blind monks and the elephant - icts and higher education futures

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BLIND MONKS AND THE ELEPHANT

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A presentation at the Council for Higher Education's Colloquium on Moving the Teaching and Learning System in South African Higher Education into the Digitally Mediated Era, 15 October 2014

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Page 1: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

BLIND MONKS AND THE ELEPHANT

Page 2: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

BLIND MONKS AND THE ELEPHANT

The shape of the emerging teaching and learning

environmentLaura Czerniewicz

14 October 2014

Page 3: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

INTRODUCTION

Page 4: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

PRINCIPLES OF TECHNOLOGY

• Division of labour• Specialisation• Economies of scale• Machines and ICTs

Adam Smith 1723 -1790

sirjohn.ca/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/.../1400120OntarioRed.ppt

Page 5: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

THE LANGUAGE OF TECHNOLOGY

Numerical representation

Modularity

Automation

Variability

Transcoding

New media objects exist as data

The different elements of new media exist independently

The logic of the computer influences how we understand & represent ourselves

New media objects exist in multiple versions

Manovich, L (2001) The Language of New Media

New media objects can be created & modified automatically

Page 6: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

Teaching & learning interactionAssessment & certification

Content

TRADITIONALLY: A SINGLE PACKAGE

Time Space

Page 7: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

DISAGGREGATION

Content

Teaching & learning interaction

Certification

Time Platform

Page 8: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

DISAGGREGATION

Content

Teaching & learning interaction

Assessment & certification

Time Platform

Page 9: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

ACCESS TO CONTENT

Legal

Digital

Analogue

Illegal

TextbooksSome

photocopying

E-TextbooksOpen

Education Resources

Photocopying

Pirate sitesFile sharing

Page 10: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

DISAGGREGATION

Content

Teaching & learning interaction

Certification

Time Place

Page 11: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

DISAGGREGATION

Content

Teaching & learning interaction

Certification

Time Platform

Page 12: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

LEARNING PLATFORMS

Hill, P (6 Feb 2014) http://mfeldstein.com/resilient-higher-ed-lms-canvas/

Page 13: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

http://www.edtechmagazine.com/higher/article/2014/02/comparison-five-free-mooc-platforms-educators

Page 14: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

Free content

Pay to access platform

Page 15: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

CHANGES IN TEACHING & LEARNING

Content

Teaching & learning interaction

Certification

Time Place

Page 16: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

On campus Remote

Internet supported

Fully online

F2F only

Form

s of

pro

visi

on

Location of students

Internet dependent

Online-intensive

Blended(mixed

mode): combines

F2F and online

Page 17: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

DISAGGREGATION

Content

Teaching & learning interaction

Certification

Time Platform

Page 18: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

CERTIFICATION: NON UNIVERSITY PROVIDERS

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CERTIFICATION: NEW FORMSo Badges- micro, granular certificationo A form of formal(ised) recognition

• for informal learning processes• for chunks of

content• for competencies

Page 20: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

CERTIFICATION: NEW FORMS & PROVIDERS

o “Degreed is a community of college students, professionals, and lifelong learners dedicated to advancing their education. When you join Degreed, you get tools to help you track, organize, share, and validate everything you learn. “

o Degreed – launched 2013

Page 21: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

CERTIFICATION: NEW FORMS

Page 22: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

CERTIFICATION: NEW FORMS

Page 23: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

CERTIFICATION: NEW FORMS

£ 119Pearson Vue Test Centre

£ 24

Page 24: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

CHANGING MONETISATION MODELS

TraditionalComplete package (fees)

Emergent models Individual elements

Fees Yes No

Content May be free/included in fees/paid for May be paid

Support Free/included in fees May be paid

Assessment Free/included in fees May be paid

Certification Free/included in fees Paid

Platform May be licensed or free (student does not pay)

May be licensed or free

Page 25: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

MOOCS

Page 26: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

On campus Remote

Internet supported

Fully online

F2F only

Form

s of

pro

visi

on

Location of students

Internet dependent

Online-intensive

Blended(mixed

mode): combines

F2F and online

MOOCs

Page 27: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

Online course MOOCFees Cost to user No fees

Maybe certificates &/or support

Yes, as per all formal courses Entrance requirements

None

Limited. Capped by resources available for support &

assessmentScale

Thousands Savings due to limited support

Responsible for curriculum alignment, QA, support

Lecturer role Flexible role re curriculumLimited individual support

Largely proprietary, some openCopyright

Content may be proprietary or open, user generated content often © MOOC provider

Distance education providersProviders

Traditional residential research universities partnered with private companies

No, not usually Analytics Yes, one of the promises

Conventional Certification Non conventional

Aligned with the usual formal courses QA processes

Quality assurance As per non formal offerings

Page 28: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

MOOCS DID NOT JUST APPEAR

Long historyo Open educationo Distance educationo Online educationo Continuing education

