with each other.

Udacity, created by a Stanford team, is far more restrictive, fixed, in the technology it uses or requires the student to use. It makes use of "bite-sized videos" within a closed and structured platform. I believe Udacity is currently developing a platform for others to use. Udacity offers 22 courses, mainly comp. sci related, with subtitles in "Spanish, Chinese, French, Portuguese and even less widespread languages such as Croatian.". The lack of language support did not seem a major issue or concern for the cMOOC fraternity I noticed in my literature review. The courses do not appear to be linked to any particular university, nor do the instructors. For example the instructor on the single Physics course, Andy Brown, was biking around the world before creating his Physics course. Udacity do seem to have HAL from 2001 Space Odyssey sending out their compute generated emails, which is obviously a major technological bonus.  Despite almost a year without logging in to Udacity I am able to resume my Introduction to Computer Science course from where I left off.


Pedagogy
For the Change, and other cMOOCs such as this current OU MOOC the methods and practice of teaching is by total immersion into a social peer supported learning bubble. The student is free to make use of the tools of their choice (e.g. I do not make use of Twitter but prefer blogging and reading other student's blogs). I scan emailed forum posts for points of interest. cMOOCs have a supporting structure but they are both the "Wild West" and the "Party where you can wander around eating nibbles and joining groups for chats". The beginner cMOOCer must have developed Internet and IT skills and must be organized (i.e. grouping bookmarks, be adept at searching blogs and forums) etc. if they are to remain motivated within the cMOOC. The pedagogy here is one of constructivism and I would also say experimentalism. The social aspect of this MOOC is very strong, leading to clusters of likeminded people who will continue to discuss and communicate at the end of the MOOC schedule.

The xMOOC is highly structured, less flexible in Internet tool use, in fact everything required is provided in the platform, and so anything added would be optional by the student (for example copying of their work into their own blog). The advantage of the xMOOC is that one can join at any time, where as the cMOOCs seem to run for a few times then close down. One feels alone and like the single independent learner in an xMOOC (unlike the feeling of being part of a big group with the cMOOC). Udacity does it's best to offer up a Blog (but this looks structured and uninviting - sort of the nerd in the corner). They organize "Meetups" and indeed there was one in Bangkok attended by 4 people. No more seem planned. The leaning is simply this: Listen, practice, listen, practice. There are elements of building on past learning and skills, where the programming problems (for the CS intro) got more tricky and made use of previous content covered. The activity problems, program code to write, required a very good understanding of the previous material if one was to be successful. As stated in the literature, the pedagogy is standard fair and quite old. Learning to learn, not required here.

General approach and philosophy
The cMOOC (The Change MOOC) has the advantage of keeping the student engaged and participating by the use of many and varied knowledge delivery systems plus of course asking the student to create digital artifacts (products) using any tool their hearts desire. This freedom of product creation tool means that there will be participants without those tool skills who will feel inferior or lack the confidence to engage and may lurk. Although lurkers have their place to. Peer pressure and "keeping up with the Jones'" may be an issue. On the other hand, this kind of MOOC and the various means of engaging with peers allows for communication at all levels (plus I think, in general these MOOCs attract a more creative and genial crowd). I believe that the MOOC founders might be a little upset that their MOOC ideas have been hijacked by what people term the "elite" universities, who garner all the media attention (Bates was certainly unimpressed with Daphne Koller's Ted Talk). However, many people will feel more at home following a cMOOC course than an xMOOC course. I think the cMOOC philosophy matches more closely to the education for everyone (rich, poor, developed, undeveloped country) ideal than the xMOOC does. Purely because of the openness in tools in cases of restricted Internet bandwidth or government controls.

The xMOOC course appeals to my innate logical, everything sorted and structured anal personality. I know where I am, literally, with a xMOOC. My progress can almost be measured down to the nano-second. The bite sized videos tend, on the CS course anyhow, to make use of the instructor drawing sketches (known to be preferred by many - aka Kharn Academy except we see pen and hand) which then morph, as if by magic, in to MC quizzes in order to test understanding. These computer graded short quizzes combined with automatically graded bigger activities is an area not seen in the cMOOC, although there is no reason I suppose why a cMOOC could not use a tool such as Yacapaca. Eventually, as the Coursera contract states, for profit xMOOCs will, in my opinion, start charging for something. Be it certificates at the end, or selling student data to employment agencies. This potential payment and the lack of media delivery flexibility may be restrictive to poorer students with low Internet bandwidth.

