1 00:00:01,484 --> 00:00:03,924 So, you've just registered for your first MOOC 2 00:00:03,927 --> 00:00:05,796 and you're wondering what to do next. 3 00:00:05,796 --> 00:00:08,004 There are many ways you can succeed in a MOOC. 4 00:00:08,311 --> 00:00:11,359 You might just want to follow along and get a sense of the topic. 5 00:00:11,666 --> 00:00:13,319 You might be doing it for course credit. 6 00:00:13,319 --> 00:00:16,691 You might be doing it to develop a new learning network 7 00:00:16,691 --> 00:00:18,856 or to help finish that project you're working on. 8 00:00:19,363 --> 00:00:24,758 This video is how I look at success in a Massive Open Online Course. 9 00:00:25,603 --> 00:00:28,752 Let's say you've just registered for a MOOC about thingamajigits. 10 00:00:29,290 --> 00:00:30,897 You've registered at the course site 11 00:00:30,897 --> 00:00:33,089 and you've decided that you're going to commit your time, 12 00:00:33,089 --> 00:00:35,271 but you're trying to figure out where to start. 13 00:00:35,871 --> 00:00:38,901 This is five steps to succeed in a MOOC. 14 00:00:39,485 --> 00:00:40,846 You need to orient, 15 00:00:40,846 --> 00:00:41,776 declare, 16 00:00:41,776 --> 00:00:42,706 network, 17 00:00:42,706 --> 00:00:43,806 cluster 18 00:00:43,806 --> 00:00:45,151 and focus. 19 00:00:46,027 --> 00:00:48,080 First, you need to orient yourself. 20 00:00:48,433 --> 00:00:49,656 Where are the materials, 21 00:00:49,656 --> 00:00:51,309 the links you'll need to use every week, 22 00:00:51,309 --> 00:00:53,224 the times of the live sessions? 23 00:00:53,224 --> 00:00:54,647 Gather these together, 24 00:00:54,647 --> 00:00:55,808 bookmark them! 25 00:00:55,808 --> 00:00:58,692 You'll find that in some ways, a MOOC is a lot like 26 00:00:58,692 --> 00:01:00,053 just being on the Web, 27 00:01:00,053 --> 00:01:01,660 with one big exception: 28 00:01:01,660 --> 00:01:03,421 a MOOC is paced. 29 00:01:03,421 --> 00:01:06,270 There are readings and topics and they are separated into weeks. 30 00:01:06,270 --> 00:01:08,511 While no one is going to be checking on you 31 00:01:08,511 --> 00:01:10,134 to make sure you read everything, 32 00:01:10,134 --> 00:01:11,510 the materials are there, 33 00:01:11,510 --> 00:01:13,425 and while you don't need to cover everything, 34 00:01:13,425 --> 00:01:16,143 the more you cover, the more you can participate. 35 00:01:16,773 --> 00:01:19,722 The next thing you need to do is declare yourself. 36 00:01:20,260 --> 00:01:23,451 You need to have a place for your thoughts and your reflections to live. 37 00:01:23,451 --> 00:01:25,443 It might be a blog that you're writing, 38 00:01:25,443 --> 00:01:27,981 it might be a discussion forum that's part of the course. 39 00:01:28,657 --> 00:01:32,597 Your MOOC will have some way of gathering all the reflections on your course together. 40 00:01:32,597 --> 00:01:34,666 It might be a tag, or some other method. 41 00:01:35,204 --> 00:01:38,235 Let's say your course tag is 'Thingamajigits2011'. 42 00:01:38,727 --> 00:01:40,456 Maybe you already have a blog, 43 00:01:40,456 --> 00:01:42,467 or you can set one up online. 44 00:01:42,467 --> 00:01:44,290 You can write a reaction to one of the readings, 45 00:01:44,290 --> 00:01:46,658 add a course tag to it and post it to Twitter. 46 00:01:47,350 --> 00:01:49,203 And then, probably, 47 00:01:49,203 --> 00:01:50,472 nothing happens. 48 00:01:50,472 --> 00:01:51,325 No one grades it, 49 00:01:51,325 --> 00:01:52,440 no one comments. 50 00:01:52,440 --> 00:01:53,647 You've declared yourself, 51 00:01:53,647 --> 00:01:55,316 but no one seems to have noticed. 52 00:01:56,300 --> 00:01:57,907 You need a network. 53 00:01:58,460 --> 00:02:01,165 You need to follow some other people reflecting on the material 54 00:02:01,165 --> 00:02:02,341 and make some connections. 55 00:02:02,341 --> 00:02:04,364 Go back and take a look at the communications 56 00:02:04,364 --> 00:02:05,864 you've been getting from the facilitators. 