o But new business models

2012

Page 29: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

MAPPING THE COURSE LANDSCAPE

Page 30: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

conventional flexible

FORMAL

SEMI-FORMAL

NON-FORMAL

Lectures & tutorials Block release Online courses

Short courses Professional developmentcourses

Summer school

Page 31: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

MOOCS AS A CATALYSTo To the acceptance and take up of

online open and distance learning by traditional universities

o New forms of certificationo New partnershipso New varieties of provision

Page 32: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

TYPES OF MOOCSVarieties in the landscape

Page 33: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

TeachingFocus

Categories of MOOCs

Showcase teaching and introduce topics with high-profile ‘rockstar’ presenters

Page 34: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

CATEGORY 1: TEACHING FOCUS

o General interest high profile course o Showcases the institution by means of an

engaging subject or personality ledo Global interest o Matches a popular understanding of high profile

MOOCs o High production costs o High enrollment o Loose curriculum ties o May attract external funding

Page 35: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

CATEGORY 1 EXAMPLES

http://edulearning2.blogspot.com/2014/05/statistics-for-2014-coursera.html

Page 36: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

CATEGORY 1: EXAMPLES

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Researchshowcase

Categories of MOOCs

Showcase research and special interest topics of interest to postgraduate level

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o Showcase research or more specialised topics of interest

o Offered at postgraduate level and assume some background in the topic. Still geared towards general or leisure learning

o Likely to have global appealo Moderate/high production costso Medium/high enrollment o Loose curriculum ties

CATEGORY 5: RESEARCH SHOWCASE

Page 39: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

CATEGORY 5: RESEARCH SHOWCASE

Page 40: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

MOOC PROVIDERS

http://edutechnica.com/moocmap October 2013

Page 41: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

PARTICIPANTS

http://globalhighered.files.wordpress.com/2013/11/courseramapoct2013.jpg

Page 42: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

REPRESENTATION MATTERSo Shapes what is known and what can be

knowno Makes some knowledge visible and

legitimate and other invisible and illegitimateo Consolidates power through normalisationo Influences how knowledge is produced and

reproducedo Online representation augments, echoes and

refracts physical representation

Page 43: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

MOOCS AS NEO-COLONIALISM

o “any device that enlarges one’s environment and makes the rest of the world one’s neighbours is an efficient mechanical missionary of civilisation and helps to save the world from insularity where barbarism hides”

Dolbear, an inventor of the telephone, quoted in Graham (2011)

Page 44: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

Gatewayskills

Categories of MOOCs

Introduce fields and support students in undergraduate study

Page 45: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

CATEGORY 2: GATEWAY SKILLS

o Provides foundational, bridging or enhancement skills for pre HE entry or during undergraduate pathways towards specialisation

o Local interest, either within the institution or at a country-wide setting

o Moderate production costs o Low enrollment o Close curriculum ties o May attract external funding

Page 46: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

CATEGORY 2: GATEWAY SKILLS

Page 47: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

Graduateliteracies

Categories of MOOCs

Develop skills and introduce topics for postgraduate study.

Page 48: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

CATEGORY 3: GRADUATE LITERACIES

o Post-graduate level courses to support application or programmes of study

o Focussed on building postgraduate literacies

o Likely to be of local or national interesto Moderate production costs

Low enrollment o Close curriculum ties o May attract external funding

Page 49: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

CATEGORY 3: GRADUATE LITERACIES

Page 50: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

Professionalshowcase

Categories of MOOCs

Showcase professional careers for continuing education and

qualifications

Page 51: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

CATEGORY 4: PROFESSIONAL FOCUSo Geared towards vocational skills development, re-

tooling and professional developmento Could be offered in conjunction with professional bodieso Likely to be of local interest, although some specialised

topics may be globally relevanto Moderate to high production costs |medium to high

enrollment o Close curriculum tieso May attract organisational fundingo High potential for pathway to credit or revenue

generation

Page 52: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

PROFESSIONAL FOCUS: EXAMPLES

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ioelondonblog.wordpress.com/2014/05/14/what-is-the-problem-for-which-moocs-are-the-solution/

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http://www.afr.com/p/national/education/top_mooc_provider_edx_no_longer_FooMSmV3LdSQHYGKND4LoI

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X-SERIES PROGRAMME

o Let’s compare

Page 56: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

£2140.00 (38,252.00 ZAR)

X 3R114 756

Page 57: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

R3000

Page 58: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

Teachingshowcase

Researchshowcase Gateway

skills

Professionalshowcase Graduate

literacies

Categories of MOOCs

Showcase teaching and introduce topics with high-profile ‘rockstar’ presenters

Introduce fields and support students in undergraduate study

Develop skills and introduce topics for postgraduate study.