Opinion
I think a person needs to be far more self-motivated in order to complete a xMOOC course, compared to a cMOOC course mainly because of the lack of functionality to "see" and share problems with others (despite the 22 minute coursera stated peer answer time). To see that others are experiencing the same problems you had. The cMOOC has a community of supportive learners who are willing to help which does not seem so apparent with the xMOOC. xMOOC content comes from the so called, best universities in the world, and although this does not necessarily mean the teaching is the best in the world, the chance to be able to access it for free is an amazing opportunity. The xMOOC will be the survivor if there is a MOOC challenge, because of the simplicity and ease of starting any course and the clean interface. By including more social learning opportunities into the xMOOC people will pay for this online course eventually. I know that if I made it to the final exam of a MIT, Harvard, Stanford, Yale etc. course I would certainly be willing to pay $100 or more for a certificate on passing the exam. I also believe that these certificates are going to be far more relevant to employers than say a Bath Master's degree. An applicant with evidence of having recently successfully completed a few xMOOCs on their CV outweighs the applicant who did an MA ten years back, for a whole host of reasons.  

References
See here for my notes and references that have gone into the above: http://davidbrettell-h817.blogspot.com/2013/04/week-4-activity-12-learner-experience.html


Week 4 - Activity 12 The learner experience in MOOCs NOTES

Week 4 - Activity 12 The learner experience in MOOCs NOTES

"This has led to some criticism that MOOCs are only suitable for more experienced learners and those who are technologically competent." My own experience tends to agree with this.

The completion rate for MOOCs is very low, as this article in The Atlantic

article in The Atlantic 
Overblown-Claims-of-Failure Watch: How Not to Gauge the Success of Online Courses
Rebecca J. Rosen Jul 22 2012, 2:52 PM E

"If anything, the low rate of success is a sign of the system's efficiency." - it is easy to drop out. And this is not viewed as negatively.

Read Kop (2011), The challenges to connectivist learning on open online networks: learning experiences during a massive open online courseExternal link . 
A bit boring to start, certainly put the wife to sleep. Some good quotes and I appreciate the lurkers point of view. What I still want to know is, of the 40 to 60 active participants (activity defined by amount of posts, not internal reflection and the building up of evidence to support an idea) how many of them completed all the reading and made it to the end, compared to the lurkers? The biggest problem with this paper is it's lack of simple English. It seems to thrive on complex educational lingo and complex words and phrases when simple ones will do much better.

Read Daniel (2012), Making sense of MOOCs: musings in a maze of myth, paradox and possibility62, which provides a comprehensive review of MOOCs.
Bifurcated = divided into two
cMOOCs and xMOOCs.  ?????
http://reflectionsandcontemplations.wordpress.com/2012/08/23/what-is-a-mooc-what-are-the-different-types-of-mooc-xmoocs-and-cmoocs/
These organisations provide one interpretation of the MOOC model. They focus on concise, targeted video content – with short videos rather than full-length lectures to wade through – and use automated testing to check students’ understanding as they work through the content.
These MOOCS have been dubbed “xMOOCs”. Whilst they include discussion forums, and allow people to bounce ideas around and discuss learning together, the centre of the course is the instructor-guided lesson. Each student’s journey/trajectory through the course is linear and based on the absorption and understanding of fixed competencies. Learning is seen as something that can be tested and certified.

The other type of MOOC is based on connectivism. These are the cMOOCS.
The connected aspect of learning is brought to the fore in a cMOOC. It’s a chaotic experience (as @RosemarySewart put it) and is inherently personal and subjective, as participants create their meaning and build and navigate their own web of connections.
cMOOCs are not proscriptive, and participants set their own learning goals and type of engagement. They won’t necessarily walk away with a fixed and tested set of specific skills or competencies, or knowledge of a set body of content. This makes cMOOCs tricky to grade or assess or certify. This, combined with the fact that the platform is totally open, means that they probably aren’t very easy to make any money from.

