Slldes for Faculty presentation on Moocs 2017 – Possibilities for On Campus and Lifelong Learning. Presented May 31, 2017 at Jiangnan University, China
1. Moocs 2017 – Possibilities for On
Campus and Lifelong Learning
Terry Anderson, PhD
May 2017
2. MOOC
• Massive: Can scale but many are not large –
especially after initial offering.
• Open: Most free to register, but pay for
certificates and assessment. Materials NOT
necessarily free and open source
• Online: All, though may be supplemented by
online seminars
• Course: Move to combine in certificates, mini-
degrees. Self paced (continuous enrollment) or
scheduled sessions.
5. Chinese MOOCs
• Many new entrants
From https://www.class-central.com/report/xuetangx/ -Oct 2016
6.
7. Social Drivers
• High cost of education
• Scaling difficulty
• Government and peer pressure
• Need to Increase access
• Sharing resources
• Lifelong learning
8. Drivers for Universities
• “don’t want to get left behind”
• Expectations for doing more from public and
government
• New learners
• Opportunity to explore new approaches –
especially blended learning and new credentials
• Opportunities for change agents to push
universities to use technologies, be more
student-focused, create a new identity for
Universities
17. MOOCs Currently serve the already
educated
The Harvard and MIT study of EdX identifies
that for STEM on-line courses 61% of
participants have a bachelor's degree and 81%
have a degree for government, health and
social sciences courses.
19. Exhibit 2b: If a MOOC classroom held 100 students, who would they
be?
TEACHERS OVER REPRESENTED
32% of MOOC sample
20. Training for jobs
• “short online courses are a means to
differentiate themselves in an increasingly
competitive job market with over 75% of
learners in the study stating that they are
taking courses for career progression reasons.”
Future Learn
https://www.fenews.co.uk/featured-article/the-coming-of-age-of-digital-education-13014
22. Use of Moocs within Credit
Universities
• Students study Moocs together in a class
• Institution evaluates and credits like normal
course
• Teachers use MOOC for extra resources
• Students do MOOC for exam preparation
• Works best with self-paced MOOCs to align
with institutional timelines
23. Moocs for Credit
• Achieving recognition is the most challenging issue for
students, companies and institutions
• Udacity’s nano degree – “recognized by a number of
well-known companies, such as Mercedes-Benz,
Microsoft, Google, IBM and Amazon.”
• CoursEra certificates
• Some Universities offering Prior Learning Assessment
or challenge exams to provide University credit – but
resistance from many faculty and administrators
• EdEx Micro Masters Degree
– Credit for MOOC, reduces time in campus
25. MicroMasters Example (EdX)
• MircoMasters from MIT
• 30 students/year on Campus
• 40,000 register for MOOC for free
• 12% pay fee for testing = 480 MOOC students
• MicroMasters – better assessment machine,
peer and teacher
• Students who pay have MUCH higher
completion rates
26. Course Transfer
• California Community Colleges, the nation’s
largest system with 113 institutions, just
launched a course exchange so students at
one campus can take classes online at another
if those courses aren’t available on their home
turf.
https://www.edsurge.com/news/2017-01-24-
california-launches-the-nation-s-largest-
community-college-course-exchange
27. Remote invigilation/proctoring
How do you know who wrote the
exam?
• Face to face invigilation is inconvenient, time
consuming and costly - around $200/student
at Athabasca
• Remote invigilation by
humans is convenient,
and mildly expensive
• Invigilation by webcam/realtime analytics low
cost, convenient see http://smowltech.com/
28. What about Low Completion Rates
• “Findings indicated that the strongest predictor of
performance was participation, followed by
motivation.” de Barba, Kennedy, Ainley (20i6)
• Students taking for credit have higher motivation
and achievement
• Many register to see and understand MOOCs or
content and have no intention of completing
•
29. Quality in Moocs
• (1) problem-centric learning with clear
expositions,
• (2) instructor accessibility and passion,
• (3) active learning,
• (4) peer interaction, and
• (5) using helpful course resources.
Khe Foon Hew (2016) Promoting engagement in online courses: What strategies can we
learn from three highly rated MOOCS. British Journal of Educational Technology 47 (2)
35. terrya@athabascau.ca
Blog: virtualcanuck.ca
Your comments and questions
most welcomed!
Terry Anderson, Ph.D.
Editor Emeritus
Professor, Athabasca University
Athabasca University
10005 93 St
Edmonton, AB Canada
T5H 1W6 Ph 780 425 5950
These slides are available!