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Contents contributed and discussions participated by Ted O'Neill

Ted O'Neill

College's rejection of edX highlights potential drawbacks of massive online course... - 0 views

  • Citing an internal report on edX, Inside Higher Ed said the school worried MOOCs could: Perpetuate an “information dispensing” model of teaching, which preferences lectures and exams over seminars and teacher-graded papers Take tuition dollars from middle-tier and lower-tier schools Lead to the centralization of higher education in the U.S. Exacerbate the star faculty system
Ted O'Neill

DS106: The Open Online Community of Digital Storytellers by Jim Groom - Kickstarter - 0 views

  • Pledge $500 or more 0 backers DS106 in a Box - All of the above, plus a complete software setup for your own online course framework with hosting for 1 year at the domain of your choice and 5 hours of consulting. Estimated delivery: Jun 2012
    • Ted O'Neill
       
      Interesting idea. Graduates of the mooc serve as consultants to a newly starting mooc? Bit of a possible pyramid scheme, but could work. Surprised nobody took this one. Post-hype, this might have had takers in 2013.
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    Successfully funded mooc resource. 
Ted O'Neill

Professor Hopes to Support Free Course With Kickstarter, the 'Crowd Funding' Site - Wir... - 0 views

shared by Ted O'Neill on 21 Apr 13 - No Cached
  • —SmartHistory: Raised $11,513 for a Web site created by two art historians. —Punk Mathematics: Raised 28,701 for a book of mathematical stories. —Open Educational Resources for Typography: Raised $13,088 to develop teaching materials for courses on typography. —Trade School: Raised $9,133 to run a program that turns storefronts into temporary trade schools. —Brooklyn Brainery: Raised $9,629 to set up a collaborative school whose courses would cost $25 for four weeks.
    • Ted O'Neill
       
      Not MOOCs but successful edu and edtech efforts funded by Kickstarter. Textbooks etc and easy target.
Ted O'Neill

How EdX Plans to Earn, and Share, Revenue From Free Online Courses - Technology - The C... - 0 views

shared by Ted O'Neill on 21 Apr 13 - No Cached
  • The first, called the "university self-service model," essentially allows a participating university to use edX's platform as a free learning-management system for a course on the condition that part of any revenue generated by the course flow to edX.
    • Ted O'Neill
       
      This model is literally passing the buck. Just pushes the problem of revenue down the stack. If Harvard and MIT can't generate enough revenue, how will Joe University make enough to pass up the pyramid?
  • The organization charges a base rate of $250,000 for each new course, plus $50,000
    • Ted O'Neill
       
      Which universities have this kind of cash on hand to develop a course when they are essentially getting their faculty to do it for free?
  • EdX has a deal with Pearson VUE, a company that runs a worldwide network of testing centers, to hold proctored examinations for its MOOCs.
    • Ted O'Neill
       
      Of course, Pearson. The mooc is open and free, the test is closed and expensive. Learning is free, certification is costly. Thank you Pearson.
Ted O'Neill

What You Need to Know About MOOCs - Technology - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 0 views

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    A one stop timeline of articles about MOOCs in The Chronicle.
Ted O'Neill

Giving Too Much Credit | iterating toward openness - 0 views

  • Coursera has done an incredibly effective job harnessing this Presidential passion for press. Coursera – ‘the platform for offering “open” courses’ – has been very noisy about the fact that they only work with prestigious universities. What school doesn’t want to join the Stanford / Tecnológico de Monterrey / Princeton / École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne club? For the cost of offering one class in a new format, a President can officially put his or her institution in the same category as these “prestigious” schools. What Board of Trustees doesn’t want that?
    • Ted O'Neill
       
      But, there is no sign that Coursera is opening the doors to those smaller, less elite institutions, is there? In fact, quite the opposite, I think
Ted O'Neill

Brown University Creates Online Course for High School Students - NYTimes.com - 1 views