So, I prefer xMOOCs but with the freedom of cMOOCs. Why, because I don't need to spend (waste) time wandering all over the Internet to gain my learning.

http://natnelson19.wordpress.com/2013/04/07/cmoocs-or-xmoocs-both-please/comment-page-1/#comment-144

xMOOCs also diverging...?
Armstrong, L. (2012). Coursera and MITx: Sustainingor disruptive?
http://www.changinghighereducation.com/2012/08/coursera-.html
accessed 2012-09-22
A bit harsh on the Cousera offering, what do you expect for free? Detailed human assessment and feedback - dream on pal.  Maybe the people who take the Coursera courses aren't deeply into "working knowledge of research in pedagogy" perhaps they don't think it is all that important when compared to getting on with the free course. Armstrong comes across as an intellectual snob.
I don't see a HUGE difference between xMOOCs given here. Only a listed, somewhat biased, personal preference. The article states that MITx is better than Cousera because MIT mention the word "pedagogy" more often in their literature. Armstrong seems to hint that Coursera is  the great pretender. A sort of "jumped up" "new money" learning platform.


Coursera (for profit) - provides a s/w platform for any university and course
Choose from 300+ courses in over 20 categories created by 62 Universities from 16 countries. With courses in French, Chinese, Italian, Spanish.

http://viz.coursera.org/2013-02-20-globe/
Only 1 from London and 1 from Edinburgh - So where is Oxbridge then? Nothing from Thailand.
The search engine on Coursera is very nice and fast. I think this is fantastic, wish it was available when I was a kid. I would have studied everything.

MITx - Is for MIT (changed now - see below.)

Udacity (for profit) - Same idea as Coursera
Courses have subtitles in Spanish, Chinese, French, Portuguese and even less widespread languages such as Croatian.
22 courses listed, topics tend to all be CS related. Information on where the courses come from is not clearly available. Perhaps the courses are created by freelancers not necessarily connected to any university.

EdX (non-profit) - MIT, Harvard, Berkeley (Berk - not mentioned in the About, but listed as providing courses) plus: edX’s newest consortium members include Wellesley, Georgetown, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, McGill University, University of Toronto, Australian National University, Delft University of Technology, and Rice University.
Open open-source s/w platform being developed
In theory, EdX picks and chooses which universities in wants, whereas Coursera will have anyone.
29 courses listed.

Opps forgot about Academic Earth! http://www.academicearth.org/
Surly one of the first?
Cambridge is here. 42 universities (a number from India)
A big list of "Climate change" related courses - 43. Because it's Academic "Earth".
Why is Academic Earth not mentioned as a MOOC?

Summary - Coursera has the most courses, choice and universities listed. EdX comes in second place, and says it is choosy in who it picks. Udacity doesn't seem to affiliate to any university but basically offers 22 courses on CS subjects only pretty much.

Where will the money come from? At the end of the Coursera partnership
agreement a section on  Possible Company Monetization Strategies  lists eight
potential business models. They are:
  • Certification (students pay for a badge or certificate)
  • Secure assessments (students pay to have their examinations invigilated (proctored))
  • Employee recruitment (companies pay for access to student performance records)
  • Applicant screening (employers/universities pay for access to records to screen applicants)
  • Human tutoring or assignment marking (for which students pay)
  • Selling the MOOC platform to enterprises to use in  their own training courses
  • Sponsorships (3rd party sponsors of courses)
  • Tuition fees
Personally I think all of these are valid. If I made it to the end of a MIT, Harvard etc. course and had to pay for a final exam human grading and certificate I would do so.

Pearson VUE, a subsidiary of the Pearson conglomerate, to use its worldwide network of testing centres
http://www.pearsonvue.com/
Pearson VUE delivers certification and licensure tests through the world’s largest network of test centers in 175 countries across the world.

I believe online education in conjunction with independent test centers will be the future.

"Put another way, cMOOCs focus on knowledge creation and generation whereas xMOOCs focus on knowledge duplication'."  I disagree, I think cMOOCs are for knowledge gain and xMOOCs for problem solving and critical thinking, for the CS field.

Google Course Builder and it's own xMOOC - Power Searching
http://www.powersearchingwithgoogle.com/
Course Builder -  looks interesting and something I could probably do

the London School of Economics, Oxford, Yale and Stanford thought they could make useful additional income by offering non-credit courses online. In the event they and their partners lost money before ventures like Fathom and AllLearn were ignominiously shuttered.
http://allearn.org/ - What a nightmare of a site, no wonder if failed. Looks like it has been hacked or is a joke.

