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anonymous

Design Principles for Motivating Learning with Digital Badges | HASTAC - 0 views

  • learner more deeply
  • a systematic study of the motivational impacts of badging has yet to be conducted,
  • we consider not only the motivation related to learning outcomes associated with badges but also to learners’ buy-in of the badge system
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  • Providing privileges
  • is likely to more adaptive
  • Engaging with communities
  • Display badges to the public
  • Recognizing identities
  • Outside value of badges
  • Setting goals
  • Collaboration
  • Competition
  • Evolving requirements for badges
  • Recognizing different outcomes
  • Some badges are awarded for meeting some criterion (performance-based), while other badges are awarded for engaging in some activity (“effort-based”).
  • t seems likely that recognition of social learning will operate very differently in effort-based versus performance-based contexts.
  • An important initial insight is that the type and nature of recognition is often determined by the broader context of the project, meaning that badge designers may not have any say over the learning that their badges need to recognize.
  • Utilizing different types of assessments
  • the type of assessment has significant consequences for motivation.
  • For example, having an expert versus a computer conducting the assessment communicates different expectations to the learner. Knowing that your peers are assessing you is very different than knowing a computer is assessing you
  • While the majority of the projects use peer assessment, a handful also use expert judgment and self-assessment. Many projects combine different types of assessments.
  •  
    Results of Indiana University's Study of the MacArthur badging projects.
Kate Miffitt

U. of Pennsylvania drafts guidelines to keep professors from competing against it onlin... - 1 views

  • In those agreements, Rock said the content of a course belongs to faculty but the "expression" of that course, which is to say videos of the lectures, belong to the university, which pays for them to be created. Professors also get a stipend for teaching a Coursera course and the chance to share revenue, if there ever is any.
Kate Miffitt

moocshop - 1 views

Cole Camplese

MOOCs and Libraries Event Videos Now Available - 1 views

  • The "MOOCs and Libraries: Massive Opportunity or Overwhelming Challenge?" event took place 18-19 March at the University of Pennsylvania and was broadcast live online.
anonymous

UNIVERSITY PARK: Penn State professors excited about possibilities of massive open onli... - 0 views

    • anonymous
       
      By the time this was published the enrollments were over 70,000.
  • More than 50,000 people have signed up since Penn State joined Coursera on Feb. 21
  • For example, Robinson said his mapping MOOC, with more than 6,000 enrollees, already is the largest course ever taught on the subject. The key, he said, will be to find a way for students to interact with each other online in a meaningful way.
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  • “flipped classroom.”
  • “The outreach potential is unmatched,” Robinson said. “Hopefully it will increase the number of people impacted by our science.”
Cole Camplese

Open SUNY: A Game-Changer in the Making |e-Literate - 0 views

  • In brief, Open SUNY is part of the system’s agenda to expand access to public higher education by leveraging existing programs or experiments already in place at member campuses or at the system level, and it has strong ties to Open Educational Resources (OER) concepts.
  • Open SUNY funding comes from a $18.6m funding from NY2020 legislation, and will eventually cost (according to estimates) $3.35m per year in operations.
  • Some of these are laudable goals (reducing time to degree and overall cost, increase completion rate), but some are ill-defined (improved outcomes) and some are questionable (increased number of online learners as a goal rather than means to a goal, and enhancing the profile). But a deeper problem is lack of discussion on determining which innovations to diffuse and which innovations to keep from diffusing. Perhaps there are plans for evaluating courses and programs, but there are no details available that I can find.
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  • SUNY, of course, is not the place to develop MOOCs, online courses, OER, open courseware or PLAs, so what is important about this announcement? I think the significance lies in SUNY’s scale and SUNY’s approach. SUNY appears to view the Open SUNY program as a method to spread educational innovations throughout one of the largest systems in the country rather than creating a new pilot program or experiment. SUNY has 468,000 students and plans to add 100,000 more. Rather than trying to create a new innovation, the role of the system is to foster innovation and then take the best ideas and make them available to all. Although it’s not getting enough attention, Open SUNY will have an outsized impact on the future of online education in the US. State-wide initiatives, whether driven by the systems or the state government, are becoming one of the biggest factors in how higher education is changing in the US. I suspect that other states will be watching SUNY and adopting this model in part or in whole. Pay attention to Open SUNY – it will matter.
Kate Miffitt

Online Education's Dirty Secret - Awful Retention by Peter Reinhardt - 0 views

  • You just start following simple instructions. Of course you slowly escalate to harder and more compelling material, increasing your commitment every step of the way.
  • The beauty is that every week I get an email that motivates me to learn more about design, and makes it incredibly easy to get started again.
  • Let me clarify: I want to learn human physiology, but I work at a startup. I’m completely lost in this artificially-imposed schedule. There is no point in trying any more. Forget it.
anonymous

UW announces new, low-cost online-only degree completion program in early childhood stu... - 0 views