  • as Brown’s team has come to believe, it could start a trend of directly advising high school students and their teachers on specific curriculums, motivated in part by the hypercompetitive college admissions process.
    • Ted O'Neill
       
      This could actually add to the competitive admissions process, or ideally replace it with a creative learning activity that builds knowledge in the applicant and connections between incoming first-years.
  • Still, Brown’s online development team is debating whether to offer a certificate of some kind to students who complete the course, which officials know would be used as yet another college application supplement.
    • Ted O'Neill
       
      Replace! Don't add to the madness! Be courageous and get rid of the other stuff high school students are forced to do to pad or extend their CVs.
  • Now, in what seems to be the first major effort by a university to tailor a massive open online course, or MOOC, specifically to high school students, Brown University is preparing to offer a free online engineering class with the aim of teaching high school students about the merits and challenges of the field.
Ted O'Neill

Emergent learning and learning ecologies in Web 2.0 | Williams | The International Revi... - 1 views

  • Courses can also be deliberately designed as adaptive systems, in which learning emerges.  The MA in Management Learning and Leadership Programme (MAMLL) course at Lancaster University in the UK is an example in which the curriculum itself is emergent, although still within the quality assurance framework for master’s courses (this might have been more difficult in an undergraduate course).
    • Ted O'Neill
       
      Are MOOCs and other connectivist learning approaches best for mature learners/graduate courses if accountability and institutional credits are goals?
Ted O'Neill

The Professors Behind the MOOC Hype - Technology - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 2 views

  • Many professors teaching MOOCs had a similarly positive outlook: Asked whether they believe MOOCs "are worth the hype," 79 percent said yes.
    • Ted O'Neill
       
      This needs to be defined. Worth in what way? Based upon what experience?
  • Many of those surveyed felt that these free online courses should be integrated into the traditional system of credit and degrees. Two-thirds believe MOOCs will drive down the cost of earning a degree from their home institutions, and an overwhelming majority believe that the free online courses will make college less expensive in general.
    • Ted O'Neill
       
      Most MOOCs are for general survey type or intro classes. The cost of providing those classes is not the driver behind higher education costs.
  • John Owens was drawn to MOOCs because of their reach. He also did not want to be left behind.
    • Ted O'Neill
       
      On the other hand, is there a cost to being an earlier adopter? Often.
  • ...9 more annotations...
  • A number of the professors in the survey said they hoped to use MOOCs to increase their visibility, both among colleagues within their discipline (39 percent) and with the media and the general public (34 percent).
    • Ted O'Neill
       
      MOOC as the driver of star professors, stratifying faculty, not just students.
  • In May 2012, when the presidents of Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology announced that they would enter the MOOC fray with $60-million to start edX, they were emphatic that their agenda was to improve, not supplant, classroom education.
    • Ted O'Neill
       
      However, there agenda may include supplanting other online offerings. Free from MIT or paid at University of Phoenix?
  • "Online education is not an enemy of residential education," said Susan Hockfield, president of MIT at the time, from a dais at a hotel in Cambridge, "but an inspiring and liberating ally."
    • Ted O'Neill
       
      For MIT/Harvard the on campus experience is the key. Further class/socioeconomic stratification?
  • Typically a professor spent over 100 hours on his MOOC before it even started, by recording online lecture videos and doing other preparation. Others laid that groundwork in a few dozen hours.
    • Ted O'Neill
       
      Point this out to your employer if asked to MOOC.
  • Once the course was in session, professors typically spent eight to 10 hours per week on upkeep. Most professors managed not to be inundated with messages from their MOOC students—they typically got five e-mails per week
    • Ted O'Neill
       
      I don't find this at all credible. I've seen more than this in some moocs. I get more email than that each week from 125 on-campus students.
  • In all, the extra work took a toll. Most respondents said teaching a MOOC distracted them from their normal on-campus duties.
    • Ted O'Neill
       
