MOOC: The Digital Future
The evolution of technology has
increased dramatically. In the 70’s and 80’s computers were the greatest
invention that mankind encountered with. In just a few short decades we contain
technology in the palms of our hands that provide us instant sources of
information, and advance ways to connect to the rest of the world. The growth
of technology will continue; the individuals and the environment must adapt to
the drastic advancements. Computers are the future, and it’s crucial that
people grow and obtain this knowledge.
What better way to learn of this
technology then by technology itself? Education is more important than ever in
order to be successful in this world. With such advancements, online education
is a capable way of learning. Education helps us acquire general knowledge,
developing the powers of reasoning and judgment, and preparing oneself or
others intellectually for a mature life. The best way to do so, is to obtain a
degree through a prestigious university. However, many people cannot afford or
have the time to receive valid education. And that’s where MOOC comes in.
What is MOOC
The evolution of technology has
increased drastically. Newer and more advanced forms of education have
developed. As university tuition increases, online courses appear to have just
as great of a value, and seem to be more obtainable. Massive Open Online
Courses (MOOC) strictly focuses on education. However, an affordable fee is
required to receive the credit. Through the support of top universities, online
courses are able to evolve and become known. College professors are provided
for the online courses, which helps effectively educate people. Online courses are just as prestige compared
to a traditional degree through a university.
The dramatic increase in online
education, particularly MOOCs, presents researchers, academics, administrators,
learners, and policy makers with a range of questions as to the effectiveness
of this format of teaching and learning. The impact of MOOCs has been largely
advertise through press releases and university reports. The peer-reviewed
research on MOOCs has been minimal. The expansion of MOOCs in higher education
requires a concerted and urgent research agenda. These are setbacks in the
evolution of MOOC, but in due time will make effective progress in educational
systems.
Why Chose MOOC
In the work field, a university degree
is crucial to be hired and to be successful. In today’s perspective a high
school diploma does not go far. Sometimes, where the degree is earned is just
as impressive. It is very competitive to be accepted in top ranked
universities. Declining enrollment and tight staffing makes it difficult to
offer some elective courses because not enough students sign up; but if the
course is taught online, students from schools across the county can take part.
Now where computer science, programing, engineering is especially important
with advanced technology, online courses seems to be the only way to learn and
become educated. An effective education does not necessarily mean that a
student needs to sit through a lecture and be taught. Students could enroll in
online classes just as for regular ones and would receive the same credit, the
President of a school district Doser said, “They would not all log in and
‘attend’ a lecture at the same time as in a traditional class, but rather would
check in for assignments and required materials and complete the work on their
own schedule” (Huffington Post).
In earlier generations, getting an
education meant going to class, sitting in a classroom or lecture hall
listening to the professor, and participating in discussions. Now, something as
simple as raising your hand in class, or asking your neighbor to borrow a pen
could become obsolete. In the growing phenomena of online education, thousands
of students are logging into class, and instead of going to a physical
building, they participate from the comfort of their home or local coffee shop.
Many students and educators praise
online courses for their flexibility and their unique way of engaging with
students. However, some question the quality of education a student can receive
from only interacting with his/her professor and classmates virtually.Dr. Jennifer Friend, Associate Professor
of Educational Leadership, Policy and Foundations at School of Education at
UMKC, tells us that online courses have transformed the way we learn by making
the educational experience more individualized and more student-centered. The
online component can take many forms in education. Classes can be offered in an
exclusively online format in which students connect to the lectures, discussion
boards, and assignments entirely online from their home or work. In hybrid
courses, students spend part of their time on campus for the face-to-face
portion of the class, and the other part of the course online. Also, some
classes rely mainly on traditional lectures with additional resources and
forums online. Whether it’s logging in to watch a lecture, or simply learning
the curriculum online, it appears to be the effective way of learning.
Online courses are becoming the ideal
form of education. Technology is rapidly growing and progressing, too fast in
order for schools and education systems to catch up. It’s valid to keep up with
the world’s views and expectations. It’s only natural for an online education
or a MOOC degree to be the respected way to be educated. Nonetheless, the
phenomena of online education is growing and more and more students are taking
some, if not all, of their courses online. Despite online course growth,
educators affirm that common institutions will not become obsolete. They will
merely need to incorporate technologies more robustly into their programs.
How it is Possible
As MOOC makes progress in making its
reputation phenomenal and make the education valuable, MOOC has many supporters
that help meet its funds and makes the education more reliable and trust
worthy. For example, “MOOC Research Initiative (MRI) is funded by the Bill
& Melinda Gates Foundation as part of a set of investments intended to
explore the potential of MOOCs to extend access to postsecondary credentials
through more personalized, more affordable pathways. Grants will be made
available in the range of $10,000 – $25,000. The grant is led and administered
by Athabasca University. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation supports
Athabasca University and interested academic institutions through research
grants to examine the efficacy of early MOOC models for various learner
audiences and in a wide variety of contexts.”
