MOOCs, Hysteria, and Educational Ideals
Final Considerations
MOOCs remain an area of interest as evidenced by the variety of MOOCs available to interested participants and the range of approaches these interviewees took to developing, delivering, and discussing this form of instruction. This forum focuses on individual concepts to highlight one or two unique aspects of an individual panelist’s MOOC experiences or practices.
Repurposing of Created Materials
Interactions within the MOOC
And the second thing is picking the right moments when teacher feedback and teacher interaction one-on-one with a student really has big oomph. What we're really talking about is thinking carefully about a classroom in which we have very thoughtful many-to-many interactions, very thoughtful few-to-few interactions, and very thoughtful one-to-one interactions, and relatively few but important one-to-many interactions.
When we think about those ratios, and we think about the kinds of interactions that are implied by those ratios, we are now working with an implicit if not an explicit learning theory. We're deploying tactics in the classroom which are consistent with that theory. This is a way of thinking that, I’m going to make people mad again, I wish were more commonplace in university writing instruction. I’ve seen a lot of programs and a lot of classrooms in the last three years, and I just don't see this happening very often. It's still Dead Poets Society out there for a lot of writing instructors.
*Jeff Grabill, Bill Hart-Davidson, and Mike McLeod are co-inventors of Eli Review, a software service that supports peer learning.
Student Development and Instructor Silence
Student Agency, Peer Tutors, and Dealing with Flaming
The Value of Rhetoric in Non-academic Writing
MOOCs and the History of Distance Education
Pat James: I don't know if you saw the cartoons and all of the images about MOOC hysteria and the end of the world is coming, and the end of education as we know it. You know, I think, "The end of education as we know it. Yes, thank you!" I think we're at a point where if education doesn't evolve and keep evolving, it'll be irrelevant. I was just sitting here this morning with a friend of mine. I was trying to remember when a point in history happened with our governance structure of the colleges, and instead of wondering what had happened, we just went online and found out, right away, and it was part of our conversation. And that informed us. We have the ability to be informed about something. How we use that in context to make sense of the world and make things improve, then, takes education. You can take all this information, but how do you make something out of that? I think what education needs to do at this point is to really cause people to be able to make something out of the facts and the information they're getting and improve life in general for everybody. I'm a child of the 60s. What do you want from me? [Laughter]