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Michael Walker

MOOCs: Too Much Hype, or Not Enough? | Innovation Insights | Wired.com - 0 views

  • The next generation MOOC (I’ll go ahead and coin ngMOOC now — you’re welcome) will have to employ more of a feedback loop to the student. Understanding the issues with social learning at scale, most progressive MOOC providers are finding ways to utilize graduate students, or simply more advanced students, like Seniors, who have already taken a course, to help push conversation and assessment. By seeding courses with large clusters of “more knowledgeable others” (as Vygotsky would call them), providers theorize they can get at the kind of learning communities desired to make a MOOC work at scale. So, essentially the next generation of MOOC combines the worlds of the xMOOC and the cMOOC, by using computers to do as much simulated instruction and assessment as possible, while making up for communication and community flaws through social construction. Wait, maybe the next generation MOOC should be an “xcMOOC” — you’re welcome again.
  • For instance, as I’ve noted before, a number of schools are working to crack the $10,000 Baccalaureate degree. To do so, it is likely that these schools and programs will need to employ the MOOC concept (whether their solutions need to include “massive” courses is yet to be determined). That means using reusable, self-paced, socially networked courses to free up typical administrative or teaching overhead. That means using more machine learning for grading, adaptivity, and personalization.
  • Are MOOCs over-hyped and dying? I don’t think so.
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  • We don’t need a new letter in front of a MOOC. Maybe we just need a new name for a MOOC. You know, something like: eCourse. Because at the end of the day, these massive courses may just be another way that any student can learn at any time.
Brendan Murphy

The MOOC Heard Around the World | Innovation Insights | Wired.com - 0 views

  • Unless you are auto-didactic learner (think Abe Lincoln) who can take a piece of content, internalize it, and not only retain it but apply it, MOOCs are likely problematic for you.
  • 5-8% retention rates. Couple that with weak (aka unauthentic) assessments,
  • In MOOCs today there is almost zero student choice,
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  • Build your own (2nd GEN!) MOOC with purpose, solid learning design, and good pedagogical / andragogical models.
  • Let’s make it about quality and learning
Michael Walker

The Digital Learning Transition MOOC for Educators: Exploring a Scalable Approach to Pr... - 1 views

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    Debbie Morrison shared this research document on MOOCs for Educators
Michael Walker

MOOCs as Neocolonialism: Who Controls Knowledge? - WorldWise - Blogs - The Chronicle of... - 0 views

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    This argues that MOOC content is mostly western in origin, and doesn't take into account other cultures or pedagogies.
Michael Walker

Hey Educators, Shut Up About MOOCs Already! | Fast Company | Business + Innovation - 1 views

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    Roz Husin shared this today.
Brendan Murphy

The Rise of MOOCs ~ Stephen's Web - 0 views

  • It's about actually empowering people to develop and create their own learning, their own education. So not only do they not depend on us for learning, but also, their learning is not subject to our value-judgements and prejudices.
  • reducing and eventually eliminating the learned dependence on the expert and the elite
Michael Walker

Open Online Experience | Technology integration experience for educators - 0 views

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    This #MOOC resource shared by @micwalker details tech integration activities for teachers/staff - https://t.co/dSwgXx106K
Brendan Murphy

OpenContent Wiki - 0 views

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    One of the first pre-moocs
Brendan Murphy

Creating the Connectivist Course | One Change a Day - 0 views

  • Why not learn content? Why not assemble a body of information that people would know in common?
Brendan Murphy

The challenges to connectivist learning on open online networks: Learning experiences d... - 0 views

  • aggregation
  • relation
  • creation
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  • sharing
  • People learning on an informal network will choose the subject they want to learn about or the activity they want to engage in, but in a connectivist environment they have to make other choices as well.
  • For instance, they have to manage time, set their own learning goals, find resources, and try out new tools and make them work.
  • Research shows that the Internet and the Web are not value-free and do not act as non-hierarchical networks
  • These free agents do not have a responsibility or an obligation to provide a critical point of view.
  • need for critical literacies
  • level of presence.
  • critical literacies, such as collaboration, creativity, and a flexible mindset, that are prerequisites for active learning
  • Other benefits were seen in the form of the extension of personal networks and in new blogs and Twitter participants to follow. Participants highlighted the need for a sense of trust and feeling comfortable and confident to be able to participate, a sense of presence and community that some participants found on the PLENK Second Life site.
  • it is impossible to sustain the high level of reading, thinking, and engaging with materials and people that happened at the beginning of the course.
  • building identity and reputation is being developed over time
  • critical ability to not only use network resources, but also to look at them critically in order to “appropriate them and redesign them,
  • for networked learning to be successful, people need to have the ability to direct their own learning and to have a level of critical literacies that will ensure they are confident at negotiating the Web in order to engage, participate, and get involved with learning activities.
  • confident and competent in using the different tools in order to engage in meaningful interaction.
  • takes time for people to feel competent and comfortable
  • level of learner autonomy
  • four major types of activity:
Fredrik Graver

MOOCs and edtech collection - 0 views

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    A public Evernote notebook collecting various articles about MOOCs and edtech.
Rhonda Jessen

Tools for the Trade - 0 views

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    A comprehensive list of Digital Storytelling tools from the DS106 Mooc, includes free, commercial and online tools.
Michael Walker

http://all4ed.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/09/MOOC-Ed.pdf - 0 views

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    The actual report
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