Here's What to Do on Monday

Monday, January 7

 

Today's Video "Lecture"

from Bonnie Stewart (@bonstewart Links to an external site.)


Today's Activities:

  1. Introduce yourself in the Join the Community Discussion, if you haven't already
  2. Collaborate in the "What Is Learning?" Google Doc exercise, choosing one of five emphases: K-12 Links to an external site., Higher Ed Pedagogies Links to an external site., Higher Ed Political Economies Links to an external site.Student Edition Links to an external site., or Non-academic Links to an external site.
  3. Tweet about your thoughts and progress, frustrations and inspirations using #moocmooc #gdoc
  4. Do some more reading
  5. Discuss your discoveries and ideas in a #moocmooc Links to an external site. Twitter discussion tonight at 6:00 PM EST 

The Provocation of MOOCs

by Sean Michael Morris (@slamteacher Links to an external site.)

MOOCs provoke. They provoke anxiety. They provoke humor. They provoke horror, apathy, bemusement. But whatever else they provoke, they provoke a response. Educators may not love them, futurists may consider them a solution, students may (and often do) get lost in them. Whether MOOCs are here to stay, or if they’re just passing through, they’ve already changed the conversation we’re having about education.

In some cases, MOOCs aren’t all that innovative for online education. Some very-large-scale courses have employed few innovative technologies, relying on threaded discussions, broadcast-style video lectures Links to an external site., and standard, paper textbooks which students purchase locally. Other MOOCs seek to create a bridge between human learning and the Internet, connecting Links to an external site. people and resources virtually to compound learning, and create a slightly chaotic, exponential experience for participants. Still other MOOCs Links to an external site. go on continually, seeming to become more a lifestyle than a course.

Regardless of their presentation, duration, or magnitude, though, MOOCs change the way we think about classrooms, students, teachers, outcomes, content, the institution of higher education, and more.

“I'm generally pretty reluctant to compare MOOCs with what went before,” says Stephen Downes Links to an external site., one of the innovators of connectivist Links to an external site. MOOCs, “and I'm generally pretty reluctant to suggest how MOOCs improve on the previous model, because what we're trying to do with MOOCs is really something very different from what was attempted before. The best practices that previously existed, insofar as they were best practices at all, were best practices for doing something else.”

Within MOOCs lies not an improvement upon the classroom, nor a substitute for higher education, nor a reduction of all things pedagogical. Within the MOOC lies something yet unstirred, yet unrealized. And that potential requires different personal, pedagogical, administrative, and institutional approaches than we’ve practiced before.

What are those approaches? What potential lurks within the MOOC?

We can begin simply, with an assertion Links to an external site. made by George Siemens Links to an external site. and Stephen Downes, that MOOCs facilitate “knowledge production rather than knowledge consumption”, and that this automatically shifts the pedagogy from teacher to student -- or rather, participant. Those who join MOOCs -- whether they actively fill up discussion boards or whether they “lurk” in the course, contributing little, but learning a lot -- are those in whose hands the content truly lies. Like an organized conference or seminar, MOOCs begin with a premise and a structure, but outcomes can’t be entirely predetermined. We find out what we’ve learned once we’ve learned it.

This is the approach we should take when entering a MOOC... And one we should consider when engaging with the idea, form, and approach of MOOCs as a strategy. We will only discover what they are when we make them what they can be.

The Questions at Hand

  1. What happens when learning happens? Where does it happen?
  2. What are MOOCs? What do we think they are? What do we fear they may be? What potential lies under their surface?
  3. How do we approach the MOOC? If MOOCs render our previous pedagogies dull and ineffective, how do we innovate? What do we innovate?
  4. If MOOCs aren’t a replacement for the classroom in higher education, how else might they be employed in our teaching and learning?

Some Articles to Explore

And the Task

  1. Consider these questions: What is learning? Where does it happen?
  2. Before 6:00 PM Eastern time, collaborate as a group (a potentially very large group) in the "What Is Learning" Google Doc to write one exactly 1000-word essay that responds to both questions. We will have five documents open during the day, each with a slightly different emphasis: What Is Learning - K12 Links to an external site.What Is Learning - Higher Ed Pedagogy Links to an external site., Higher Ed Political Economies Links to an external site.What Is Learning - Student Edition Links to an external site.What Is Learning - Non-academic Links to an external site.
  3. As you approach your writing, invite friends, colleagues, other folks in this MOOC to join you in the document. We do our best learning in networks Links to an external site., so reach out, connect, and collaborate.
  4. Somewhere in the essay, reference, cite, attribute, or respond to articles from within the course.
  5. Include (and attribute) a single picture chosen via http://search.creativecommons.org/ Links to an external site..
  6. Revise and title the finished essay, keeping the instructions at the top of the document.
  7. Tweet about your thoughts and progress, frustrations and inspirations using #moocmooc #gdoc Links to an external site.

Please feel free to discuss ideas, brainstorm responses to activities, and otherwise collaborate. Use today's open discussion forum, start a new discussion forum, or head to Twitter to chat with one another under the hashtag #moocmooc Links to an external site..

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