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[Xmca-l] Fwd: fyi



More on moocs.
Anyone want to wager how much longer the MOOC supporter's commitment to the
disadvantaged and the third world will hold out?
And are there reasons why moocs might better serve those who are privileged
and advantaged?
Thrun at least sounds committed, but will that matter in the long run?
-greg


  ------------------------------

December 10, 2013

*After Setbacks, Online Courses Are Rethought*

*By TAMAR LEWIN
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/l/tamar_lewin/index.html>*

Two years after a Stanford professor drew 160,000 students from around the
globe to a free online course on artificial intelligence, starting what was
widely viewed as a revolution in higher education, early results for such
large-scale courses are disappointing, forcing a rethinking of how college
instruction can best use the Internet.

A study of a million users of massive open online courses, known as MOOCs,
released<http://www.gse.upenn.edu/pressroom/press-releases/2013/12/penn-gse-study-shows-moocs-have-relatively-few-active-users-only-few-persisti>this
month by the University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education
found that, on average, only about half of those who registered for a
course ever viewed a lecture, and only about 4 percent completed the
courses.

Much of the hope — and hype — surrounding MOOCs has focused on the promise
of courses for students in poor countries with little access to higher
education. But a separate survey from the University of Pennsylvania
released last month found that about 80 percent of those taking the
university’s MOOCs had already earned a
degree<http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2350964>of
some kind.

And perhaps the most publicized MOOC
experiment<http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/15/technology/california-to-give-web-courses-a-big-trial.html>,
at San Jose State University, has turned into a flop. It was a partnership
announced with great fanfare at a January news conference featuring Gov.
Jerry Brown of California, a strong backer of online education. San Jose
State and Udacity <https://www.udacity.com/>, a Silicon Valley company
co-founded by a Stanford artificial-intelligence professor, Sebastian
Thrun, would work together to offer three low-cost online introductory
courses for college credit.

Mr. Thrun, who had been unhappy with the low completion rates in free
MOOCs, hoped to increase them by hiring online mentors to help students
stick with the classes. And the university, in the heart of Silicon Valley,
hoped to show its leadership in online learning, and to reach more
students.

But the pilot classes, of about 100 people each, failed. Despite access to
the Udacity mentors, the online students last spring — including many from
a charter high school in Oakland — did
worse<http://www.sjsu.edu/chemistry/People/Faculty/Collins_Research_Page/AOLE%20Report%20-September%2010%202013%20final.pdf>than
those who took the classes on campus. In the algebra class, fewer than
a quarter of the students — and only 12 percent of the high school students
— earned a passing grade.

The program was suspended in July, and it is unclear when, if or how the
program will resume. Neither the provost nor the president of San Jose
State returned calls, and spokesmen said the university had no comment.

Whatever happens at San Jose, even the loudest critics of MOOCs do not
expect them to fade away. More likely, they will morph into many different
shapes: Already, San Jose State is getting good results using videos from
edX <https://www.edx.org/>, a nonprofit MOOC venture, to supplement some
classroom sessions, and edX is producing videos to use in some high school
Advanced Placement classes. And Coursera <https://www.coursera.org/>, the
largest MOOC company, is experimenting with using its courses, along with a
facilitator, in small discussion classes at some United States consulates.

Some MOOC pioneers are working with a different model, so-called
connectivist MOOCs, which are more about the connections and communication
among students than about the content delivered by a professor.

“It’s like, ‘The MOOC is dead, long live the MOOC,’ ” said Jonathan Rees, a
Colorado State University-Pueblo professor who has expressed fears that the
online courses would displace professors and be an excuse for cuts in
funding. “At the beginning everybody talked about MOOCs being entirely
online, but now we’re seeing lots of things that fall in the middle, and
even I see the appeal of that.”

The intense publicity about MOOCs has nudged almost every university toward
developing an Internet strategy.

Given that the wave of publicity about MOOCs began with Mr. Thrun’s
artificial-intelligence course, it is fitting that he has become emblematic
of a reset in the thinking about MOOCs, after a profile in Fast Company
magazine<http://www.fastcompany.com/3021473/udacity-sebastian-thrun-uphill-climb>that
described him as moving away from college classes in favor of
vocational training in partnerships with corporations that would pay a fee.

Many educators saw the move as an admission of defeat for the idea that
online courses would democratize higher education — and confirmation that,
at its core, Udacity, a company funded with venture capital, was more
interested in profits than in helping to educate underserved students.

“Sebastian Thrun put himself out there as a little bit of a lightning rod,”
said George Siemens, a MOOC pioneer who got funding from the Bill & Melinda
Gates Foundation for research on MOOCs, and last week convened the
researchers at the University of Texas at Arlington to discuss their early
results. “Whether he intended it or not, that article marks a substantial
turning point in the conversation around MOOCs.”

The profile quoted Mr. Thrun as saying the Udacity MOOCs were “a lousy
product” and “not a good fit” for disadvantaged students, unleashing a
torrent of commentary in the higher-education blogosphere.

Mr. Thrun took issue with the article, and said he had never concluded that
MOOCs could not work for any particular group of students.

“I care about education for everyone, not just the elite,” he said in an
interview. “We want to bring high-quality education to everyone, and set up
everyone for success. My commitment is unchanged.”

While he said he was “super-excited” about working with corporations to
improve job skills, Mr. Thrun said he was working with San Jose State to
revamp the software so that future students could have more time to work
through the courses.

“To all those people who declared our experiment a failure, you have to
understand how innovation works,” he wrote on his
blog<http://blog.udacity.com/2013/08/sebastian-thrun-update-on-our-sjsu-plus.html>.
“Few ideas work on the first try. Iteration is key to innovation. We are
seeing significant improvement in learning outcomes and student engagement.
”

Some draw an analogy to mobile phones, which took several generations to
progress from clunky and unreliable to indispensable.

Mr. Thrun stressed that results from the second round of the San Jose
experiment over the summer were much improved, with the online algebra and
statistics students doing better than their on-campus counterparts.
Comparisons are murky, though, since the summer classes were open to all,
and half the students already had degrees.

Some San Jose professors said they found the MOOC material useful and were
disappointed that the pilot was halted.

“We had great results in the summer, so I’m surprised that it’s not going
forward,” said Julie Sliva, who taught the college algebra course. “I’m
still using the Udacity videos to support another course, because they’re
very helpful.”

Mr. Siemens said what was happening was part of a natural process. “We’re
moving from the hype to the implementation,” he said. “It’s exciting to see
universities saying, ‘Fine, you woke us up,’ and beginning to grapple with
how the Internet can change the university, how it doesn’t have to be all
about teaching 25 people in a room.

“Now that we have the technology to teach 100,000 students online,” he
said, “the next challenge will be scaling creativity, and finding a way
that even in a class of 100,000, adaptive learning can give each student a
personal experience.”






-- 
Gregory A. Thompson, Ph.D.
Visiting Assistant Professor
Department of Anthropology
883 Spencer W. Kimball Tower
Brigham Young University
Provo, UT 84602
http://byu.academia.edu/GregoryThompson
Status: O