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02 - MOOC acronym [Massive Teaching]

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    MOOC.
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    Well, what's that?
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    The word MOOC is an acronym.
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    I should at least say once what it stands
    for: Massive Online Open Course.
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    That was the easy part, just to give you
    those words.
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    Now to give a definition, that's going to
    be very challenging.
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    For every one of those words, I think it's
    fair
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    to say that there is a generally accepted
    understanding of what
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    the word means, but then there is a
    substantial number of
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    people who challenge that understanding,
    who try to push it further.
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    For instance, massive, you can't give a
    number there because
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    a thousand students is already a large
    class for an instructor.
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    But it's ridiculously small compared to some
    of the MOOCs
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    which have managed to attract hundreds of
    thousands of students.
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    Online should be clear.
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    It means people do activities online such
    as watching
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    videos, reading texts, answering quizzes,
    or talking on forums.
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    That's what most people accept but it
    ignores that
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    some professors have tried to preach to
    the physical world.
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    For instance, by meeting their
    students, or organizing Meet Ups in
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    different cities, or by assigning
    real-life physical lab work to do at home.
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    The course part should also be clear.
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    The beast must have pedagogical goals and
    a structure that matches those goals.
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    That means they should be more like a tutorial
    than a reference manual or an encyclopedia.
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    But then, some people throw in other
    concepts with the word, course.
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    Maybe you should get a degree at the end.
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    Maybe you should have a class and teach a
    bunch of
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    students at once, so, a big group of
    students that you teach.
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    Finally, the word open is more
    controversial.
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    In MOOCs, it's open because students
    should
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    be allowed to take the class for free.
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    They should have access to the content for
    free.
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    They can have to pay for some extra
    services, such as a certificate.
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    But really in the end, access to content
    is free for the learner.
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    The problem here is that it's a very
    different usage
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    of the word open from the usage
    popularized in the past.
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    For instance, before there existed open
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    educational resources or open courseware,
    that
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    still exists but it used the word open in
    a different way.
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    Open educational resources are teaching
    material with a very permissive license,
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    and is available for any teacher to use
    and reuse in their own class.
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    It's sort of encouraging recycling if you
    want.
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    Open CourseWare is one of MIT's
    initiatives in
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    this direction, offering MIT classes for
    anyone to reuse.
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    If you want, they' are like open educational resources already structured in a course format.
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    Ultimately with MOOC, or with Massive
    Online Open Course, you get four
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    words, four different flavors, and
    everyone
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    in every course combines these flavors
    differently.
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    That's the way I see it, at least.
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    The most important aspect of the MOOC
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    revolution in education is that new
    technology
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    to support each of those flavors is
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    being actively developed and integrated
    into one framework.
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    Then educators can tweak each, innovate,
    and
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    repurpose the technology for their own
    means.
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    For instance, I've heard of very
    successful,
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    small, private, online courses using
    M.O.O.C. platforms.
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    And many universities have started to use
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    these platforms to support their own
    residential teaching.
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    That's what's exciting about MOOCs: a lot
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    of new technology aimed at improving
    education.
Title:
02 - MOOC acronym [Massive Teaching]
Description:

From Week 1 Lecture Videos of "Teaching goes massive: new skills required"
by Paul-Olivier Dehaye
See
https://etherpad.mozilla.org/pr8ZtLXODg
and
http://www.elearnspace.org/blog/2014/07/09/congrats-to-paul-olivier-dehaye-massiveteaching/

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