57 00:02:05,864 --> 00:02:07,471 Do a search for the course tag. 58 00:02:07,824 --> 00:02:09,277 Find some people's work, 59 00:02:09,277 --> 00:02:11,115 read a few posts and comment on them. 60 00:02:11,622 --> 00:02:15,271 Those connections and your comments are what the course is all about. 61 00:02:16,563 --> 00:02:18,278 Better yet: go back to your spot 62 00:02:18,278 --> 00:02:21,346 and write a thoughtful reply to someone's questions or concerns. 63 00:02:21,346 --> 00:02:22,584 Tell them about it, 64 00:02:22,584 --> 00:02:23,622 make connections. 65 00:02:24,268 --> 00:02:25,937 There is a discussion going on 66 00:02:25,937 --> 00:02:29,047 and the discussion is probably what you took this course for. 67 00:02:29,739 --> 00:02:32,570 After a few weeks, it's probably time to cluster. 68 00:02:33,093 --> 00:02:35,789 During the first couple of weeks of reading and commenting, 69 00:02:35,789 --> 00:02:37,935 you'll notice that there are a couple of other people 70 00:02:37,935 --> 00:02:40,846 whose interests in thingamajigits is very close to yours. 71 00:02:41,415 --> 00:02:43,543 You'll find that you're returning to their work more often, 72 00:02:43,543 --> 00:02:45,827 that they're commenting on your work more often, 73 00:02:45,827 --> 00:02:47,127 that you're connecting. 74 00:02:47,619 --> 00:02:49,519 You don't need to connect with everyone. 75 00:02:49,519 --> 00:02:53,512 Find yourself a cluster of people who are focused on what you're interested in, 76 00:02:53,512 --> 00:02:55,596 a group of people for you to work with, 77 00:02:55,596 --> 00:02:58,504 maybe, even a community that might share ideas 78 00:02:58,504 --> 00:02:59,896 after the course is over. 79 00:03:00,526 --> 00:03:03,561 Finally, and this is especially important to me, 80 00:03:04,207 --> 00:03:05,783 you need to focus. 81 00:03:06,413 --> 00:03:07,989 Even with all the positive connections 82 00:03:07,989 --> 00:03:09,489 and the interesting readings, 83 00:03:09,519 --> 00:03:11,342 in the learning about thingamajigits, 84 00:03:11,342 --> 00:03:14,513 I always find that a little over half-way through an open course, 85 00:03:14,513 --> 00:03:16,305 my mind starts to wander. 86 00:03:17,335 --> 00:03:19,823 Maybe you're not sure what you're trying to do with the course. 87 00:03:20,484 --> 00:03:22,245 If you're not trying to finish the course for credit, 88 00:03:22,245 --> 00:03:23,791 why are you trying to do it? 89 00:03:24,406 --> 00:03:26,167 Maybe you have an idea about something 90 00:03:26,167 --> 00:03:28,036 that you could do with thingamajigits at work, 91 00:03:28,036 --> 00:03:30,268 and decide to post your idea in your blog. 92 00:03:30,606 --> 00:03:33,370 You can draw in your new cluster to help you with your plans, 93 00:03:33,370 --> 00:03:36,000 start a project, maybe a paper, maybe a grant, 94 00:03:36,507 --> 00:03:38,637 and use the rest of the course to finish it. 95 00:03:39,175 --> 00:03:42,423 After ten weeks, you'll know lots more about thingamajigits, 96 00:03:42,423 --> 00:03:45,191 you'll have made some valuable and useful professional connections, 97 00:03:45,191 --> 00:03:46,244 and have a project 98 00:03:46,244 --> 00:03:48,297 that you can apply right back to your work. 99 00:03:48,604 --> 00:03:50,180 You'll have succeeded. 100 00:03:50,180 --> 00:03:54,895 Orient, declare, network, cluster and focus. 101 00:03:55,279 --> 00:03:56,302 MOOCs are open. 102 00:03:56,302 --> 00:03:59,154 That includes being open to different ways of success. 103 00:03:59,154 --> 00:04:00,407 This is my way. 104 00:04:02,558 --> 00:04:05,307 (written and narrated by Dave Cormier video by Neal Gillis) 105 00:04:05,307 --> 00:04:08,195 (researchers Dave Cormier Alexander McAuley George Siemens Bonnie Stewart) 106 00:04:08,195 --> 00:04:11,237 (Created through funding received by the University of Prince Edward Island through the Social Sciences and Humanities research Council's "Knowledge Synthesis Grants on the Digital Economy") 107 00:04:11,237 --> 00:04:14,253 (2010 Creative Commons Attribution license)