Showcase research and special interest topics of interest to postgraduate level

Showcase professional careers for continuing education and

qualifications

Page 59: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

conventional flexible

FORMAL

SEMI-FORMAL

NON-FORMAL

Lectures

Short courses

Summer school

Blended courses Online courses

Professional developmentcourses

MOOC related variants

Page 60: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

EMERGING MODELS FROM MOOCS

MOCMassive Online Course: formal course with “MOOC pedagogy”

Wrapped MOOCStudents in a course taking a MOOC with added local support and additional material

MOOCMassive Open Online Course

CourseFormal course with lectures and support.

Page 61: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

EXAMPLE: WRAPPED MOOCSo UCT 1st semester

• Critical Thinking in Global Challengeshttps://www.coursera.org/course/criticalthinking

• Principles of Written English – Part 2https://www.edx.org/course/uc-berkeleyx/uc-berkeleyx-colwri2-2x-principles-1348

• Understanding Research: An Overview for Health Professionalshttps://www.coursera.org/course/researchforhealth

• Model Thinkinghttps://www.coursera.org/course/modelthinking

• Design and Interpretation of Clinical Trials• https://www.coursera.org/course/clintrials• Data Analysis and Statistical Inference• https://www.coursera.org/course/statistics• New Models of Business in Society 

https://www.coursera.org/course/bizsociety• The Data Scientist’s Toolbox • https://www.coursera.org/course/datascitoolbox• English Composition I: Achieving Expertise

https://www.coursera.org/course/composition• Getting and Cleaning Data 

https://www.coursera.org/course/getdata• Understanding Research Methods

Page 62: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

EMERGING MODELS FROM MOOCS

Open Boundary courseCourse offered simultaneously as a formal and as a open course

MOCMassive Online Course: formal course with “MOOC pedagogy”

Wrapped MOOCStudents in a course taking a MOOC with added local support and additional material

MOOCMassive Open Online Course

CourseFormal course with lectures and support.

Page 63: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

EXAMPLE: OPEN BOUNDARY COURSE

o The 1st MOOC (2008)

o 25 fee-paying students on campus

o 2 300 general public students who took the online class free of charge

Page 64: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

EXAMPLE: OPEN BOUNDARY COURSE http://www.m

rowe.co.za/blog/2013/08/pht402-online-course-accreditation/ 3 August 2013

Page 65: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures
Page 66: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

EMERGING MODELS FROM MOOCS

Open Boundary courseCourse offered simultaneously as a formal and as a open course.

SPOCSmall private online course

MOCMassive Online Course: formal course with “MOOC pedagogy”

Wrapped MOOCStudents in a course taking a MOOC with added local support and additional material

MOOCMassive Open Online Course

CourseFormal course with lectures and support.

Page 67: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

EXAMPLE: VARIATIONS - SPOC

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Page 69: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

FORMAL SEMI-FORMAL NON-FORMAL

CONVENTIONAL

curriculum innovation

Page 70: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

FORMS OF PROVISIONo Multiple forms of provision

conceptualised • Ad hoc• Up front• Within/ across levels

o Implications for coherence across provision types• Quality oversight in different places

Page 71: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

PARALLEL OFFERINGSo Credibility and legitimacy of parallel

offeringso Rise of acceptance of emerging

forms of certificationo Quality control of new forms of

offerings and of certification

Page 72: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

EMERGING PROVIDERSo Flexible providers

Page 73: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

THE RISE OF THE ONLINEo The major shift is to growing interest

in online education• The rise of the online in the semi-formal

and informal arenas• The rise of the online in the formal arenas

Page 74: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

Daniels, J 2012

o Online education is in the hand of the private sector

• “In the US the for-profit sector has a much higher proportion of the total online market (32%) than its share of the overall higher education market (7%).

• Seven of the 10 US institutions with the highest online enrolments are for-profits.

• For-profits seem better placed to expand online because they do not have to worry about resistance from academic staff, nor about exploiting their earlier investment in campus facilities.”