According to the official MOOC website,
mooc.com, there are many individuals that contribute to the MOOC program that
come from an area with a decent reputation. These supporters provide guidance
and direction:
·
Yvonne Belanger and Stacey Clawson from the Gates Foundation
·
Marti Cleveland-Innes from Athabasca University
·
Jillianne Code from University of Victoria
·
Shane Dawson from University of South Australia
·
Keith Devlin from Stanford University
·
Tom (Chuong) Do from Coursera
·
Phil Hill the Co-founder of MindWires Consulting and co-publisher of
e-Literate blog
·
Ellen Junn from San Jose State University
·
Zack Pardos from MIT
·
Barbara Means from SRI International
·
Steven Mintz from University of Texas
·
Rebecca Petersen from edX,
·
Cathy Sandeen from American Council on Education
·
George Siemens from Athabasca University.
All of these individuals have help
create something out of MOOC. They’ve helped make it reliable program. Due to
the numerous funds and support that MOOC receives, this helps make MOOC be
looked upon as an effective way to be educated and obtain an affordable degree.
According to the Huffington Post, Andrew
Ng is the cofounder of Coursera; a Silicon Valley startup that offers free
college-level classes to millions of online visitors. In Coursera’s online
world, where there’s no need to follow traditional academic calendars, the
online class is enjoying a remarkable burst of popularity. As the accompanying
chart shows, Coursera currently is offering classes as short as three weeks.
Its most common offerings run just six weeks. And classes of ten weeks or more
constitute just 27% of Coursera’s current menu of 335 classes.
What’s making conciseness so appealing
is Coursera’s classes typically experience two waves of attrition. The first
involves people who sign up for classes and then never attend a lecture, or
give up after a few minutes. That sort of casual browsing doesn’t bother
Coursera insiders. The site is designed to make such window-shopping easy.
The second pool of dropouts is more
vexing. Some students start out with strong commitment, but then, as Ng
ruefully explains, “life gets in the way.” Coursera’s average student age is
about 30, which means a big percentage of its user base consists of people with
full-time jobs, who are trying to carve out a little personal time in the
evenings or weekends to take a class. For such people, the longer that a class
is scheduled, the more likely their initial good intentions are likely to be
overwhelmed by unexpected personal obligations.
Make the class more compact, and such
disruptions are less likely. Coursera works collaboratively with individual
professors to set up their classes’ timelines, so there’s no rigid requirement
that every course be short. But Coursera’s current catalog includes some highly
ambitious eight-week classes such as “Neuroethics,” “Introduction to Logic”,
“Bioinformatics Algorithms,” and a lot more. Digital education is the future
(“Online Ed-Getting it Right” article).
MOOCs Creative Teaching Techniques
As traditional universities become more
and more competitive, the classroom environment becomes increasingly dull and
unappealing, where the learning rarely takes place. Online courses such as MOOC are finding new
and creative ways to help individuals obtain a college education. For example,
Instructure, another form of online education, reached out to UC Irvine and
entertainment company AMC to partner on a free MOOC based on a show about a
zombie infestation, “The Walking Dead.”Four faculty have signed on to teach
different modules over the eight-week course, using the zombie apocalypse to
examine social structures, public health, physics, and math. “For example: A
little girl gets her head decapitated in one swing,” Instructure co-founder
Brian Whitmer says. “In physics, could that have really happened?”
Sarah Eichhorn, a professor for MOOC,
will be teaching math in the Walking Dead MOOC. She’s modified existing
equations for how disease spreads to account for zombie mechanics, like that
fact that when someone dies they don’t stay dead. She’s excited about the
opportunity the MOOC affords her to spice up math for students who might not otherwise
be interested. “We are taking something people are already interested in,
zombies, and using the opportunity to show them academic disciplines,” says
Eichhorn.
Aside from demonstrating people love
zombies enough to study them, “The Walking Dead” MOOC shows how the MOOC format
can be used to experiment and innovate with news ways of teaching and
engagement. MOOCs make education accessible, frequently for free, to anyone
with a computer. But students don’t have to finish the courses if they get
bored, and the onus is on the MOOC instructor to make learning interesting
enough to keep people around (mooc.com).
MOOC is Effective
MOOC is always trying to find new and
effective ways to improve online education. Through numerous supporters, top
ranked universities, financial support, creative teaching techniques, MOOC can
provide a degree just as prestige compared to one received in a university.
Technology is always advancing and schooling must keep up with it. It’s the
rational thing to; let technology evolve and let school evolve with it. That’s
why online courses need to be praised and not looked down upon. The future is
relying on students and individuals to adapt. The advancements in technology
cannot be learned in a traditional classroom. People need to work with
technology, and online courses is the most effective way to learn. Online
degrees should be looked upon with great value because they are the future.
Bibliography
Blake, David. "A Yelp for Online
Learning." Huff Post 04 Nov 2013, n. pag. Print.
http://mooc.org/
https://net.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/ELI3029.pdf
http://www.moocresearch.com/
https://www.class-central.com/
http://www.educause.edu/ero/article/mooc-model-challenging-traditional-education
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1BLBZdGIeB6XOe92z94gp1xndbmDcbz_IvZ3ngG9-Tc0/edit?pli=1
http://edfuture.net/
http://chronicle.com/article/What-You-Need-to-Know-About/133475/
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