      What do employers think of that?
  • "It's out of 'my own' time, which is quite limited," Mr. Owens reported. "So, yes, other areas of my job suffered."
    • Ted O'Neill
       
      Pretty candid admission. Is he still employed? Will this affect tenure?
  • In lieu of credit toward a degree, most professors offer certificates to students who complete massive online courses. Three-quarters of the professors surveyed said they offered some sort of document certifying that a student had completed a MOOC. It remains unclear, however, how seriously those certificates are being taken by employers. College degrees are still seen as the coin of the realm.
    • Ted O'Neill
       
      "College degrees are still seen as the coin of the realm." and universities will make sure it stays that way if they can.
  • Most professors who responded to The Chronicle's survey said they believed that MOOCs would drive down the cost of college; 85 percent said the free courses would make traditional degrees at least marginally less expensive, and half of that group said it would lower the cost "significantly."
    • Ted O'Neill
       
      Were any of them economics professors? "Lower cost significantly" by replacing a few income generating courses with free replacements? Fantasy.
Ted O'Neill

California to Give Web Courses a Big Trial - NYTimes.com - 0 views

    • Ted O'Neill
       
      If they cannot pass elementary courses after their preparation in high school, what does that tell us about their preparation for university? Online courses require learners to already be autonomous and prepared to learn. That does not match well with students who need remedial work.
  • Ellen N. Junn, provost and vice president for academic affairs at the university in San Jose, said the California State University System faces a crisis because more than 50 percent of entering students cannot meet basic requirements. “They graduate from high school, but they cannot pass our elementary math and English placement tests,” she said.
  • Recently edX completed a pilot offering of its difficult circuits and electronics course at San Jose State to stunning results: while 40 percent of the students in the traditional version of the class got a grade of C or lower, only 9 percent in the blended edX class got such a low grade.
    • Ted O'Neill
       
      Would love to see the actual data on these claims and the study methodology if any.
Ted O'Neill

Twitter / gsiemens: This is why MOOCs have to be ... - 0 views

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    Siemens' image of the drop off in participation misses the point. The completers were there all along. Start a mooc with a community fo completers and it doesn't have to ve so large. How? Start with an existing community or "horrors" charge a small one-time fee like Metafilter.
Ted O'Neill

#ocTEL- proudly powered by … Jisc CETIS MASHe - 0 views

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    Second post by @mhawksey on using WordPress yo host a MOOC. This post lists all of the plugins etc in detail. Recipe for your MOOC.
Ted O'Neill

(M)OOC in a Box: Turning WordPress into an Open Course Reader #ocTEL Jisc CETIS MASHe - 0 views

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    Read this if you wish to set up a MOOC. Martin Hawksey @mhawksey goes through an extended explanation of choosing WordPress to run a MOOC. Comments are also worth reading. 
Ted O'Neill

Groups and Networks | Flickr - Photo Sharing! - 0 views

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    Huge Stephen Downes whiteboard brain dump that defines the differences between groups and networks. Relevant to small closed online classes vs massive open online courses. SCOCs vs MOOCs.
Ted O'Neill

Designing and Running a MOOC - 0 views

    • Ted O'Neill
       
      "Sort of" completely misses the point. Openness is the key. It can't be compromised on.
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    Slides only, no audio, short bullet point presentation on the most basic considerations in setting up a MOOC. May underplay the difficulties, but makes a strong, positive pitch that educators should try this.
Ted O'Neill

elearnspace. Connectivism: A Learning Theory for the Digital Age - 0 views

    • Ted O'Neill
       
      I'm fundamentally uncomfortable with this statement. Old education was based on military industrial needs. Is connectivism just based on preparing the next generation of cubicle dwellers who manage "information overload" in knowledge organizations. Corporate speak here. Prepare to serve the corporation. 
Ted O'Neill

What is a MOOC? - YouTube - 0 views

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    In a time of information overload...
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