Cynthia Macdonald with files from ³Ō¹Ļ±¬ĮĻ / en Much wow: how online courses are potential game-changers for higher education /news/much-wow-how-online-courses-are-potential-game-changers-higher-education <span class="field field--name-title field--type-string field--label-hidden">Much wow: how online courses are potential game-changers for higher education</span> <span class="field field--name-uid field--type-entity-reference field--label-hidden"><span>sgupta</span></span> <span class="field field--name-created field--type-created field--label-hidden"><time datetime="2014-01-23T04:09:07-05:00" title="Thursday, January 23, 2014 - 04:09" class="datetime">Thu, 01/23/2014 - 04:09</time> </span> <div class="clearfix text-formatted field field--name-field-cutline-long field--type-text-long field--label-above"> <div class="field__label">Cutline</div> <div class="field__item">Jennifer Campbell and Paul Gries of ³Ō¹Ļ±¬ĮĻ's Department of Computer Science (photo below by Ken Jones</div> </div> <div class="field field--name-field-author-reporters field--type-entity-reference field--label-hidden field__items"> <div class="field__item"><a href="/news/authors-reporters/cynthia-macdonald" hreflang="en">Cynthia Macdonald</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/news/authors-reporters/cynthia-macdonald-files-u-t-news" hreflang="en">Cynthia Macdonald with files from ³Ō¹Ļ±¬ĮĻ</a></div> </div> <div class="field field--name-field-author-legacy field--type-string field--label-above"> <div class="field__label">Author legacy</div> <div class="field__item">Cynthia Macdonald with files from ³Ō¹Ļ±¬ĮĻ</div> </div> <div class="field field--name-field-topic field--type-entity-reference field--label-above"> <div class="field__label">Topic</div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/news/topics/global-lens" hreflang="en">Global Lens</a></div> </div> <div class="field field--name-field-story-tags field--type-entity-reference field--label-hidden field__items"> <div class="field__item"><a href="/news/tags/features" hreflang="en">Features</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/news/tags/teaching" hreflang="en">Teaching</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/news/tags/mooc" hreflang="en">MOOC</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/news/tags/utsc" hreflang="en">UTSC</a></div> <div class="field__item"><a href="/news/tags/global" hreflang="en">Global</a></div> </div> <div class="clearfix text-formatted field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field__item"><p><strong>Steve Joordens</strong> absolutely loves teaching large classes. ā€œI like to think of them being akin to the NASA space program,ā€ says the University of Toronto Scarborough psychology professor. ā€œIn order to make something work in very challenging conditions, one is pushed to be innovative and to come up with unique solutions.ā€</p> <p>Good thing, then, that Joordens teaches Introductory Psychology. Itā€™s always been the Woodstock of university courses ā€“ the one guaranteed every year to attract vast hordes of young people deeply curious about the workings of their own minds.</p> <p>Joordens is the kind of infectiously happy prof who would probably fill a room no matter what he taught. The recipient of numerous teaching awards, heā€™s a devoted vegetarian who zips around town on a motorcyle, plays in a rock band and looks much younger than his 48 years. Itā€™s no surprise that his Intro Psych class normally packs in almost 2,000 students.</p> <p>ā€œThe more people in the crowd,ā€ he says, ā€œthe more energy you have to work with and shape.ā€</p> <p>Of course, Joordensā€™ love of crowds runs counter to received educational wisdom. Giant classes are often scorned as a bad thing, for student and teacher alike. So you might ask why, this past spring, he chose to make his class size even bigger. How big? Try 40,000 students.</p> <p>Joordens is one of several ³Ō¹Ļ±¬ĮĻ professors now teaching a ā€œmassive open online course,ā€ or MOOC. MOOCs are shorter, video-based versions of regular university courses, and theyā€™re often completely free. With a single mouse click, a prospective student anywhere in the world can now sign up for a class taught by a ³Ō¹Ļ±¬ĮĻ professor on psychology, computer science, statistics, education or social work ā€“ and thatā€™s just for starters. Nine ³Ō¹Ļ±¬ĮĻ MOOCs have ā€œgone liveā€ since fall 2012; three more are being launched over the next several months.</p> <p>ā€œA MOOC is more a form of public outreach than it is a traditional university course,ā€ says <strong>Cheryl Regehr</strong>, ³Ō¹Ļ±¬ĮĻā€™s provost. ā€œWe see this as a way of giving the world access to some of our finest instructors.ā€</p> <p>To do this, the university signed deals with two well-known providers of MOOC software ā€“ the for-profit Coursera, and the not-for-profit EdX. MOOCs ā€œprovide incredible access to universities for people who ordinarily wouldnā€™t have it,ā€ says <strong>Charmaine Williams</strong>, who teaches a social work course on mental health. ā€œThey reach people at all different levels, in all kinds of different places.