Tuesday, June 16, 2020
The MOOC Revolution Opportunity or Overhype
The MOOC Revolution: Opportunity or Overhype? Since 2011, major news and media outlets have devoted substantial attention to the rise of Massive Online Open Courses, better known as ââ¬Å"MOOCs.â⬠Journalists and educators alike have laudedà startups like Udacity, Coursera and edXââ¬âprimarily for their aims to make high-quality education both accessible and affordableââ¬âand have written extensively on a new education landscape, where everyoneââ¬âno matter their location, age, or educational backgroundââ¬âcan learn from the worldââ¬â¢s best.While MOOCs may offer a potential solution to postsecondary inequality and the rising costs of a college education, they have not, so far, delivered large-scale benefits to new learners or to marginalized populations.à Truth is, the overwhelming majority of MOOCs haveà dismal completion ratesà and/or cater toà students already possessing college degrees.à Moreover, many MOOCsà fail to offer the interactive classroom experienceà that many students ne ed, andà do not provide the credits or credentialsà that prospective employers desire.Despite their many limitations, MOOCs are here to stay, and deservedly so. à These online courses are innovative, inexpensive and may one day transform higher educationââ¬âbut not yet. Like their brick-and-mortar predecessors, MOOC-providers must develop viable ways of supporting student learning and success.à Until then, the rhetoric around MOOC education wonââ¬â¢t match reality.Improving educational technology is one thing; using technology to improve education (and society) is quite another.
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