  • The program will be administered by UW Educational Outreach, which received a Next Generation Learning Challenges grant partially funded by the Gates Foundation, to help offset costs of developing the degree. The grant includes offering several core classes in early childhood education free to the public, as Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) on the Coursera platform.
  • The program is designed for students who have completed a two-year associate’s degree, or started college and then discontinued their studies. Eligible students will have earned 70 eligible transfer credits at the UW or elsewhere.
  • Transfer credit will also be offered to students who have attended community college but have not earned an associate’s degree. This option may be available through special arrangements with several community colleges, including Shoreline Community College and the Seattle Community Colleges – North, South and Seattle Central.
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  • “In Washington state, there are over 900,000 adults with some college and no degree,” said Rep. Reuven Carlyle.”
Kate Miffitt

MOOC pedagogy: the challenges of developing for Coursera | ALT Online Newsletter - 0 views

  • However, some of the most interesting and innovative practices in online education have emerged by challenging these very ideas; loosening institutional control of learning outcomes and assessment criteria, shifting from a focus on content delivery to a foregrounding of process, community and learning networks, and working with more exploratory assessment methods – digital and multimodal assignments, peer assessment and group assignments, for example.
  • It seems at present that sustained and personal engagement on the part of tutors with course participants is impossible in such a context, and Coursera themselves recommend an approach that borders on course automation.
  • We want to explore how a MOOC pedagogy might work with a construction of the teacher that has an immediacy that can succeed at scale.
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  • he University of Edinburgh’s partnership with Coursera presents us with an opportunity to research the new and sometimes uncomfortable territory that the MOOC foregrounds, a prospect that will allow us to engage meaningfully, critically, and productively with the shifting landscapes of open education
  • We are attempting to develop a course which initiates reading, critical viewing of films and structured discussion as the primary pedagogical activities.
  • Participatory practices and customs in the wider social web are integral to this approach, and we’re interested in how the pedagogical modes operating within platforms like Coursera can be productively extended to create more open learning spaces, integrating our work with public services and sites beyond the platform.
Kate Miffitt

The dirty little secret of online learning: Students are bored and dropping out - Quartz - 0 views

  • If they do that, they’ll see that digital learning needs to become much more mobile, personal and social.
  • mixes short videos and frequent assessments with facilitated group projects, asynchronous collaboration and innovative tools designed specifically to drive participation
  • Mobile content, then, needs to be “bite-sized,” visually stimulating and interactive.
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  • But, he adds, “you can use technology to personalize the instruction and target what their individual needs are. You can fill those gaps, and when you do that and when you empower students to do that … the learning is so much more productive.”
Cole Camplese

suny.edu - SUNY Board Outlines Implementation of Open SUNY - 0 views

  • The State University of New York Board of Trustees today outlined the implementation of Open SUNY, which will bring all online courses offered at each of the system’s 64 campuses onto a shared and comprehensive online environment, making them accessible to all of the system’s 468,000 students and 88,000 faculty.
  • More than 86,000 SUNY students registered for at least one online course in 2012. Chancellor Zimpher has estimated that Open SUNY will add 100,000 degree-seeking students to the enrollment total within three years, and that it will contribute to the feasibility of three-year undergraduate degree programs and five-year graduate degree programs
Cole Camplese

SUNY Signals Major Push Toward MOOCs and Other New Educational Models - Wired Campus - ... - 0 views

  • The State University of New York’s Board of Trustees on Tuesday endorsed an ambitious vision for how SUNY might use prior-learning assessment, competency-based programs, and massive open online courses to help students finish their degrees in less time, for less money.
  • The system will also push its top faculty members to build MOOCs designed so that certain students who do well in the courses might be eligible for SUNY credit.
  • The U.S. Education Department on Monday said it had no problem with spending federal student aid on college programs that give credit based on “competency,” not the number of hours students spend in class.
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  • “This resolution opens the door to assurances to our students that this kind of prior-learning assessment will be available eventually on all our campuses,” said Ms. Zimpher in an interview.
  • Indiana, Missouri, Tennessee, Texas, and Washington have enlisted Western Governors University, a nonprofit online institution that uses the “competency” method, to help working adults in those states earn degrees. Pennsylvania and Wisconsin are building programs aimed at helping their own adult students redeem their on-the-job skills and knowledge for credit toward degrees. And California may soon use MOOCs to deal with overcrowding in some courses at its public colleges and universities.
  • “Usually when you have an outside vendor, it’s to deliver something that you don’t know how to do,” she said. “In our case we actually know how to do this, and we know how to do it well.”
Cole Camplese

Penn State shows impressive early enrollment for MOOC courses | Penn State University - 0 views

  • A month after the launch, each course already has thousands of enrollments. One of the highest-enrolling classes is Introduction to Art: Concepts & Techniques, with 17,800 students currently enrolled. Anna Divinsky, lead faculty member of the Digital Arts Certificate Program, is instructing the course.
  • Divinsky’s MOOC will focus on the fundamental theories and techniques of visual arts, and students will be expected to conduct research, complete writing assignments and create their own original works of art. Divinsky said that unlike a traditional class setting, MOOC students will have to be self-directed and learn to rely on each other for feedback instead of continual guidance from an instructor.
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