Moocs 2017 On campus and Off

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Moocs 2017 – Possibilities for On Campus and Lifelong Learning Terry Anderson, PhD May 2017

Transcript of Moocs 2017 On campus and Off

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Moocs 2017 – Possibilities for On Campus and Lifelong Learning

Terry Anderson, PhD

May 2017

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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.

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Popularity of Moocs

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Chinese MOOCs

• Many new entrants

From https://www.class-central.com/report/xuetangx/ -Oct 2016

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Social Drivers

• High cost of education

• Scaling difficulty

• Government and peer pressure

• Need to Increase access

• Sharing resources

• Lifelong learning

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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

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Cost of higher education - USA

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Motives of MOOC Owners

• MOOC Private companies: - profit, advertising, sale to industry, certificate revenue, entry into adult education market

• Universities: Brand Promotion, recruit for fee courses & programs, public service, develop new educational models – blended learning, new audiences, content for campus courses, research opportunities,

• Software developers: Sell product• Companies – new, low cost training opportunities

where skill shortages exist

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Why do Students who complete MOOCs take Them?

Source https://hbr.org/2015/09/whos-benefiting-from-moocs-and-why

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What do Students get out of MOOCs

Source https://hbr.org/2015/09/whos-benefiting-from-moocs-and-why

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Courses & Students Cont. to Grow (EdX)

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Language of MOOCs

https://www.class-central.com/languages

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Demographics (from EdX)

Very low completion rates

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MOOCS Currently SERVING Well Off

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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.

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Ompare to over age =

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Exhibit 2b: If a MOOC classroom held 100 students, who would theybe?

TEACHERS OVER REPRESENTED32% of MOOC sample

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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

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Move from Paced to self paced

Paced - inprogrss Self-paced

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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

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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

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EdX Micro Masters

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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

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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

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Remote invigilation/proctoringHow 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/

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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

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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)

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Types of Participants

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Quality Indicators based on Traditional Online Courses

https://onlinelearninginsights.wordpress.com/2016/02/26/moocs-desperately-seeking-quality/

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We are developing quality standards

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Quality standards (cont)

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FutureofMOOCs Model

From D Santandreu - 2017

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[email protected]

Blog: virtualcanuck.ca

Your comments and questions

most welcomed!

Terry Anderson, Ph.D.Editor EmeritusProfessor, Athabasca UniversityAthabasca University10005 93 StEdmonton, AB CanadaT5H 1W6 Ph 780 425 5950

These slides are available!