Page 75: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

OUTSOURCINGIT departments may be skeptical about MOOCs, but colleges are forging a digital future by creating online programs. And they’re enlisting help: Nearly a third (29 percent) of respondents said their colleges were outsourcing online-program development to third-party providers. Those “enablers,” such as Pearson Embanet, offer marketing services and technology support in exchange for payment.

Over all, 43 percent of IT officers said they believe outsourcing “offers a viable instructional strategy for their institution’s online efforts,” but among those at private universities, 67 percent do. A third (34 percent) think outsourcing will provide a solid revenue strategy, but among those at private universities, 59 percent do.

http://chronicle.com/blogs/wiredcampus/optimism-about-moocs-fades-in-campus-it-offices-survey-finds/54705 1 October 2014

Page 76: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

SA ONLINE

http%3A%2F%2Fwww.unisa.ac.za%2Fcontents%2Fstudy2012%2Fdocs%2FmyStudies-Unisa-2014.pdf

Page 77: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

THE IRON TRIANGLE IN THE POST TRADITIONAL LANDSCAPE

o The central challenge • Breaking the insidious link between quality

and exclusivity (John Daniel)• The hope of the

emerginglandscape

Cost

Quality

Access

Page 78: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

ACCESS

Page 79: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

GROWING THE PIE?o New forms of provision reaching

those who are not can not access traditional formal education?

o But concerns about keeping students within the system (US)

o Effect on global system & developing countries

http://chronicle.com/blogs/ticker/higher-ed-leaders-worry-most-about-declining-enrollment-survey-finds/86223 17 /9/14

Page 80: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

THE GLOBAL MARKET PLACEo The developing

world as the new market to solve crises at northern universities

Page 81: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

ACCESS: THE GLOBAL MARKETPLACE

o Diversified offerings for different groups

o MOOCs reached more non-US students than any other form

• Students lost or gained?o Analysis of 875k students on 9

Wharton Business School MOOCs• Higher % of foreign born US

students• Higher % of unemployed

students• Higher % of US under-

represented minorities• Fewer women

MOOCs Won’t Replace Business Schools — They’ll Diversify ThemJune 3, 2014 http://blogs.hbr.org/2014/06/moocs-wont-replace-business-schools-theyll-diversify-them/

Page 82: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

o Northern hegemony• Northern curriculum

Northern knowledgeo US students in

formal courses

Page 83: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

WHEN IS ONLINE SUITABLE?o Surveyed 40 000 students in

nearly 500 000 courseso Findings

• …While all types of students in the study suffered decrements in performance in online courses, some struggled more than others to adapt: males, younger students, Black students, and students with lower grade point averages

Xu & Jaggar 2013 Adaptability to Online Learning: Differences Across Types of Students and Academic Subject Areas

Page 84: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

ACCESS AND SUCCESSo Completion rates lowo Absolute numbers high

Page 85: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

o MOOC students largely educated and working

o Suitable for professional and continuing education

o Change in completion as certification improves and becomes more credible?

Page 86: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

DIGITAL LITERACIES“A consistent diagnosis is made in the literature of a potential lack of, or poor distribution of, the particular networking, reputational and learning skills that MOOC environments require for successful learning. Online autonomy, group formation and inclusion/exclusion feelings among learners, are a vital dynamic in MOOC learning, and are probably insufficiently understood. “

BIS 2013 Literature Review of Massive Open Online Courses and Other Forms of Online Distance Learning

Page 87: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

COST

Page 88: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

o Cost savingso New forms of revenue generation

Page 89: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

COSTSo Typical ratio of

course production & presentation costs• Production- fixed cost• Tuition- recurring

costs

Tuition-Paying people to support learners

Generic student support

Weller 2013, The Cost of Supporthttp://nogoodreason.typepad.co.uk/no_good_reason/2013/

06/the-cost-of-support.html

Page 90: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

TURNING TUITION INTO A FIXED COST

o Turning the tuition support costs partially or fully into fixed costs through:• Peer assessment • Machine marking• Outsourcing tuition costs• Adaptive learning, intelligent tutoring

systems, computer-based learning

Page 91: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

OUTSOURCING TUITION

Page 92: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

o We believe that embedded within the MOOC is a more focused technology, which we will call SuperText. This technology is characterized by:

• Content authored by a recognized expert and delivered primarily via short video segments.

• Chunking of content so that a specific instance of a course can be customized to particular learning objectives.

