The Campus Tsunami - NYTimes.com - 5 views
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If a few star professors can lecture to millions, what happens to the rest of the faculty?
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This is perhaps the most interesting point, but should lead us to discussions about how local teachers leverage these materials for blended learning experiences, rather than to imply that regular folks will end up out of work. See, there is no _direct_ competition between the "star professor" and the local teacher. A teacher is not yet a commodity that can be reproduced at little or no cost--unlike digital _content_, which is a non-rivalrous resource. So, while the lecture may be available via the web, but the professor is not. We're talking static multimedia content in most cases, but even with MOOCs we find that it's not the "star professor" interacting with a world of students, but rather TAs, RAs, or the community itself that must take responsibilty for interaction.
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What happens to the students who don’t have enough intrinsic motivation to stay glued to their laptop hour after hour?
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online learning will give millions of students access to the world’s best teachers
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Openness is still the only superpower | Hapgood - 1 views
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In a cruel world we would have to decide which of these we wanted to pursue and dedicate resources to and which one we wanted to starve.
10 Predictions for Blended Learning in 2013 -- THE Journal - 0 views
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"7. MOOCs Disrupting Advanced Placement Courses Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) are becoming hugely popular at the higher education level (see Coursera, edX, and Udacity). Advanced middle and high school students are increasingly eyeing the chance to take physics from MIT or Shakespeare at Harvard. Next year this trend will accelerate."
Ten Questions to Ask About LMS Migrations | Inside Higher Ed - 1 views
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I described the then campus LMS landscape as a “mature market with immature products.”
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I described the then campus LMS landscape as a “mature market with immature products.”
The Jig is Up | iterating toward openness - 2 views
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When universities can’t bully students into taking gen ed courses by threatening to withhold their degrees, what will they do? General education will have to be sold to students on its merits rather than placed as roadblocks on the way to the courses they really want.
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Educational institutions will not go away, in-fact, their worth and contribution will be absolutely necessary, as validators and reviewers of the digital portfolios that will be linked to badges they award, authenticating the integrity and worth of the badge. It is not dissimilar to “certificates of proficiency” that are awarded by certain institutions or organizations that are at a finer grain size than an entire degree.
Unbundling vs. Embedding: Approaches to reuse of integrated course objects | Hapgood - 0 views
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one of the core functions the educator provides is to structure content into a sequence that learners can follow and have trust in. The bargain they make is this – if I do the course you have constructed then I will come out with a certain understanding of the topic.
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I’ve realized that there are major problems with severing assessment from content, content from interaction, and so on. If you don’t believe me, hop on down to your kid’s school on standardized assessment day.
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In an embedded model, there is no unbundling. Instead there is “wrapping”.
Charlie Rose - Online Education - 0 views
Nick Gidwani - What MOOCS can learn from the publishing industry - 0 views
"MOOCs are simply an evolution of what began with the Internet and continued with Wikipedia and Open Courseware. It is doubtful that MOOCs represent the last major innovation in how we, as a societ...
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