ā€</p> <p>The term ā€œMOOCā€ was coined in 2008 by a group of academics in Manitoba and P.E.I. who were interested in expanding the possibilities of online learning. The first class, offered by the University of Manitoba, bore the name ā€œConnectivism and Connective Learning,ā€ and boasted some 2,300 students. Faculty and administrators at three of North Americaā€™s most prestigious universities took note and created their own online learning platforms ā€“ Coursera was started by computer science professors at Stanford; EdX at Harvard and MIT. Now, schools around the world are signing on: whether youā€™re sitting on a park bench or snuggled in bed, you can now return to class at ³Ō¹Ļ±¬ĮĻ, attend Harvard or study at a university in India or Hong Kong.</p> <p>Venture capitalists are hugely enthusiastic about investing in MOOCs: so far, Coursera says it has raised some $65 million. Bill Gates is a big supporter. EdX president Anant Agarwal, an electrical engineer, somewhat grandly likens the MOOC revolution to the invention of the printing press, while Andrew Ng, one of Courseraā€™s co-founders, crows that itā€™s growing ā€œfaster than Facebookā€ did when it started.</p> <p>Ng and Agarwal talk about changing the face of higher education ā€“ and on the surface, it looks like they might be right. But they are still searching for a viable business model.</p> <p>³Ō¹Ļ±¬ĮĻā€™s MOOCs, like most others, are really mini-courses: four- to eight-week versions of the real thing, with no formal credit provided at the end. But some institutions are beginning to experiment with MOOCs that substitute for traditional university courses. This fall, the Georgia Institute of Technology, for example, is offering a MOOC masterā€™s degree in computer science at one-sixth the price of a conventional one. And in Canada, the University of Alberta has just launched a for-credit paleontology course; it costs half of what an in-person course does. One has to wonder: could MOOCs be a truly disruptive technology ā€“ higher educationā€™s version of Kindle and Napster?</p> <p>Itā€™s doubtful. Even the professors who teach MOOCs say they are unconvinced of this. First, thereā€™s the problem of community. MOOCs boast lively discussion boards, but ā€œI donā€™t see them replacing universities,ā€ says <strong>Paul Gries</strong>, a computer science professor whose Learn to Program course (taught with <strong>Jennifer Campbell</strong>) is so far ³Ō¹Ļ±¬ĮĻā€™s largest, with an initial enrolment of 70,000 learners. ā€œI think students really enjoy being connected to a human being. Itā€™s so important to be able to say ā€˜I donā€™t understand this line,ā€™ and have somebody sit down and explain it to you.ā€</p> <p>Then thereā€™s the infamously low completion rate, which averages from seven to 10 per cent. ā€œItā€™s very easy to register ā€“ and then your life takes over,ā€ says<strong> Laurie Harrison</strong>, ³Ō¹Ļ±¬ĮĻā€™s director of online learning strategies.</p> <p><img alt src="/sites/default/files/2014-01-20-steve-joordens.jpg" style="width: 425px; height: 283px; margin: 10px; float: left;">Joordens (pictured left) &nbsp;thinks MOOCs are more about process than product: ā€œa lot of people told me they didnā€™t want the certificate of completion,ā€ he says. ā€œThere are some people who say, ā€˜I watched every lecture, I learned a lot and thatā€™s what I came here for. I wasnā€™t looking for formal accreditation; I was just looking for the knowledge.ā€™ā€</p> <p>Itā€™s also a challenge to ensure academic integrity in a setup involving one professor and thousands of students ā€“ and in this respect some courses are more difficult than others.</p> <p>ā€œPlagiarism could be a problem in any MOOC where thereā€™s writing involved,ā€ warns Williams. This includes her own social work course. (Registrants to any MOOC are asked to click on an honour code, which, for all its old fashioned charm, is hardly a guarantee that everyone will follow it).</p> <p>Further, marking is tough. Because a single instructor canā€™t possibly be expected to mark the work of a student population twice the size of Yellowknife, many lecturers will use computer-graded tests or support additional learning by having the students grade themselves. You simply submit your assignment to up to five other students and they mark it according to guidelines provided, sometimes with additional comments. But is a fellow studentā€™s evaluation as valuable as a professorā€™s?</p> <p>Finally, MOOCs cater to an unusually broad group of learners, and itā€™s sometimes difficult for professors to know exactly whoā€™s out there. Technical snafus can occur: says Gries of his final exam, ā€œyou could start it any time you wanted, but you had to finish it in three hours. And we had people posting from Ghana saying sorry ā€“ I donā€™t have electricity for three hours straight, let alone an Internet connection!