This is a much better paper compared to the other one. It's clear, doesn't indulge in eduspeak and contains good and meaningful links to follow up on. No sense of pretensions and language that can be understood. Good job!

Elite institutions, of course, usually define their quality by the numbers of applicants that they exclude, not by the teaching that happens on campus after admission. My late Athabasca University colleague Dan Coldeway called this the principle of 'good little piggies in, make good bacon out'.

Learning analytics are 'the use of data and models to predict student progress and performance, and the ability to act on that information'
The best MOOCs / universities will be the ones where measured value-added of incoming and exiting students is the greatest.

For over 30 years Athabasca University has offered a Bachelor's degree with no residency requirement (i.e. students do not have to take any courses from Athabasca, the award can be made entirely on the basis of credit accumulation). Athabasca is also contemplating putting together a 'Best First Year Online' constructed entirely from open courseware (Pannekoek, 2012).

Pannekoek, F. (2012). Best First Year Online: An Open Courseware Alternative.
http://president.athabascau.ca/documents/BestFirstYear.pdf accessed 2012-09-23

OERu - OERu
http://wikieducator.org/OER_university/Home
A few words but nothing solid in place. Looks like a dead duck to me.

Bates, T (2012). What's right and what's wrong about Coursera-style MOOCs?http://www.tonybates.ca/2012/08/05/whats-right-and-whats-wrong-about-coursera-style-moocs/
accessed 2012-09-22

TED Talks: Daphne Koller: What we’re learning from online education
Daphne Koller, one of the two founders of Coursera, describes some of the key features of the Coursera MOOCs, and the lessons she has learned to date about teaching and learning from these courses. The video is well worth watching, just for this.

If Stanford or MIT gave credit for these courses to students from South Africa who succeeded in the exams, and then awarded them full degrees, then that might be different. But these elite universities continue to treat MOOCs as a philanthropic form of continuing education, and until these institutions are willing to award credit and degrees for this type of program, we have to believe that they think that this is a second class form of education suitable only for the unwashed masses.

I proudly stand and declare myself as one of the Unwashed and indeed Unshaved also!

Having watched the Koller Ted Talk I think Bates is being a bit biased and negative. I don't think Koller stated or believes she has created MOOCs or Online leaning. 

With luck the dream of the great American educator Ernie Boyer (1990) may even
come true. In 1990, in Scholarship Reconsidered: Priorities of the Professoriate,
he wrote:   'We need a climate in which colleges and universities are less
imitative, taking pride in their uniqueness. It's time to end the suffocating
practice in which colleges and universities measure themselves far too
frequently by external status rather than by values determined by their own
distinctive mission'.


 Sir John Daniel Bio  - http://sirjohn.ca/wordpress/?page_id=14

 That was supposed to be a 1 hour activity, more like 1 day!

Monday 15 April 2013

Week 4 - Activity 12

Week 4 - Activity 12
Before we examine MOOCs in more detail, briefly consider if the MOOC approach could be adopted in your own area of education or training. Post your thoughts in your blog and then read and comment on your peers’ postings.

4 hours, that was the timing for this activity. I must have spent at least 10 hours reading and following up on links. Of the 100% I read I only ever seem to retain about 5% if I am lucky, so I had better write this fast. My notes on the given material and links stemming from this material can be found here.

My area of education has always been in private overseas international secondary schools (KS3-5), from the time I earned my PGCE to now (about 25 years in 5 different countries). The simple answer is yes, I believe the MOOC approach can work and already is being adopted in overseas international schools. For example, I have one student who has successfully completed two Udacity courses. He is a special case, but others started the AI course that was offered and some students took part in the team challenge on edX I think it was. This was all self-motivated and initiated by the students. In my school, within the Computing faculty, we make use of Codecademy, Code Monster and other online tutorials. Although these may not be classed as MOOCs I can see that as soon as MOOCs offer courses at the secondary school level they will be used. Already I make use of the first 5 to 7 lectures of a Stanford computing course as an introduction to programming with my IB Computer Science classes. My school is a 1:1 laptop school, which makes a difference in that all students have access to hardware and the school have a fast and fairly robust Internet connection.

