How to design and orchestrate a MOOC as a collaborative knowledge community
1. Stian Håklev, University of Toronto
KMDI PhD Seminar, July 16, 2016
How to design and orchestrate a MOOC
as a collaborative knowledge community
Photo by Bestarns @ Deviantart
4. Principle-based curriculum design, KCI model
KCI Principles
• Students work collectively as a knowledge
community, creating a knowledge base that is
indexed to a specific content domain.
• The knowledge base is accessible for use as a
resource as well as for editing and improvement
by all members.
• Collaborative inquiry activities are designed to
address the targeted domain learning goals,
using the knowledge base as a primary resource
and producing assessable outcomes.
• The teacher's role must be clearly specified
within the inquiry script, in addition to a general
orchestrational responsibility.
9. History of MOOCs in one slide
• Open Educational Resources
• Early social learning experiments: Wiley Wikis, cMOOCs (Stephen Downes and George
Siemens), Peer2Peer University
10. History of MOOCs in one slide
• Open Educational Resources
• Early social learning experiments: Wiley Wikis, cMOOCs (Stephen Downes and George
Siemens), Peer2Peer University
• Peeragogy, Connectivism, Networked Learning, Personal Learning Environments (PLE),
Personal Learning Networks (PLN)
11. History of MOOCs in one slide
• Open Educational Resources
• Early social learning experiments: Wiley Wikis, cMOOCs (Stephen Downes and George
Siemens), Peer2Peer University
• Peeragogy, Connectivism, Networked Learning, Personal Learning Environments (PLE),
Personal Learning Networks (PLN)
• Open Learning Initiative (CMU OLI) simulations, massive peer-review, automatic grading
of programming assignments
12. History of MOOCs in one slide
• Open Educational Resources
• Early social learning experiments: Wiley Wikis, cMOOCs (Stephen Downes and George
Siemens), Peer2Peer University
• Peeragogy, Connectivism, Networked Learning, Personal Learning Environments (PLE),
Personal Learning Networks (PLN)
• Open Learning Initiative (CMU OLI) simulations, massive peer-review, automatic grading
of programming assignments
• Khan Academy short YouTube videos recorded directly for the web (not in lecture
theatre)
13. History of MOOCs in one slide
• Open Educational Resources
• Early social learning experiments: Wiley Wikis, cMOOCs (Stephen Downes and George
Siemens), Peer2Peer University
• Peeragogy, Connectivism, Networked Learning, Personal Learning Environments (PLE),
Personal Learning Networks (PLN)
• Open Learning Initiative (CMU OLI) simulations, massive peer-review, automatic grading
of programming assignments
• Khan Academy short YouTube videos recorded directly for the web (not in lecture
theatre)
• First xMOOCs from Stanford, Artificial Intelligence/Machine Learning
14. History of MOOCs in one slide
• Open Educational Resources
• Early social learning experiments: Wiley Wikis, cMOOCs (Stephen Downes and George
Siemens), Peer2Peer University
• Peeragogy, Connectivism, Networked Learning, Personal Learning Environments (PLE),
Personal Learning Networks (PLN)
• Open Learning Initiative (CMU OLI) simulations, massive peer-review, automatic grading
of programming assignments
• Khan Academy short YouTube videos recorded directly for the web (not in lecture
theatre)
• First xMOOCs from Stanford, Artificial Intelligence/Machine Learning
• xMOOC platforms: Coursera, EdX, Udacity, ++
15. History of MOOCs in one slide
• Open Educational Resources
• Early social learning experiments: Wiley Wikis, cMOOCs (Stephen Downes and George
Siemens), Peer2Peer University
• Peeragogy, Connectivism, Networked Learning, Personal Learning Environments (PLE),
Personal Learning Networks (PLN)
• Open Learning Initiative (CMU OLI) simulations, massive peer-review, automatic grading
of programming assignments
• Khan Academy short YouTube videos recorded directly for the web (not in lecture
theatre)
• First xMOOCs from Stanford, Artificial Intelligence/Machine Learning
• xMOOC platforms: Coursera, EdX, Udacity, ++
• Learning Analytics
16. History of MOOCs in one slide
• Open Educational Resources
• Early social learning experiments: Wiley Wikis, cMOOCs (Stephen Downes and George
Siemens), Peer2Peer University
• Peeragogy, Connectivism, Networked Learning, Personal Learning Environments (PLE),
Personal Learning Networks (PLN)
• Open Learning Initiative (CMU OLI) simulations, massive peer-review, automatic grading
of programming assignments
• Khan Academy short YouTube videos recorded directly for the web (not in lecture
theatre)
• First xMOOCs from Stanford, Artificial Intelligence/Machine Learning
• xMOOC platforms: Coursera, EdX, Udacity, ++
• Learning Analytics
• Learning@Scale
29. Design constraints
• Specific target group: in-service teachers
• Fully online, almost entirely asynchronous course
• Varying levels of commitment/interest in different
activities
30. Design constraints
• Specific target group: in-service teachers
• Fully online, almost entirely asynchronous course
• Varying levels of commitment/interest in different
activities
• Many students will not complete the course (drop out)
33. Pre-course lounge
Epistemic treatment
Collecting data for student model
Supporting group formation of SIGs
Kickstarting resource generation script,
which will feed into week 1 inquiry
activities, and inspire Design Strand activity
16
34.
35.
36.
37.
38. Design of group hierarchy, and group formation
21
From large to small groups
47. Connecting course to previous and future generations
Course begins by reviewing previous lesson designs. Finished lesson designs, as well as
sorted, tagged and commented resources shared with future generations, and public
30
57. Interdependence between Strands
Inquiry scripts in Foundation Strand provide inspiration to Design Strand, cycle of
reviews/constructive feedback based on weekly themes, final Gallery Walk of projects
36
58.
59.
60.
61. How to end the course on a bang,
rather than a whimper?
Supporting an online meeting with
hundreds of students
40
68. Discussion
• “Scripting across the curriculum”
• MOOC context: two strands, interdependence
• Pedagogical design of group hierarchy and group formation
• Enabling content to move across group boundaries
• Supporting small teams
• Synchronous/asynchronous, motivation, coordination…
• Learning analytics for teacher awareness
• Technological support for scripting in MOOCs