ā€ He also had to extend his course by a week because of difficulties posed by Hurricane Sandy.</p> <p>The universityā€™s research suggests that the typical MOOC student is a motivated, curious adult who already has at least one degree. The age range is vast, spanning anywhere from 12 on up. The data also show that more than half of ³Ō¹Ļ±¬ĮĻ MOOC students are not native anglophones, and Gries says one student actually took his course to improve his English.</p> <p>ā€œHe was already a computer programmer. The English was more accessible to him because it was contextualized in a domain he was familiar with.ā€</p> <p>So while ³Ō¹Ļ±¬ĮĻ faculty and administrators are as keen as anyone to know what will happen with MOOCs (ā€œthereā€™s a lot of fog of war around them,ā€ sighs Joordens), few believe they will leave ā€œbrick-and-mortarā€ institutions in their dust ā€“ which isnā€™t to say they arenā€™t a perfectly interesting complement to the educational landscape.</p> <p>MOOCs represent the kind of fast and easy learning that seems to herald not only a changed university, but a changed brain. Lectures are divided into 10- to 15-minute nuggets and placed on video; they cater perfectly to the YouTube generation ā€“ or indeed to any of us who might find a subject interesting, but are intimidated by our lack of background in, say, science or math (not to mention tired after a day spent at our regular jobs).</p> <p>This past summer, I registered for Williamsā€™ course, the Social Context of Mental Health and Illness. The resource material was excellent ā€“ the readings were varied and surprising, and Williams was an enthusiastic, smart and friendly lecturer. The MOOC community lacks that person-to-person <em>je ne sais quoi</em>, but I found the online discussions fascinating nonetheless. In her introduction, Williams asks students to describe how mental health is treated in their own countries; the information gleaned from her global survey (readily available on the discussion boards) makes for wonderful reading. Students around the world seemed to make common cause; for example, a mother in Bogota, Colombia, frustrated with the treatment of her childā€™s ADD, found ready counterparts in other countries.</p> <p>Joordensā€™ Intro Psych students are especially spirited. They started calling themselves the ā€œCognitive Cannibals,ā€ picking up on a phrase in his introductory video, and even created their own flag. Itā€™s an important point: MOOCs are fun. They seem to bring university professors down to earth, transforming them from theatrical Laurence Oliviers into televised Jon Stewarts. MOOCs also demystify profs. Williams says that many of her international students are taking a university course for the first time; when they hear PhD, they envision a gallery of pipe-puffing, white-haired, white men.</p> <p>ā€œI donā€™t fault them for thinking thatā€™s what a university professor is, because thatā€™s what I mostly saw when I went to university,ā€ she says. Part of her motivation for teaching a MOOC was to be ā€œa black woman out there, representing an elite university with elite instructors.ā€</p> <p>Like other MOOC instructors, Williams has attained a greater measure of celebrity than sheā€™d otherwise have. People now approach her on the street, and her already overstuffed email inbox now contains 800 more messages each day during the MOOCā€™s run. As for Joordens, he was able ā€“ in response to his adoring fans ā€“ to livestream his bandā€™s gig to the worldwide Intro Psych community. And to some degree, heā€™s attained professional immortality. Once a MOOCā€™s done, itā€™s preserved for all time in the cloud, and can be repeated even after the instructor dies or retires.</p> <p>Itā€™s the kind of reward that makes the onerous task of setting up a MOOC seem worth it. In the future, the laborious process of recording lectures on video, mounting and monitoring discussion forums, and placing PowerPoint lectures online will surely be streamlined. But the future hasnā€™t happened yet.</p> <p>Gries says that recording 10 minutes of video takes him between four and eight hours to do each time, and Williams says her family felt like she ā€œdisappeared for a long time.ā€ But, on the positive side, she notes: ā€œIā€™ve developed a whole set of skills that I didnā€™t have before.ā€</p> <p>For all of this, many professors would prefer not to mount MOOCs; the thought of immortality scares rather than excites them. This is because MOOC materials are not only used by lifelong learners in their pyjamas ā€“ they are making their way into regular classrooms, too. In a recent edition of <em>The New Yorker</em>, Peter Burgard, a professor of German at Harvard University, articulated his disdain for this latest development.</p> <p>ā€œImagine youā€™re at South Dakota State,ā€ he said, ā€œand theyā€™re cash-strapped, and they say, ā€˜Oh! There are these HarvardX courses. Weā€™ll hire an adjunct for $3,000 a semester, and weā€™ll have the students watch this TV show.