The issues for secondary students is the need to help them stay motivated and organized as they work through a MOOC. The other issue will be parents asking what they are paying high school fees for if their children are spending time in lesson working on something they can just as easily work on at home, and probably with private tutor at a far lower cost. When I present this issue to my IB ITGS students their response is that they would rather come to school, for the social aspects of it as well as the need to be in a different place to work. They say they would not do any work if left alone at home. For middle school students, staying organized and not becoming overwhelmed with the various tools required to be used would take learning and practice. Overall, I think the use of MOOCs across a range of subjects will be used at some point in the student's learning during an academic year.

Sunday 14 April 2013

Week 4 - Activity 12: Background to MOOCs Notes

Activity 12: Background to MOOCs Notes

Streamed live on 15 Oct 2012
An interview/discussion with Dave Cormier and George Siemens on MOOCs, to be used in the Open University open course, on, erm, open education.
 
2008 MOOC - George - 2007 online conferences, open. Made use of technology in teaching.
 
Dave - Why the term MOOC.  
PLE MOOC - set aside 10 weeks of time to work together where ever one adds in and learns together. MOOCs = connection. Open = Transparent
Course -> Need a date and topic.  People feel a part of something, a member of a group (it is social). The blogs and forum postings re-enforce this feeling. The feeling that something is alive. So a bit like a classroom except you have to digitally walk through the door to receive and partake of it. And it is easier not to walk through this digital door. But the MOOC endurance, participatory involvement, will be enhanced by VR and AG because of the ease and speed of entering and leaving. No need to turn on the computer, sign in, open blogs, open sites. It will all be open and in front of your eyes, with Google Glasses or similar. Got a spare 10 minutes whilst in traffic or a shopping queue, then go back to school. Learning will be done in discrete packets.    
 
Watch this interview in which George Siemens and Dave Cormier are interviewed by Martin Weller, about a range of issues concerning MOOCs.
 
Early MOOCs issues:
  • High drop out rates
    • Students do not complete the course
    • Participation - requires a deeper input (in my opinion)
  • The person who "chats" a lot gains significance - although they may not be studying - too busy chatting
  • Learner expectation - Learner feedback - can be negative feedback
  • Expectations to finish a course, may not be the goal
    • That's bullshite though. MOOC VIPS are redefining the terms of course success because of the high dropout rate. Citing that something good always comes out of a limited exposure to the course. Agree, but only of the mindset of the person who "drops out" does not see themselves as a failure for having done so (as school teaches).
  • So many participants results in too much content/feedback which results in work overload.
  • Need more MOOC organisers/supervisors to volunteer to help
  • Open -> more surprise from free-loaders
  • Open -> allows development of course content etc. And allows one to learn more and reflect
  • Massive - pedagogy changes (peer learning), need to adjust way of learning, i.e. my aspect is to ignore it all, or to find a system or tool to help me locate what I am interesting.
  • Cliques form in MOOCs.
  • Is there a MOOC on how to learn from a MOOC - or is this it?
  • MIT etc. just copy classroom structure
    • But is that not a good way to introduce online learning to new learners?
  • MOOCs -> add a business model might fuck it all up
  • Small payment for MOOCs -> May lead to mainstream of topics.
    • Trade organization should run their own MOOCs
  • Coursera - Developing world students take the courses.
    • Joining big MOOCs means a loss of creative and different MOOC structures
  • MOOC future
    • Just named what was happening anyway (Think of NAND computer course)
    • Universities are dead already if their contract is about delivering content
    • Practical skills and experience cannot be gained - all lab work
    • Machine learning for auto-assessment
    •  New models of education will result from MOOCs
  • MOOCs cause the questioning of the Higher Education system and where it is going
Interesting. It wasn't just about MOOCs but the effect they have on society and the future of education.
 
Read McAuley et al. (2010), The MOOC Model for Digital PracticeExternal link . NOTES FOLLOW BELOW for this report
This is a lengthy report so if you do not have time to read it all focus on the Executive Summary and the section entitled ‘Gaps in knowledge about MOOCs’.

This paper is about how participants of MOOCs can make money, based in Canada.
By exploring the relationship of MOOCs to the digital economy in general and their potential roles to prepare citizens for participation in that digital economy in particular, it illustrates one particularly Canadian model of how these needs may be addressed.
 
