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Week Activity 14 - Comparing MOOCs

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MOOC comparison DS106 v FutureLearn (or cMOOC v xMOOC)

Signup

DS106 has a very text-heavy sign-up page and there is immediately the necWeb 2.0 teaching tools to enhance education and learning — Edjudoessity for an existing blog page and a Twitter account for collaboration and communication purposes. I have both of these already, but the likelihood of learners in my professional context having both would be relatively low. 

FutureLearn's signup is far simpler and less text-heavy with pretty much just an email and a password, much like signing up to many online services, so it should be within the capabilities of most learners.  

Neither signup necessitated my opening my email to confirm. 

Menu system / navigation 

DS106 is text-heavy and once your blog and navigation seems based on previous experience of other sites. A much rougher looking Web 2.0 style aesthetic. 

FutureLearn's menu system is very clean and easy to follow. There are images and clear titles to find areas and courses. FutureLearn is far more professional in appearance. Very modern in terms of the web design style. 

A fundamental difference, however, is that FutureLearn just provides a platform for many institutions to hold what appear to be much smaller more focused courses of around 6 weeks work. DS106's whole site is more dedicated to one course or the main area of learning, digital storytelling. So much of the content immediately strikes you as learner-generated. 

I'd have to add that as DS106 focuses solely on one area of learning, or one collective pursuit, its website could be considered simpler in that regard. However, as a learner is also directed in the 'Quick Start' section to perform the following...

 

...there is so much learner autonomy required and a greater degree and variety of digital literacies. But they do give you all the necessary links and a clear list of tasks to achieve.

Nevertheless, you do get the immediate 'presence' of being a part of a community. Especially by adding your blog and Twitter at the beginning. That connection is immediate. 

Content and Schedule

FutureLearn

Joining the British Council's Understanding IELTS 6 week course, the schedule and the course progress is very clearly set out with activities numbered in order. The activities are readings, audio recordings, and videos with quizzes all rigidly connected to the topics. It's impersonal, and there isn't any collaborative spaces or anywhere where real communication is engendered other than a reflective comment area after each activity. However, with these areas being for all users and number of comments in the many thousands, it is unlikely that genuine interactions would be fostered in this fashion. 

DS106

DS106's 'About' section features the blurb.. 

Digital Storytelling (also affectionately known as ds106) is an open, online course that happens at various times throughout the year at the University of Mary Washington… but you can join in whenever you like and leave whenever you need. This course is free to anyone who wants to take it, and the only requirements are a real computer, a hardy internet connection, preferably a domain of your own and some commodity web hosting, and all the creativity you can muster. 

Also there is a funny learner created video  - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Twc51r300Q

This really supports the friendly, informal, personalized and learner generated spirit of everything within this community. It doesn't take itself too seriously. 

Nevertheless, as the video details, the task based freer approach tied in with feedback and help from other members had the learner learning by doing and within weeks was accomplishing things they had never undertaken before. This guided community of practice was generating real practical artefacts. For example, the learner created video that incorporates and is generated with the skills learnt in the course is an excellent illustration of a course that produces results which themselves serve as the means of production of future courses. This sustainable and dynamic model is very attractive and pulls the learner in so much more than the staid and boring xMOOC style of FutureLearn. 

Pedagogy

Clearly the pedagogies differ greatly between the two MOOCs.

The BC's IELTS MOOC on FutureLearn takes a far more objectivist and behaviorist approach. Essentially, if we were to use Sfard's two metaphors of acquisition and participation, the FutureLearn MOOC is overwhelmingly that of acquisition with no utilization of the content past some cursory reflection posts. 

In contrast, the DS106 MOOC takes a far more connectivist and constructivist approach, where Sfard's participation is key to the learning. The participation is the learning as are the connections that produce the help and advice that engender the production of artefacts through the facilitating activities. The DS106 supplies no real content save a place for likeminded learners to cluster, make connections and a structure with which those clusters of likeminded learners can achieve their goals and learn by becoming a part of a community of practice. 

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Myself centre, with my sister and a friend in Hanoi, Vietnam last year

Week 7 Activity 1 - My experience with open education

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Edited by Gareth Davies, Friday, 27 Mar 2015, 09:48

I was first introduced to the concept of open education studying with the OU. SInce that initial introduction regarding the concept and some of the theory behind it, it's become something I'm very much interested in and drives a great deal of my engagement with the MAODE's materials.

I very much respond to the democritization of education, the tearing down of barriers to learning that have been in place for so long based on culture, financial considerations, even nepotism. The freedom for all to engage in education, I think, could be one of the greatest paradigm shifts in how we as a species might move forward in the future. 

However, I do also have reservations as to how content is made available and how, without scrutiny of subject matter and delivery, many people may end up lost in a sea of material that has no structure, resulting in learners that find it difficult to as Siemens (2004) discusses in his theory of Connectivism. identify what information is important and learn the core skill of being able 'to see connections between fields, ideas, and concepts'. 

Outside of the framework of the OU and as directed by it, I've taken advantage of a great deal of open educational materials. I particularly like how in this field of study that a lot of the authorities in it make their work freely accessible like Martin Weller (2014) whose book 'The Digital Scholar' is available online via Bloomsbury Open Access under a Creative Commons licence. 

I've also signed up to a few different MOOCs, primarily to see how they are run and structured with EdX and Coursera. Though I've never completed any of them, I feel that once I've completed the MAODE later this year, I'll continue my learning through making use of them.

I'm even in the process of setting up a MOOC for English language learners who want to take the English standardized IELTS test. We're using LearnDash LMS as it integrates with the Wordpress theme we've bought though we started with Moodle and as a result I took part in a Moodle MOOC as well and will possibly be using Moodle further in my 9-5 work later this year. 

We're making our course a MOOC as opposed to a paid course to see if we can't take advantage of this possible new trend in the way education is provided and undertaken with advertising being the source of revenue in the business model. However, we'll need a good product to engender that potential revenue which is why, even though it's free, we're working hard to make it a pedagogically sound, engaging, and user-friendly learning experience. 

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