WEBVTT 00:00:00.320 --> 00:00:01.290 MOOC. 00:00:01.290 --> 00:00:02.710 Well, what's that? 00:00:02.710 --> 00:00:04.530 The word MOOC is an acronym. 00:00:04.530 --> 00:00:10.910 I should at least say once what it stands for: Massive Online Open Course. 00:00:10.910 --> 00:00:14.060 That was the easy part, just to give you those words. 00:00:14.060 --> 00:00:17.970 Now to give a definition, that's going to be very challenging. 00:00:17.970 --> 00:00:20.200 For every one of those words, I think it's fair 00:00:20.200 --> 00:00:22.780 to say that there is a generally accepted understanding of what 00:00:22.780 --> 00:00:26.030 the word means, but then there is a substantial number of 00:00:26.030 --> 00:00:29.100 people who challenge that understanding, who try to push it further. 00:00:30.170 --> 00:00:33.690 For instance, massive, you can't give a number there because 00:00:33.690 --> 00:00:37.010 a thousand students is already a large class for an instructor. 00:00:37.010 --> 00:00:39.850 But it's ridiculous small compared to some of the MOOC's 00:00:39.850 --> 00:00:42.230 which have managed to attract hundreds of thousands of students. 00:00:44.000 --> 00:00:45.950 Online should be clear. 00:00:45.950 --> 00:00:48.630 It means people do activities online such as watching 00:00:48.630 --> 00:00:52.610 videos, reading texts, answering quizzes, or talking on forums. 00:00:52.610 --> 00:00:55.350 That's what most people accept but it ignores that 00:00:55.350 --> 00:00:59.170 some professors have tried to breach to the physical world. 00:00:59.170 --> 00:01:03.530 For instance, by meeting the, their students, or organizing Meet Ups in 00:01:03.530 --> 00:01:09.360 different cities, or by assigning real-life physical lab work to do at home. 00:01:11.120 --> 00:01:13.470 The course part should also be clear. 00:01:13.470 --> 00:01:18.670 The beast must have pedagogical goals and a structure that matches those goals. 00:01:18.670 --> 00:01:19.970 That means they should be more like a 00:01:19.970 --> 00:01:22.800 tutorial than a reference menu or an encyclopedia. 00:01:24.050 --> 00:01:28.340 But then, some people throw in other concepts with the word, course. 00:01:28.340 --> 00:01:30.310 Maybe you should get a degree at the end. 00:01:30.310 --> 00:01:32.560 Maybe you should have a class and teach a bunch of 00:01:32.560 --> 00:01:35.680 students at once, so, a big group of students that you teach. 00:01:37.510 --> 00:01:41.180 Finally, the word open is more controversial. 00:01:41.180 --> 00:01:43.650 In MOOCs, it's open because students should 00:01:43.650 --> 00:01:45.590 be allowed to take the class for free. 00:01:45.590 --> 00:01:48.440 They should have access to the content for free. 00:01:48.440 --> 00:01:52.840 They can have to pay for some extra services, such as a certificate. 00:01:52.840 --> 00:01:56.450 But really in the end, access to content is free for the learner. 00:01:57.740 --> 00:02:00.810 The problem here is that it's a very different usage 00:02:00.810 --> 00:02:04.550 of the word open from the usage popularized in the past. 00:02:05.700 --> 00:02:09.090 For instance, before there existed open 00:02:09.090 --> 00:02:12.610 educational resources or open courseware, that 00:02:12.610 --> 00:02:15.630 still exists but it used the word open in a different way. 00:02:16.910 --> 00:02:22.390 Open education resources are teaching material with a very permissive license, 00:02:22.390 --> 00:02:27.040 and is available for any teacher to use and reuse in their own class. 00:02:28.200 --> 00:02:30.910 It's sort of encouraging recycling if you want. 00:02:32.180 --> 00:02:34.640 Open CourseWare is one of MIT's initiatives in 00:02:34.640 --> 00:02:38.140 this direction, offering MIT classes for anyone to reuse. 00:02:38.140 --> 00:02:40.890 If you want, if you want they're like 00:02:40.890 --> 00:02:45.840 open educational resources already structured in a course format. 00:02:45.840 --> 00:02:50.680 Ultimately with MOOC, or with Massive Online Open Course, you get four 00:02:50.680 --> 00:02:53.270 words, four different flavors, and everyone 00:02:53.270 --> 00:02:55.879 in every course combines these flavors differently. 00:02:57.010 --> 00:02:58.310 That's the way I see it, at least. 00:02:58.310 --> 00:02:59.990 The most important aspect of the MOOC 00:02:59.990 --> 00:03:03.290 revolution in education is that new technology 00:03:03.290 --> 00:03:05.650 to support each of those flavors is 00:03:05.650 --> 00:03:09.280 being actively developed and integrated into one framework. 00:03:10.590 --> 00:03:13.880 Then educators can tweak each, innovate, and 00:03:13.880 --> 00:03:15.730 repurpose the technology for their own means. 00:03:17.010 --> 00:03:19.000 For instance, I've heard of very successful, 00:03:19.000 --> 00:03:22.630 small, private, online courses using M.O.O.C. platforms. 00:03:22.630 --> 00:03:25.028 And many universities have started to use 00:03:25.028 --> 00:03:28.598 these platforms to support their own residential teaching. 00:03:28.598 --> 00:03:30.970 That's what's exciting about MOOCs: a lot 00:03:30.970 --> 00:03:33.598 of new technology aimed at improving education. 00:03:33.598 --> 00:03:43.442 [BLANK_AUDIO]