The first summarizes what a MOOC is:
What is a MOOC? by Dave Cormier - seen it already, see previous post
 
The second summarizes what new users may need to consider for success in a MOOC:
Success in a MOOC by Dave Cormier
5 Steps to Succeed in a MOOC
  1. Orient - yourself
    1. Where are the materials
    2. What do I need to sign up for
    3. How to search the blogs and forums
    4. How to post to them
    5. Where are all the links?
    6. (See my first blog posts...)
    7. MOOC is paced - defined time structure (A big disadvantage and issue, because when the time has elapsed is the MOOC not dead? Am I the only one playing catch-up? No, but having fallen behind am I now the inferior person, despite all the valid reasons on job, family, home commitments? This is, in my opinion, a huge disincentive to continue the MOOC. MOOCs should re-start every time period, they should have no time scale (like Stanford MOOC Computing 101). Any MOOC that obliges one to meet the exact time schedule is dead in the water as far as I am concerned.
    8. "The more material you cover the more you can participate". Yes but, if you dedicate 100% of your available time to covering the material then there is no time for participation. And what do we gain from a few comments to a posting etc? compared to covering more material? So far, covering out-weighs participation for me.
  2. Declare
    1. Blogs, tags,
    2. Reflections
    3. Nothing happens - yep, no comments on my blog, but do I care? No.
  3. Network
    1. To get feedback on our posts - why? Yes, all the usual answers, but generally speaking the comments do not provide insight, more of a forced distraction really.
    2. Why is the course all about my vapid comments on someone else's posts? I don't see this as being a necessary integral part of a MOOC. Yes, helpful to drop in and out of them, but only if time allows.
    3. The problem of making "connections" is the time required, and lost, to engage in the conversations. Which then can often result in intellectual arguments over semantics and grammar. There is an opportunity for too much wasted time, unless we can agree on some "networking" ground rules such as:
      1. The author of the original piece is in no way obliged to respond to any comments, feedback or question presented to him/her
      2. The original author does not even need to commit to reading any 3rd party comments made to their work
      3. None of this would be viewed as being rude
      4. Other people may post if they wish or not in the understanding that they may receive nothing in return
      5. To put it bluntly, who gives a shit what you think?
  4. Cluster
    1. Grouping with people of the same opinions - thus given that my opinion is that I don't want to spend time "Networking" then that "unNetworking" group is not going to cluster.
  5. Focus
    1. Half-way through we might wander off. But hang on, is that not the mark of a successful MOOC? The individual has found what they are really interested in, as a result of the MOOC, and then gone off to follow this path "follow their dream"? Is a call to focus the right thing?
    2. Success is Open after all. The expression "Failure is not an option" may well be literally interpreted to mean exactly that, no one fails as MOOC, as success is having participated for some of it. I would argue that perhaps when the going gets tough the drop-outs exceed all expectations at success.

The third touches on the creation of knowledge in a MOOC:
Knowledge in a MOOC by Dave Cormier
  • MOOC creates a dynamic knowledge base
  • Network creation
The fourth provides an example of how MOOCs might be presented as a contributor to a digital
economy:
http://edactive.ca/mooc/digitaleconomysample = http://innovation2010.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/video-archive2010.php?video=21&lang=en and http://innovation-forum.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/video-archive2010.php?video=21&lang=en
Social media
Open course
Topic within a company - for IBM perhaps?
MOOCs create a social space.
MOOC on Future of Education
India and Mexico contributed to change the thinking
Gains - collaboration, gain an Internet presence
Gain network around the same topic people are interested in
Gain - an online presence

Q&A
How "Massive" do you want?
>100 professionals in a MOOC begins to make things confusing

A set of MOOC videos at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-eNoTC5jRqs&list=PLQnexh-7vC1fqS9eFYj7agFvTskqoMWRJ

p.4 MOOC: An integration of:
1. Social network
2. Expert(s) in the field
3. Collection of free resources

Q. Percentage breakdown? How to measure? Is there an ideal amount for the "perfect", most successful MOOC? What makes a successful MOOC?

MOOCs seem to be offered in real-time, but what about working through a MOOC later?

