Making Sense of Participation in Change MOOC
Jenny Mackness posted a really thought provoking post a few weeks back about MOOC principles and course design that I find myself coming back to know that I am being asked to design a small learning community for EDIT 517. Jenny asks where the responsibilities of educators lie when attempting to replicate a MOOC on a smaller scale. Perhaps it is helpful to look at the learning principles which form the basis of a connectivist approach to learning; autonomy, diversity, openness and connectedness. Jenny has placed her thoughts about course she designed using these principles on a continuum that I find really useful.
I'd like to add mine here. Massive doesn't necessarily relate to the numbers of participants, although it might be possible to have thousands involved in a course, it might be undesirable in some instances (live sessions being one example). Smaller courses let loose over an expanse of resources could be one way of conceptualising massive. The Internet is massive, five pioneer families banding together in a caravan of wagons would have thought the prairies to be massive. Pioneering often means doing more with much much less. Openness is important, but it needn't be dogmatically adhered to. I like the idea that participation in a MOOC has the potential to open up your practice, simply being open to new ideas is a positive outcome. You could go even further to the radical openness espoused by David Wiley, which is truly inspiring because it is aligned with the higher purpose of educating the world. Conversely sticking with one-way of doing something because the alternative looks more centralised, or replicates a broadcast model that might be out of favour, is limiting yourself and detracting from the experience others may have of the course. Online, we all think we know what that means, but how you see it is very different from how I do. The kinds of online experiences I wish to build for myself and those that participate in courses, events or other happenings are shaped by my very personal view of online. I'd like to see more recognition of individual learning styles in the construction of open learning environments. I want to do more of this learning mobile (i.e. moving) not just standing and sitting. I'd like to hear more of it, touch more of it, and get a spatial sense of it. Course is a misnomer, unless it is something more like a 35 course meal. I appreciate the fact that I am able to take a plate of whatever I like and put it in to practice where I see fit. Some stuff I'm just not into, and I'm not going to get marked down if I don't partake in it. By the same token I don't want the content rammed down my throat just because there is a lot to get through. The overwhelming part of the course is possibly another manifestation of the need to be massive. When you want more, more presenters, more challenges, more massiveness that when it becomes a turn-off.
I've been watching the week five round up that DTLT posted and you can here George Siemens acknowledge the difficulties that newbies to this style of learning have. Among the criticisms of learners are that there is just too much to keep up with, and this course moves way too fast. This certainly isn't something that you'd be able to get away with first year University students on an international campus, or an introductory course for people in nursing homes. Diversity respects these kinds of learners too.
I would echo George's comments that a balance needs to be struck between assisting learners to develop the digital literacy to thrive while simultaneously developing the tool sets that would encourage newcomers to try their hand at a MOOC.
Looking back over the notes I have taken on the articles I've read relating to constructivism there is an educational idealism that attracts me to it, which is much harder to realise in practice. A closer look at the principles of connectivism is probably what I need right now.
What attracts you to connectivism as an approach to learning? Do you think an emphasis on more massiveness is missing the point of MOOC?










