Added by on 2013-01-29

By Paul Glader, WiredAcademic

Source: evolllution.com

Ivy League school officials suggest that one of the biggest impacts of massive online open courses – MOOCs – could be a renewed focus on teaching over research at elite American universities.

“Coursera already is affecting our campus,” said Jeffrey Himpele, associate director of the McGraw Hill Center for Teaching and Learning at Princeton University, which aims to improve teaching at Princeton University. He’s also a documentary filmmaker, professor in media and anthropology and an author.

He says many faculty members have been more focused on research instead of teaching in the past. Open education classes are changing that. Because of MOOCs and Princeton’s upcoming participation in Coursera, “The conversations about teaching (at Princeton) have gone from 0 to 60 on our campus,” he says. Princeton faculty who used to brush off discussions geared toward improving their teaching are now eager to have such discussions, he says.

What’s changing?

“It really is the ability to reach tens of thousands of students,” Himpele said, during a panel discussion at the Education Writer’s Association annual meeting in Philadelphia in May, 2012. “They’re aware of their own role in the classroom in a way they were not before.”

The first Coursera course launches in a month at Princeton and already has 20,000 students signed up for it.

Himpele says the MOOC courses are also forcing professors and universities to rethink the traditional 60 or 90 minute lecture structure for classes. Princeton’s upcoming Coursera course uses a 50 minute lecture format, broken into several 12-minute parts with quizzes in between.

“After 12 minutes in a lecture hall, student attention falls off a cliff,” he says. He said professors at Princeton are now radically rethinking how they teach this coming fall. “They are thinking about it from the point of view of their students.”

Some are considering ways to flip their lectures, having students go over some basic material at home and going with a more engaging, discussion-oriented setting in class. “A year ago, to flip a lecture would have required a lot of twisting of arms,” he said.

At the panel discussion on MOOC courses, other experts and faculty expressed more skepticism at the impact of MOOCs on top schools and the traditional college system.

Dr. Peter Struck, an associate professor of classical studies at the University of Pennsylvania, is teaching a Coursera class on classics and mythology. He compares online teaching to hosting a TV show rather than a classroom, which functions more like a play. His upcoming Coursera class has 14,000 student signed up already and counting.

“This is thrilling!” he said. “Being the center of attention has never been a problem for me.”

Kevin Carey, policy director at Education Sector in Washington DC, said the fact that Harvard University – which was absent from open educational resources for some time – recently teamed up with MIT on edX is significant. “I can only assume that Harvard University decided to do this because they felt they were being left behind,” he said. Competition among MOOC providers is a driving factor right now, he says.

Carey sees MOOCs setting up a power struggle between the two coasts of knowledge power – the West Coast, Silicon Valley-based tech sector and the DC to Boston corridor of Ivy League and elite colleges. “I’m not sure who will end up running the place,” he says. “Colleges don’t have a monopoly on expertise.”

Meanwhile, Joshua Kim, director of learning and technology in a program at Dartmouth College, identifies himself as a MOOC skeptic. He thinks the idea is trendy at the moment and a way for colleges – especially elite institutions – to bolster their PR and further the argument they are doing good in the world . But a MOOC focus, he thinks, can drain the resources and attention within a university to what it should be doing.

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Sidebar:

University of Pennsylvania Professor Peter Struck shares his thoughts on what MOOCs will do, won’t do and might do:

What MOOCs Will do:

1) Will make the TV show class free to people.

2) It will allow professors and colleges to be better than the history channel at providing knowledge on history and other topics.

3) It will allow some real pedagogical advances, challenging the notion of a 50 minute lecture. While his Coursera segments range from 7 to 15 minutes in length, Struck notes, that “the long narrative arc is sometimes the critical component to convey in my class.”

What MOOCs Won’t do:

1) Won’t revamp higher education as we know it. “I just don’t think that’s in the cards, Struck says.

2) It won’t kill the lecture completely.

3) Won’t democratize knowledge the way some think it will.

What MOOCs Might Do:

1) Expand wisdom.

2) Broaden empathy – understanding of what other people are feeling.

3) I don’t know, if in the aggregate, it will make us smarter.

4) I’m not sure if it will make teaching a more important part of self definition.

5) It might add to the credentialing frenzy of high school students who want to go to a Princeton or University of Pennsylvania, who see MOOC badges as another way to demonstrate their achievement, similar to AP classes.

@PaulGlader is a European Journalism Fellow at Frei Universität in Berlin and co-founder of @WiredAcademic. He’s been a reporter for The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post and Associated Press and has written for Spiegel Online, FastCompany.com, ESPN.com and others.

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  • Roger Collins

    Right now its impossible to say what MOOCs will, can or can’t do because MOOCs are at the same development stage that the Web was at in the early 90′s. I know for certain that the quality of MOOC offerings is, to say the least, highly variable; I suspect that quite a few members of MOOCs are “early adopter”academics who are there just for the challenge/fun of it.On the other hand, the development of Web – based social groupings and interactions means that more and more people are getting used to on-line learning, and in many areas the gap between face-to-face and online education appears to be narrowing.

    MOOC education may never be the equal of face-to-face education – but that’s not the point; in many areas – most importantly, in terms of price – it offers advantages that traditional methods simply cannot match. In 2013,no-one in their right mind is going to assert the equivalence of face-to-face and MOOC methods in a course of welding or surgery, but all those courses delivered by lecture to a hall of hundreds or even thousands of freshmen and sophomores who are examined by batteries of multiple choice questions are vulnerable right now.

    For the MOOC to really take off the Ivy League Universities currently sloughing off their courses to Coursera et al need to take ownership of those courses and to integrate them into on-line programs for which they create assessment structures* and for whose quality and certification they take responsibility. Given that reputation is the most important asset of any educational institution, and given the current pressure on the student and the public purse, such a move for, say, the first two years of many undergraduate programs would undoubtedly create waves throughout the post-secondary education system.The question is, are the Ivy Leaguers ready to grasp the MOOC nettle?

    * Principally, questions and problems; the task of identifying students and of proctoring exams can be hived off to external – possibly “for profit” bodies.

  • Lennart Lundberg

    Many interesting thoughts But the number of students attending a MOOC by necessity demands a lot of automation built in to evaluate student response. That means You have to have quizzes or other self-correcting assignments, or doesn’t it? So what does that say about the learning achieved? I agree in that it won’t change university education as a whole. I think it is very important to set the expectations right concerning what You get by attending a MOOC, when You advertise a MOOC! I think there will, for a long time, be important differences between an ordinary academic course and a MOOC…

  • http://digital.leuphana.de/ Hannah

    I think MOOCs are great. I’m just taking part in one. Participants design their ideal city of the 21. century. The course is led by Daniel Libeskind and other famous scholars. Check out this and more videos about the course. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=riBJ2Tf5DXI