Others will offer MOOCs because it’s an effective way of getting out an important message or to raise awareness about certain topics.
Discussion of MOOCs: more links and questions - 0 views
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The retention and lurker behavior described above adds another differentiation to the previous list.
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haviourist way it lends itself to automation. Shouldn’t the face-to-face class have been doing something different
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Making Sense of MOOCs: Musings in a Maze of Myth, Paradox and Possibility | Daniel | Jo... - 0 views
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The first course carrying the name MOOC was offered in 2008, so this is new phenomenon. Second, the pedagogical style of the early courses, which we shall call cMOOCs, was based on a philosophy of connectivism and networking. This is quite distinct from the xMOOCs now being developed by elite US institutions that follow a more behaviourist approach. Third, the few academic studies of MOOCs are about the earlier offerings because there has been no time for systematic research on the crop of 2012 xMOOCs. Analysis of the latter has to be based on a large volume of press articles and blogs. Fourth, commentary on MOOCs includes thinly disguised promotional material by commercial interests (e.g. Koller, 2012) and articles by practitioners whose perspective is their own MOOC courses.
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The term MOOC originated in Canada. Dave Cormier and Bryan Alexander coined the acronym to describe an open online course at the University of Manitoba designed by George Siemens and Stephen Downes. The course, Connectivism and Connective Knowledge, was presented to 25 fee-paying students on campus and 2,300 other students from the general public who took the online class free of charge (Wikipedia, 2012a).
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Can xMOOCs make money?
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Reducing the Online Instructor's Workload (EDUCAUSE Quarterly) | EDUCAUSE - 0 views
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Automate parts of the course whenever possible.
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Create a “What’s New” section to let your students focus on new assignments or learning materials without having to review the entire course. This also minimizes the amount of e-mail questions you will receive regarding assignments
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Communicate with students early in the semester about how to best use the course
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Robotic Nation, by Marshall Brain - 0 views
Gamification Shows the Learner Visible Signs of Their Learning | Faculty Focus - 0 views
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One of the strengths of gamification is that it provides visible milestones of the student’s mastery of content in real time (when it is well designed). Too often in an instructional setting, the learner doesn’t know whether or not he or she really understands or can apply the knowledge they are learning. There is often no visible sign of mastery of the content or application of the content.
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Gamification should orient the learner to where they are in the instructional process, where they are going, and how much further they have to go until the end. The concept is that the learner is able to “see” progress. The progress might be in the form of a character moving up a mountain or an image of how close the learner is to the next level (Kapp, 2013).
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Gamification uses criterion and mastery to advance the learner from one element of the instruction to the next.
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