Club Admiralty

v7.2 - moving along, a point increase at a time

Multilitteratus Incognitus

Pondering what to learn next 🤔

Quack! (If it looks like a duck...)

I was just about to give up on eduMOOC when this thread was started (or rather evolved from a previous thread) about what is an isn't a MOOC.  A Similar discussion came up on the Wikieducator list for eduMOOC.  A MOOC is a Massive Online Open Course, or so says the acronym. The concept of a MOOC was articulated by Cormier and Siemens (2010) in Educause (free read). The words Massive, Online and Course seem to pose no problem in defining a MOOC, however the word open does.  What is open?

The key points that Cormier and Siemens hit upon are Open Curriculum, Open Educators and Open Learners.  Open educators seems to be about the practice of professional reflection (in open environments) and becoming a better educator through such practice. It also seems to have elements of Freirean (Pedagogy of the Oppressed) philosophy in that the educator and the learner are on the same level and are working toward the same goals.  Open learners as a concept seems to be about empowerment of the learner to work on his own learning outside of the classroom by access to a variety of sources.  Finally (and what seems to be causing turmoil) is the concept of Open Curriculum. The idea here, as articulated by Cormier and Siemens, is is that instead of having a curriculum fully fleshed out at the beginning of the course, it's a byproduct of the educational venture.

So the MOOC that has brought up this discussion is Stanford's Artificial Intelligence MOOC. There are many things that people are picking on, such as the syllabus being fully developed and the class being too structured (personally I find unstructured "courses" like eduMOOC to be more like socials rather than anything else - but that's my opinion), the required textbook costs over $100 so therefore it's not an Open class  because of the barriers imposed, and it's not connectivist.

So let's start with the textbook. The textbook for this course is Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach. Amazon lists it for $115. As textbooks go, this isn't that bad for a new textbook.  This issue of "closed source", or pay-to-play also came up in MobiMOOC when people posted interesting articles that were in pay-for-play journals. I understand that not everyone can drop $115 on a textbook, or journal articles for that matter, but until we completely change the system we can't just rely on open access journals and we can't expect people to make their own materials from scratch all the time (if you haven't created your own materials from scratch try it sometime, it's time consuming).  Just because you are required to read some pay-for-play journal articles and/or a paid textbook that doesn't make the class not be open.  It's still open, it's just not completely free! These two concepts (free and open) aren't mutually inclusive.

The second thing is connectivism. A MOOC, in my opinion, doesn't need to be connectivist to be a MOOC.  After all the "C" in MOOC does stand for Class, not Connectivism (as Rebecca points out!). This brings me back to my days as a linguistics student (not that far behind me) and the various methods of language teaching that I encountered in my methods courses. The concept of a course encompasses many methodologies and philosophies of teaching. There is no need to predefine what a course is by tell us what the prescribed methodology is.  Connectivism, as far as I am concerned, by itself is not that useful.  Connectivism in concert with other learning theories becomes much more potent.  If all MOOCs were connectivist they would die out as more learning theories come along to explain how we as humans learn. If we think of it as course, without basing it solely on connectivism we can achieve so much more.

Finally you've got the structured versus the unstructured. Personally, courses (MOOCs) that we more structured (LAK, CCK, MobiMOOC) were much more interesting. People actually cared enough to go out and find articles that exemplified that week's topics and provided them to the people who were participating in the MOOC.  On top of that participants also contributed their own bibliographies which was awesome. It felt more like a course. EduMOOC on the other hand feels more like a community of practice. Both have their places, but a community of practice is not a course.  A course can be a community of practice bound by constraints like time and place, but the two aren't mutually inclusive terms.

In the end, for me, a MOOC is a Massive Online Open Course - the actual implementation, underlying philosophy, costs-to-participate and pedagogy may vary.