P.5. "Participation in a MOOC is emergent, fragmented, diffuse, and diverse. It can be frustrating. It’s not unlike life."
Agreed. Being part of one is like a newborn. I am attempting to crawl before I can walk and then run. I do not wish to participate in the social network until I am out of nappies.

P.7 "parallels between MOOCs and commercial ventures such as the Massive Open Online Novel (http://mongoliad.com) or the “Indigo MBA” (http://www.chapters.indigo.ca/Indigo-MBA/indigomba-giz.html)argue that there may be potential for revenue generation that do not unduly compromise the free and open nature of the MOOC model."

Massive Open Online Novel (http://mongoliad.com)
The Mongoliad was originally conceived and presented as a community-driven, enhanced, serial novel that could be read on your Web browser, smart phone, or tablet. This site and the material available through the iOS and Android apps is a record of the serialized experience, but is no longer considered to be the definitive text of The Mongoliad.

The story is set in the year 1241 CE when Europe thought that the Mongol Horde was about to completely destroy their world and only a small band of warriors and mystics stood in the way of utter defeat and subjugation by the great Khan.

Indigo MBA” (http://www.chapters.indigo.ca/Indigo-MBA/indigomba-giz.html)argue
Dead link - I guess their commercial venture didn't succeed.
http://www.chapters.indigo.ca/indigomba/ - A link to some books.

If lots of people become involved in the "Digital Economy" who is left to do the "real" work? Growing food, doing the plumbing, wiring, building. In the developed world, people will want to be part of the "Digital world" because it's a damn sight more comfy to work on the computer rather than get their hands dirty. People with good practical skills will benefit because of the lack of people with those skills.

We need to run a small MOOC for children to follow. One done: http://blogs.slj.com/neverendingsearch/2012/12/02/moocs-for-kids-too/

But last week, the University of Miami Global Academy–an online high school sponsored by UM’s Division of Continuing and International Education. launched what may be the first free MOOC for high school students–a three-week test prep class designed to get students ready for the Collage Board’s SAT Subject Test in Biology.

Hello!
I am developing the OC@ADLC – The Open Classroom at ADLC. We offered #BEFA12, a course about digital identity and digital literacy for HS students in November/12. Please check it out. Version 2 will be offered in April 2013 – Free and open to any High School student.
http://www.openclassroomonline.com/beyondfacebook12-open-online-course-4hs-students-by-hs-students/

Back to the article - ICT in the classroom has not helped develop a knowledge-based economy. Probably because the ICT teachers haven't a clue. The report believes MOOCs will do the job.

P.9 "In a digital economy, capital lies in the capacity to leverage, connect, and promote knowledge
(Lesser, 2000). The capacity for production and flow of manufactured goods defined prosperity in
the industrial economy. Similarly, the capacity to create, improve, innovate with, and apply knowledge will define prosperity in a digital economy (Cormier, 2010).
"

Just as the capacity to service existing infrastructure will define prosperity for those who can do it.

An investigation in to MOOCs as used by International secondary school students within Bangkok, Thailand.

P.10 "The term came into being in 2008, though versions of very large open online courses were in existence before that time (McAuley, 2010)."

P.14  'webcast academy'http://webcastacademy.net/

 P.19 "I had been participating from the position of a person with both something to contribute and something to learn. Once I felt I didn't have much to offer, I had trouble maintaining my sense of my role."
Right! So, if she were a person with something to learn before something to contribute she may have found it easier to return, since she had no perceived expectations to hold up to, built up from past postings. Q. Check the number of people who complete the OU MOOC and the extent of their postings compared to those who did not complete and the number of their postings.




This report contains a historical account of the main players in MOOC research. The question begs, what do the people who actually create the large MOOCs say and think?

P.24 The model that defines MOOCs:
Based on this discussion, we settled on the pedagogical model that continues to define MOOCs:
  • High levels of learner control over modes and places of interaction (Users can pick from a choice of communication methods)
  • Weekly synchronous sessions with facilitators and guest speakers (Contact to keep people engaged)
  • The Daily email newsletter as a regular contact point for course participants. The Daily includes a summary of Moodle forums, course participant blogs, Twitter discussions related to the course, etc.
  • Using RSS-harvesting (gRSShopper) to track blogs of course participants
  • Emphasis on learner autonomy in selecting learning resources and level of participation in activities
  • Emphasis on social systems as effective means for learners to self-organize and way finding through complex subject areas
  • The criticality of “creation” - i.e. learners create and share their understanding of the course
  • topics through blogs, concept maps, videos, images, and podcasts. Creating a digital artifact helps learners to re-centre the course discussion to a more personal basis.

gRSShopper - created by Downes, contains adverts. Looks defunct. 2 reviews.

