[A message from Dave King, associate provost of Oregon State University Outreach and Engagement; and Lisa L. Templeton, executive director of Oregon State University Extended Campus]
No doubt you’ve seen several stories lately in the news about what some people are calling MOOCs – Massive Open Online Classes – with 160,000 or so students in online open courseware classes. (See below.) The increased profile of these classes and the new enterprises involved in their development raise questions about what it means to Oregon State.
There are a couple of issues off the top that will impact OSU. First, these massive courses offer significant opportunities to test analytics of the learning process quickly with large samples. The developers of these MOOCs have said they plan to take advantage of the opportunity to test analytics, and we at OSU will watch closely and see what we can learn. Embedding analytics in our online and blended courses has the potential to help improve student success significantly.
Second, at OSU we are coming at the open courseware environment from the other end. As opposed to massive enrollment classes, we are planning development of open learning modules that focus on individual learning objectives. Oregon State’s existing competitive advantage is the development of high-quality online courses that focus on varying methods of helping students be successful. You will hear much more about our new open module development program in the near future. But, suffice to say now, this is how we’re approaching the expanding open courseware market.
If you have any questions, don’t hesitate to contact us at Ecampus.
Here are some of the latest articles on these topics in case you’ve missed any of them:
MIT and Harvard announce edX: Two of the world’s most prestigious universities recently formed a partnership that will make their classes available for free online as a way to “improve education for everyone.” MIT president Susan Hockfield says the online venture will help improve on-campus education, too.
Universities reshaping education on the web: The New York Times takes a close look this week at the rapid rise of Coursera, the online platform for free, open university courses that is altering the landscape of higher education. Says Georgia Tech’s Richard DeMillo: “The potential upside for this experiment is so big that it’s hard for me to imagine any large research university that wouldn’t want to be involved.”
- Related: The single most important experiment in higher education
- Related: How an upstart company might profit from free courses
After leadership crisis fueled by distance-ed debate, UVa will put free classes online: The University of Virginia, once fearful that it would be left in the dust of other schools experimenting with open online courses, this week teamed up with Coursera – ensuring that it will instead be at the forefront of the MOOC experimentation.
- Related commentary: Going public the UVa way
A conversation with Bill Gates about the future of higher education, Part I and Part II: The technological innovator and billionaire philanthropist opens up about his affinity for online learning; the need for delivering education in hybrid formats; why American universities should use a business-style approach to improve completion rates and remain relevant; and how technology can help reinvent higher education.
