The first image of the first talk by Professor Mayer-Schonberger, he of
Big Data book fame (see my review here), was one word – MOOC. His point was
that MOOCs currently offer the best chance of harvesting Big Data in education,
as they’re massive and online. This was prophetic, as MOOCs dominated this
year’s Online Educa. I gave a talk on MOOCs, chaired a MOOC session and watched
12 presentations on MOOCs, had innumerable discussions on MOOCs and the
backchannel was MOOCsville. It was, as they say, a MOOCfest.
MOOCs are ‘doomed’ debate
Let me start with the MOOC debate, which I helped organise. We decided to
go for a simple motion - this house believes that ‘MOOCs are doomed’. Now most Online Educa debates are well argued on
both sides and pretty close on the vote but this was a wipeout. It was clear
from the start that the two protagonists, arguing that MOOCs were doomed,
didn’t really know what they were talking about. The audience and the
opposition sniffed this out with questions on Twitter, and when they both
admitted that they had never even bothered to take, even look at a MOOC, the
debate was all but done. Strangely enough I had this same experience in the
last MOOC panel I witnessed in Qatar, where neither of the critics had bothered
to look at even a single MOOC. They quite simply lacked, the data, nuance and
arguments to make any impression. It was like watching celibate priests debate
‘sex’.
Here, in Berlin, they completely misjudged the level of expertise in the
audience, the majority of whom, on a show of hands, had taken a MOOC, many
several. Once they had been shown up as uninformed charlatans, you could see their
embarrassment and feel the mood turn. Interestingly, there were also comments
(from women verbally and online) about the fact that they were all men, trussed
up in suits and ties and it was true, they seemed so old-school.
The final nail in the coffin was a lovely Greek guy who explained how he
loved his MOOCs and had actually cried when he had completed his first, a quite
moving moment. As George Bernard Shaw said, ‘People who say it cannot be done
should not interrupt those who are doing it’. The vote was so one sided, the
audience and chair actually laughed.
MOOCs everywhere
We saw MOOCs from around the world.
There’s coming on for 400 MOOCs in Europe, with Spain, UK, France and Germany
leading the way but also Netherlands, Switzerland, Norway, Ireland, Estonia,
Lithuania, Slovakia, Italy and Portugal also contributing (see this wonderfulmap)
Russia’s also getting in on the act as is Canada, South America, the Far
East and Africa. This doesn’t surprises me, as the need for free (at
least cheap) education is a global issue. Many of the more interesting examples
I saw were not from the US but in different languages and flavours from around
the globe.
MOOC sessions
We heard from the US, UK, Spain and Germany about the way in which MOCs
had caught the imagination of HE but had moved well beyond this domain into the
corporate (Adidas), not-for-profit (World Bank, Ufi) and even high school
spheres. The liveliest debate was around drop-out, with one side seeing it as a
serious problem, the other as a category mistake, as there’s lots of window
shoppers, the curious, toe-dippers and others, so it’s not really drop-out.
Better to be amazed at how many drop-in. The debate around pedagogy was interesting,
as those who had taken MOOCs, and there were plenty, were very positive, with
the criticism, curiously, coming mostly from those who had not. Most
interesting of all was the sheer diversity of MOOCs, people taking MOOC, places
where MOOCs were being built and the untapped possibilities. My own
presentation, called the flipped university, was about the shifts from old to
new that MOOCs were enabling.
MOOC builds
I chaired an interesting set of presentations from MOOC builders in
Belgium, Dubai and Russia, who were honest about how hard it had been but
positive about the outcomes. Bert De Coutere explained how he had used an
ensemble of tools including Canvas, YouTube, Dropbox, Surveygizmo and
Openbadges, and provided some incisive insights into the problems he faced.
Tamilselvan Mahalingam used Coursesites with very low cost video production.
Marie was working with OpenupEd and gave us the strangest fact of the
conference, that MOOC means ‘torture’ in Russian! Platform choice was a live
topic which I touched upon this in my presentation and in this blog post. LINK
Conclusion
The debate simply confirmed the great
majority in the room that this is not the time for negativity based on prejudice
rather than experience. What was heartening were the many who were starting to
see MOOCs through fresh eyes. The backchannel and discussions were, as usual,
the most interesting areas to test out ideas and get a feel for the debate.
Twitter was abuzz with MOOC talk and I felt that in this quite sophisticated
audience, MOOCs had been tried, would be tried and had excited many. There’s
always those, like armchair critics, who have for years yearned for onine
learning to come of age, and when it does, globally, they shy away from the
consequences, which is decentralisation and disintermediation.
PS
I love this conference, Rebecca Stomeyer and
her wonderful team do a brilliant job, in creating an atmosphere that fosters debate and
discussion. Importantly, Berlin is the venue. This avoids the Anglo-Saxon
dominance that occurs when it’s in London or the US. It’s also great at this
time of year, all Christmas markets and gluhwien.
2 comments:
1.- MOOC is the wrong Word. But never mind. That made THE NEW ONLINE FROM ELITES famous .
2.- MOOCs or online around for 20 years . The difference now is from they are from elite school and free .
3.- They are from elites therefore demand is huge .
4. Only missing is degrees. If edx provide degrees and charge only $ 100 per course they will get thousands and thousands of enrollment
5.- Please convince edx to provide degrees soon .
EDX provides courses same as oncampus courses. Therefore they are academically worthwhile to get a degree . + They are non profit.
So I go edx .
MITx started in December 2011 before Coursera started MOOCs in April 2012
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