• Within an instance of a course, semi-synchronous pacing in which a batch of new content and assignments are released by a course administrator periodically (usually weekly). Between releases, students consume the content when and how they wish.

• Assessment that can be adapted to the learning objectives set by the course administrator.

• Students interact with a course administrator and with each other but not typically with the expert content author.

MOOCs Won’t Replace Business Schools — They’ll Diversify Them - Christensen, Alcorn and Emanuel - Harvard Business Review, 3 June 2014

Page 93: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

o SuperText as the New Frontier• The technology combines the adaptive nature of office hours, the

charisma of the best educators, the convenience of “anywhere and anytime,” and economies of scale in production

MOOCs Won’t Replace Business Schools — They’ll Diversify Them - Christensen, Alcorn and Emanuel - Harvard Business Review, 3 June 2014

Page 94: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

ISSUESo Changing roles of academic staff

• Divisions of labour- viable?• Casualisation of academic labour

o Students’ datao Business models determining

learning needso The holy grail

• Can the fundamentals of learning be met• Can disciplinary knowledge be taught?

Page 95: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

ROLES

Page 96: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

ETHICSo Big data & student rights

Page 97: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

o Versions of courses lead to 2nd tier provision and income • QA through 1st tier credit courses• Widens access• Who are these courses for?

o Traditional formal provision for the elite

o Monetisation of different aspects

Page 98: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

QUALITY

Page 99: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

KNOWLEDGE ABOUT GOOD LEARNING

o Good learning requires mediationo We are more likely to get the learning outcomes

we want when the curriculum is aligned o Learning is more likely to happen when students

are actively engaged o Learning is more likely to be successful where the

teaching is cognizant of what students bring with them: prior knowledge, language, experience

o Learning involves some degree of transformation of self

Shay, S 2013Shay, S Good Learning: What we Know. Presentation at Heads of Department Workshop, University of Cape Town, April 2013

Page 100: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

QUALITY

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“the course is amazingly, shockingly awful”http://www.angrymath.com/2012/09/udacity-statistics-101.html

Page 101: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures
Page 102: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

STUDIES OF DUAL MODEo The complexity of distance learning in

comparison to face to face delivery – requiring much more advanced planning and integration of services and functions.

o Different ways of teaching and ways of working• the different way distance educators worked

compared to campus provision – in multi professional teams where ‘all are involved in this teaching and learning process’ not just the academics.

Lentell H 2013

Page 103: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

o Is the research about learning design informing quality• in traditional • or post traditional education?

o Are current mechanisms of quality assurance adequate and appropriate?

Page 104: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

QUALITY ASSURANCE OUTSOURCED

Page 105: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

CONCLUSION

Page 106: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

TENSIONSo Where are the risks in the emerging

landscape?o How can the tensions be managed

between• A coherent student experience• Flexibility and innovation• Inclusivity and experimentation

Page 107: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

POLICIESo Need to map the policies which drive ,

shape and enable the post-traditional landscape• Within education• Beyond education policies (telecom,

privacy, IP etc.)o Consider

• Whose interests do existing policies serve?• Do existing policies adequately address the

emerging terrain?

Page 108: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

o What role can policy usefully play • to enable required expertise (eg)

• Learning design• Digital literacies

• Content (eg OERs)• Re-alignment administrative systems• Oversight of public-private partnerships• Innovation and experimentation

Page 109: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

o Blended learning will be the norm• Array of “delivery formats” across courses

and programmes• Within courses

o The shift as an opportunity • to re-examine the nature of excellent

learning and teaching• to explore possibilities and exploit new

affordances for an equity agenda

Page 110: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

o As universities we need work together to find ways• to prioritise and firmly (re) assert access to

and contribution to knowledge production and dissemination as social and public goods into the very complex emergent landscape and into the discourses which shape it.

Page 111: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

THANK YOUo [email protected]

@czernie

Acknowledgements to my excellent colleagues at CILT especially Andrew Deacon, Janet Small, Sukaina Walji

Page 112: Blind Monks and the Elephant -  ICTs and Higher Education Futures

READINGo Czerniewicz, L; Deacon, A; Small, J and Walji, S (2014) Developing

world MOOCs: A curriculum view of the MOOC landscape, in Journal of Global Literacies, Technologies, and Emerging Pedagogies (JOGLTEP) Vol. 2, Issue 3, July 2014, Michigan State, available at http://joglep.com/files/7614/0622/4917/2._Developing_world_MOOCs.pdf

o Curation of MOOC resources: http://www.scoop.it/t/moocswatch