Abstract

The demographics of massive open online course (MOOC) analytics show that the great majority of learners are highly qualified professionals, and not, as originally envisaged, the global community of disadvantaged learners who have no access to good higher education. MOOC pedagogy fits well with the combination of instruction and peer community learning found in most professional development. A UNESCO study therefore set out to test the efficacy of an experimental course for teachers who need but do not receive high-quality continuing professional development, as a way of exploiting what MOOCs can do indirectly to serve disadvantaged students. The course was based on case studies around the world of information and communication technology (ICT) in primary education and was carried out to contribute to the UNESCO “ Education For All ” goal. It used a co-learning approach to engage the primary teaching community in exploring ways of using ICT in primary education. Course analytics, forums and participant surveys demonstrated that it worked well. The paper concludes by arguing that this technology has the power to tackle the large-scale educational problem of developing the primary-level teachers needed to meet the goal of universal education. Keywords: MOOCs; blended learning; disadvantaged students; teaching designers; peer learning; learning community; professional development (Published: 13 April 2016) Citation: Research in Learning Technology 2016, 24 : 29369 - http://dx.doi.org/10.3402/rlt.v24.29369

Highlights

  • Digital technologies can do much for education, but it is suboptimal to ask ‘what problem can we solve with this technology?’ This is what happened when the first free online courses from top US universities attracted massive student numbers

  • If the massive open online course (MOOC) format is to be an effective mechanism for promoting educational innovation it must be able to support a co-learning model of professional development for the community of teachers

  • This paper has demonstrated that by utilising the current functionality of MOOCs, it is possible to provide some of the critical features of a co-learning approach:

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Summary

Introduction

Digital technologies can do much for education, but it is suboptimal to ask ‘what problem can we solve with this technology?’ This is what happened when the first free online courses from top US universities attracted massive student numbers. The rhetoric needed the big problems to match the invention of the massive open online course (MOOC), and ‘‘Education For All’’ was the obvious candidate. Access to higher education is one of the very big problems in education.

Laurillard
The means to discuss
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Findings
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