CCK08
http://www.fininformatica.it/wp/category/cck08/
About a year ago, I launched a survey on the use of the wide range of technological tools used within the Connectivism and Connective Knowledge Online Course (CCK08).
This might be interesting - his paper on
The Technological Dimension of a Massive Open Online Course: The Case of the CCK08 Course Tools, trying to summarize the results and make some hypothesis on the findings.

The study has now been published in The International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning (IRRODL) in its Special Issue: Openness and the Future of Higher Education edited by David Wiley and John Hilton III.

Okay, enough of this report - got too boring.  Waffled on too much and become a bit repetitive in places. i.e. the number of MOOCS can be counted on the fingers of 2 hands.


Read Weller (2012b), MOOCs IncExternal link .
28/05/2012

Curtis Bonk’s course ?
Hmm.. last post 7 May 2012, nearly a year ago.

I agree with the benefits of mainstreamed MOOCs
1. Can up scale the MOOC
2. Legitimizes the course - i.e. it become recognized.
3. Creates a defined structure and standard that works, in theory
4. More robust - not experimental - more professional - less user frustrations
5. Possible to make money from them - pay for the accreditation at the end.

Current large MOOCs not Open, free yes, Open no.

Weller sounds upset that he will be forgotten, or become a has-bean. Surely not? "and 10 years from now people will be writing papers that cite Stanford as the initiator of open courses."

Internet memory lasts about a month on average.


Additional resources

The MOOC GuideExternal link : Stephen Downes (undated) sets out some of the history of MOOCs.
Online guide, can cache with :
http://www.httrack.com/ - HTTrack is a free (GPL, libre/free software) and easy-to-use offline browser utility. See C:\My Sites

AmnesimoocExternal link : Martin Weller (2012a) outlines the differences between online distance education courses and large-scale online open courses.
Web posting on difference between large scale distance learning and MOOC

What is a MOOC?External link : JISC webinar (2012) describing the MOOC phenomenon and demonstrating examples of practice and support in the UK.
A blackboard recorded session. Seminar -> Webinar - a bit clunky. Didn't fully load.

Now for the activity itself.







 

Saturday 13 April 2013

Week 4 MOOCs - Notes

MOOCs

After studying this week, you should understand:
  • the different types of MOOC and the issues surrounding them
  • the evidence of learner behaviour and the effectiveness of MOOCs
  • the learner experience in MOOCs
  • the strengths and weaknesses of MOOCs as an approach
  • personal learning networks.

The term ‘MOOC’ was coined by Dave Cormier and arose after his analysis of one of the first MOOCs, the ‘Connectivism and Connected Knowledge’ course (known as CCK08) run by George Siemens and Stephen Downes.

The MOOC Guide

https://sites.google.com/site/themoocguide/3-cck08---the-distributed-course


03. CCK08 - The Distributed CourseThe Connectivism and Connective Knowledge course (CCK08) was the first to incorporate open learning with distributed content, making it the first true MOOC. It attracted 2200 participants worldwide




One of the most innovative MOOCs in its use of technology has been DS106External link , the digital storytelling course run by Jim Groom

DS106 looks like a very rewarding and creative course. I think anyone who completed this course must have learned a lot, both new skills and perhaps more about themselves and what the can achieve.

What is a MOOC? 4 min by Dave Cormier
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eW3gMGqcZQc
A concise and quick intro to MOOCs that definitely promotes the social and networking aspects of the programme.

Sir Ken Robinson - Education will explode because of MOOCs. People will learn what they want and not what they were offered at school. (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_RumyGvl-vk)

The early experimentation led to more mainstream adoption of MOOCs, and in 2011 two Stanford professors offered an open course in artificial intelligence that attracted over 100,000 students. This was followed in 2012 by Harvard and MIT announcing the formation of edXExternal link , a joint initiative to offer open courses. In addition, the Stanford team founded Udacity, a commercial enterprise to offer open courses, and a number of universities started offering courses through Coursera.