open online courses as new educative practice

48
Massive open online courses as new educative practice George Siemens February 29, 2012 Presented to: Universitat de València NANEC

Upload: gsiemens

Post on 06-May-2015

51.269 views

Category:

Education


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Present

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

Massive open online courses as new educative practice

George SiemensFebruary 29, 2012

Presented to: Universitat de València

NANEC

Page 2: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

A decade of openness

Open education resourcesOpen teachingOpen coursesOpen accreditation (very early stages)Open research (coming soon)

Page 3: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

2008, 2009, 2011

Open online courses

Page 4: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

OverviewContentTeaching

Learner supportLearner activity & assessment

Page 5: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

OverviewContentTeaching

Learner supportLearner activity & assessment

Page 6: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice
Page 7: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

This is an unusual course. It does not consist of a body of content you are supposed to remember. Rather, the learning in the course results from the activities you undertake, and will be different for each person.

In addition, this course is not conducted in a single place or environment. It is distributed across the web. We will provide some facilities. But we expect your activities to take place all over the internet. We will ask you to visit other people's web pages, and even to create some of your own.

Page 8: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice
Page 9: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

The course objectives are rather straightforward:

* Develop skills in using technology as a tool for networking, sharing, narrating, and creative self-expression* Frame a digital identity wherein you become both a practitioner in and interrogator of various new modes of networking* Critically examine the digital landscape of communication technologies as emergent narrative forms and genres

Page 10: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice
Page 11: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

Codecademy is the easiest way to learn how to code. It's interactive, fun, and you can do it with your friends.

Page 12: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice
Page 13: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

Coursera is committed to making the best education in the world freely available to any person who seeks it. We envision people throughout the world, in both developed and developing countries, using our platform to get access to world-leading education that has so far been available only to a tiny few. We see them using this education to improve their lives, the lives of their families, and the communities they live in.

Page 14: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice
Page 15: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

We believe university-level education can be both high quality and low cost. Using the economics of the Internet, we've connected some of the greatest teachers to hundreds of thousands of students all over the world.

Page 16: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

OverviewContentTeaching

Learner supportLearner activity & assessment

Page 17: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice
Page 18: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

Content Progress

Badges

Profile/status

Page 19: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice
Page 20: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice
Page 21: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice
Page 22: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice
Page 23: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

Coursera, Udacity, Codeacademy:Formal (traditional) course structure and flow

DS106/EC&I831/MOOCs: Content as a starting point, learners expected to create/extend

Page 24: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

OverviewContentTeaching

Learner supportLearner activity & assessment

Page 25: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

Udacity/Coursera/Codeacademy: Traditional relationship between teacher/learner

Formal, structured teaching/content provision.

Learners expected to duplicate/master what they are taught

Page 26: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

Ongoing presence

Page 27: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

Live Weekly Lectures/Discussion sessions

Page 28: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice
Page 29: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

MOOCs/DS106: Changed relationship between teacher/learner

Distributed, chaotic, emergent.

Learners expected to create, grow, expand domain and share personal sensemaking through artifact-creation

Page 30: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

OverviewContentTeaching

Learner supportLearner activity & assessment

Page 31: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

Coursera/Udacity/Codeacademy: Centralized discussion forum support

MOOCs/DS106: Distributed, often blog-based, learner-created forums and spaces

Page 32: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

Office hours and in-forum support – staffed by grad students

Page 33: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice
Page 34: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice
Page 35: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice
Page 36: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

Self-organization and sub-networks

Sensegiving through artefact creation and sharing

Sensemaking/giving through language games

Knowledge domain expansion

Wayfinding cues, symbols

Social organization through creating sharing

Page 37: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

OverviewContentTeaching

Learner supportLearner activity & assessment

Page 38: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

Learners generally complete some level of activity for formative and summative evaluation (quizzes, assignments, papers, create artifacts) in open online courses.

Evaluation is either automated (Udacity), instructor graded (DS106/CCK), or peer-commented (to some degree, all open courses)

Page 39: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice
Page 40: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice
Page 41: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

Type of Course Formal Credit?

EC&I831 University

CCK/08/09/11/12 University

LAK11/12 No

Coursera No

Udacity Udacity recognition

DS106 University

Codeacademy Badges

Page 42: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

Garrison, D. R., Anderson, T., & Archer, W. (2000). Critical inquiry in a text-based environment: Computer conferencing in higher education. The Internet and Higher Education, 2(2-3), 87-105.

Page 43: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

COGNITIVE:learners are able to construct and confirm meaning through sustained reflection and discourse

Page 44: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

TEACHING: design, facilitation, and direction of cognitive and social processes for the purpose of realizing personally meaningful and educationally worthwhile learning outcomes

Page 45: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

SOCIAL:“the ability of participants to identify with the community (e.g., course of study), communicate purposefully in a trusting environment, and develop inter-personal relationships by way of projecting their individual personalities.

Page 46: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

Coursera/Udacity: Emphasizes teaching, partial cognitive, limited social

MOOCs & DS106 model: Holistic, teaching presence, but emphasizing social/cognitive

Page 47: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

7 Primary Tensions in open online courses

Automation vs. Creation

Social vs. Scripted

Structured vs. Self-Organized

University-based vs. Informal learning

Assessment/recognition vs. Personal growth

Functioning in existing system vs. Transforming existing system

Learner owned vs. Organization owned interaction spaces

Page 48: Open Online Courses as New Educative Practice

change.mooc.ca

Twitter: gsiemens

www.elearnspace.org/blog

http://www.solaresearch.org/

Learning Analytics & Knowledge 2012: Vancouver

http://lak12.sites.olt.ubc.ca/