ā€™ Their faculty is going to dwindle very quickly.ā€</p> <p>This will not happen at ³Ō¹Ļ±¬ĮĻ, senior administrators assure. Regehr says that while ³Ō¹Ļ±¬ĮĻ is not averse to letting other schools use their MOOCs, they will not import material from other schools.</p> <p>ā€œWe are only using MOOC content created by University of Toronto professors in our inverted classroom pilots,ā€ she says.</p> <p>The ā€œinverted classroomā€ is where MOOCs may well have the biggest impact on higher education. <strong>Alison Gibbs</strong> teaches a MOOC on statistics, which sheā€™s decided to use in her regular second-year course as well. In the ā€œinverted classroom,ā€ students watch Gibbsā€™ lectures on video at home and tackle problem-solving in class.</p> <p>ā€œReal learning happens when youā€™re grappling through a problem set ā€“ but you typically do that at home, without the guidance of an instructor. So weā€™re going to actively engage students in class. And the more passive stuff where theyā€™re just watching and taking in information, theyā€™ll do that at home.ā€</p> <p>The technological innovations that Joordens is honing within his own MOOC ā€“ such as peer assessment and a research instruction tool called the ā€œDigital Labcoatā€ ā€“ can also be used in his regular Intro Psych class; after all, at nearly 2,000 strong, itā€™s practically a MOOC itself. And he has added features to his online course to better ensure students are actively absorbing material ā€“ features that can certainly be used to improve learning capacity across the board.</p> <p>At ³Ō¹Ļ±¬ĮĻ, exploration and evaluation of the MOOC experience is ongoing. Researchers are attempting to understand the appeal and potential of these new online course formats. They are also examining the range of teaching strategies that MOOCs make possible, such as peer assessment and the inverted classroom model. And that streamlined future may be drawing nearer.</p> <p>In December, the Ministry of Training, Colleges and Universities announced funding for projects that would focus on "redesigning courses to use more online and multimedia resources to enhance student learning, such as electronic textbooks and mobile-friendly online curriculum". Five initiatives at ³Ō¹Ļ±¬ĮĻ received funding for such projects. The faculty leads are: Joordens;<strong> Franco Taverna</strong>, who teaches human biology; <strong>Margaret Blastorah</strong>, who teaches nursing; <strong>Rosa Hong</strong> who teaches language studies at University of Toronto Mississauga and <strong>Scott Ramsay</strong> who teaches materials science engineering.&nbsp;</p> <p>Together, their projects comprise an initiative called <a href="http://alor.onlinelearning.utoronto.ca/">Active Learning: Online Redesign</a>.&nbsp;This interdisciplinary undertaking seeks to improve the quality of learning by breaking down large classes into smaller learning experiences, while maximizing efficiencies through the use of web-based tools, says Harrison. Examples include enhancements to Joordens' Digital Labcoat (to improve integration with existing UofT learning systems and provide improved faculty and student user support)&nbsp;or, in the case of Ramsay, developing lab activities that would use online and portable materials which would decrease the demand for dedicated undergraduate laboratory space.</p> <p>So itā€™s difficult to argue that MOOCs wonā€™t positively change education, especially if theyā€™re used to improve rather than replace traditional education. And for those outside the classroom (including ³Ō¹Ļ±¬ĮĻ alumni eager to learn something they missed the first time) online learning could be the next best thing. ā€œMy dad used to brag that his son taught over 1,500 students,ā€ Joordens writes in a note on his course blog. ā€œI wish he had lived to see all this!ā€</p> <p>Watch a video about the course ā€œLearn to Program: The Fundamentalsā€ by Jennifer Campbell and Paul Gries from ³Ō¹Ļ±¬ĮĻ:</p> <p><iframe allowfullscreen frameborder="0" height="315" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/2lWYkj_EQw0" width="560"></iframe></p> <p><em>Cynthia Macdonald is a freelance writer for&nbsp;<a href="http://www.magazine.utoronto.ca/feature/screen-time-massive-online-open-courses-moocs-steve-joordens/">³Ō¹Ļ±¬ĮĻ Magazine</a>, where this article originally appeared.&nbsp;</em></p> <p><em style="line-height: 21px; font-size: 14px">Ā© University of Toronto. All rights reserved. Any unauthorized reprint or use of this material is prohibited.</em></p> </div> <div class="field field--name-field-news-home-page-banner field--type-boolean field--label-above"> <div class="field__label">News home page banner</div> <div class="field__item">Off</div> </div> <div class="field field--name-field-picpath field--type-string field--label-above"> <div class="field__label">picpath</div> <div class="field__item">sites/default/files/2014-01-20-jennifer-campbell-paul-gries-MOOCs.jpg</div> </div> Thu, 23 Jan 2014 09:09:07 +0000 sgupta 5819 at