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MASSIVE OPEN ONLINE COURSES (MOOCs):

MASSIVE OPEN ONLINE COURSES (MOOCs):. BEST PRACTICES & PARTICIPATORY MODELS. PROF DR MANSOR FADZIL Senior Vice President Open University Malaysia. INTRODUCTION. MOOCS A RECENT DEVELOPMENT IN HIGHER EDUCATION:. 2008. The term was coined. 2011. 1st MOOC launched via Stanford University.

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MASSIVE OPEN ONLINE COURSES (MOOCs):

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  1. MASSIVE OPEN ONLINE COURSES (MOOCs): BEST PRACTICES & PARTICIPATORY MODELS PROF DR MANSOR FADZIL Senior Vice President Open University Malaysia

  2. INTRODUCTION MOOCS A RECENT DEVELOPMENT IN HIGHER EDUCATION: 2008 The term was coined 2011 1st MOOC launched via Stanford University 2012 New York Times’ Year of the MOOC Immense repercussions on the future of higher education: Especially in ODL, lifelong learning & work-based education Early success enjoyed by North American providers, e.g. Coursera, edX, Udemy, Udacity & Khan Academy

  3. INTRODUCTION A graphical depiction of the growing global interest in MOOCs since 2008. (Generated by Google Trends)

  4. FUTURE EXPECTATIONS Consumption beyond English-speaking countries, e.g. Coursera Zone CONTINUED GROWTH & NEW INITIATIVES Corporate MOOCs: scalable, on-demand & self-paced training programmes Interactive components, e.g. HarvardX FOOD FOR THOUGHT: To what extent will MOOCs disrupt higher education? MOOCs are different to OER: MOOCs are fully packaged courses OER are freely accessible educational materials

  5. EXPLORING BEST PRACTICESIN MOOCS SUCCESSFUL NORTH AMERICAN PROVIDERS: DEMOCRATISATION OF EDUCATION: Association with top-ranked Ivy League universities Massiveness, openness & connectivism High quality courses & learning materials Promise of greater accessibility, reach & engagement Effective branding BENEFIT FROM THE ‘OPEN KNOWLEDGE’ CULTURE: CREATIVE & INNOVATIVE USE OF VARIOUS ICT OER, OCW & free distribution of learning materials FUTURE DERIVATIVES OF MOOCs: cMOOCs, POOCs, SPOCs & meta-MOOCs

  6. PARTICIPATORY MODELS PARTICIPATORY MODEL: “A collaborative process that places learners at the centre of instruction” (Fingeret, 1989) LEARNER-CENTRED APPROACH Many contributors involved in one provider RELATES TO THE CONCEPT OF COLLABORATION: Learner input in collaborative research & curriculum design Use of the Wiki approach to democratise teaching, learning & the innovation process

  7. WORLD’S FIRST META-MOOC

  8. MAKING MOOCs A SUCCESS Important to consider academic & pedagogical elements in MOOCs: CONSTANT ACCESSIBILITY EXCELLENT SUPPORT SERVICES ASSESSMENT & CERTIFICATION Store learning materials in cloud/virtual storage or multiple servers Can leverage on artificial intelligence Develop a system suited to the content of each MOOC Reduce demand on human support without neglecting learner needs Use MCQs & other easily graded formats Must consider different speeds of Internet connection Provide local support where possible

  9. POTENTIAL SUPPORT SERVICESMODELS A model that relies on significant human support A model leveraging on artificial intelligence

  10. CONCLUDING REMARKS MOOCs still in the early stages of development, although North American providers have enjoyed early success A collaborative spirit is crucial in developing a participatory approach in MOOCs & paving the way for POOCs to take shape in the future Talks of technology should not undermine the importance of academic & pedagogical issues in MOOCs

  11. THANK YOU

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