 Comments
Stacks Image 20

Archive

 Apr 2025 (1)
 Mar 2025 (1)
 Feb 2025 (1)
 Jan 2025 (1)
 Dec 2024 (2)
 Oct 2024 (2)
 Sep 2024 (1)
 Aug 2024 (5)
 Nov 2023 (1)
 Aug 2023 (1)
 Jul 2023 (1)
 May 2023 (1)
 Apr 2023 (4)
 Mar 2023 (5)
 Feb 2023 (2)
 Dec 2022 (6)
 Nov 2022 (1)
 Sep 2022 (1)
 Aug 2022 (2)
 Jul 2022 (3)
 Jun 2022 (1)
 May 2022 (1)
 Apr 2022 (2)
 Feb 2022 (2)
 Nov 2021 (2)
 Sep 2021 (1)
 Aug 2021 (1)
 Jul 2021 (2)
 Jun 2021 (1)
 May 2021 (1)
 Oct 2020 (1)
 Sep 2020 (1)
 Aug 2020 (1)
 May 2020 (2)
 Apr 2020 (2)
 Feb 2020 (1)
 Dec 2019 (3)
 Oct 2019 (2)
 Aug 2019 (1)
 Jul 2019 (1)
 May 2019 (1)
 Apr 2019 (1)
 Mar 2019 (1)
 Dec 2018 (5)
 Nov 2018 (1)
 Oct 2018 (2)
 Sep 2018 (2)
 Jun 2018 (1)
 Apr 2018 (1)
 Mar 2018 (2)
 Feb 2018 (2)
 Jan 2018 (1)
 Dec 2017 (1)
 Nov 2017 (2)
 Oct 2017 (1)
 Sep 2017 (2)
 Aug 2017 (2)
 Jul 2017 (2)
 Jun 2017 (4)
 May 2017 (7)
 Apr 2017 (3)
 Feb 2017 (4)
 Jan 2017 (5)
 Dec 2016 (5)
 Nov 2016 (9)
 Oct 2016 (1)
 Sep 2016 (6)
 Aug 2016 (4)
 Jul 2016 (7)
 Jun 2016 (8)
 May 2016 (9)
 Apr 2016 (10)
 Mar 2016 (12)
 Feb 2016 (13)
 Jan 2016 (7)
 Dec 2015 (11)
 Nov 2015 (10)
 Oct 2015 (7)
 Sep 2015 (5)
 Aug 2015 (8)
 Jul 2015 (9)
 Jun 2015 (7)
 May 2015 (7)
 Apr 2015 (15)
 Mar 2015 (2)
 Feb 2015 (10)
 Jan 2015 (4)
 Dec 2014 (7)
 Nov 2014 (5)
 Oct 2014 (13)
 Sep 2014 (10)
 Aug 2014 (8)
 Jul 2014 (8)
 Jun 2014 (5)
 May 2014 (5)
 Apr 2014 (3)
 Mar 2014 (4)
 Feb 2014 (8)
 Jan 2014 (10)
 Dec 2013 (10)
 Nov 2013 (4)
 Oct 2013 (8)
 Sep 2013 (6)
 Aug 2013 (10)
 Jul 2013 (6)
 Jun 2013 (4)
 May 2013 (3)
 Apr 2013 (2)
 Mar 2013 (8)
 Feb 2013 (4)
 Jan 2013 (10)
 Dec 2012 (11)
 Nov 2012 (3)
 Oct 2012 (8)
 Sep 2012 (17)
 Aug 2012 (15)
 Jul 2012 (16)
 Jun 2012 (19)
 May 2012 (12)
 Apr 2012 (12)
 Mar 2012 (12)
 Feb 2012 (12)
 Jan 2012 (13)
 Dec 2011 (14)
 Nov 2011 (19)
 Oct 2011 (21)
 Sep 2011 (31)
 Aug 2011 (12)
 Jul 2011 (8)
 Jun 2011 (7)
 May 2011 (3)
 Apr 2011 (2)
 Mar 2011 (8)
 Feb 2011 (5)
 Jan 2011 (6)
 Dec 2010 (6)
 Nov 2010 (3)
 Oct 2010 (2)
 Sep 2010 (2)
 Aug 2010 (4)
 Jul 2010 (9)
 Jun 2010 (8)
 May 2010 (5)
 Apr 2010 (4)
 Mar 2010 (2)
 Feb 2010 (3)
 Jan 2010 (7)
 Dec 2009 (9)
 Nov 2009 (5)
 Oct 2009 (9)
 Sep 2009 (13)
 Aug 2009 (13)
 Jul 2009 (13)
 Jun 2009 (13)
 May 2009 (15)
 Apr 2009 (15)
 Mar 2009 (14)
 Feb 2009 (13)
 Jan 2009 (10)
 Dec 2008 (12)
 Nov 2008 (6)
 Oct 2008 (8)
 Sep 2008 (2)
 Jun 2008 (1)
 May 2008 (6)
 Apr 2008 (1)
Stacks Image 18