EDUCAUSE on MOOCs

Educause provide loads of resources around the uses of technology in education, and here’s a briefing note on the questions to ask about MOOCs. I wish I had read this months ago, it might have saved a lot of other reading!

The article provides a quick summary of what a MOOC is, who the major players are but crucially what are the questions that need to be asked:

Why jump on the MOOC bandwagon?
Possibilities include: for outreach and exper- imentation, to extend the brand, and to gain institutional experience with emerging forms of instruction. Ultimately MOOCs may become a source of revenue to drive down costs while open- ing access to learning.

What is our institutional capacity to deliver a MOOC?
MOOCs require investment. Whether the MOOC is self-hosted or offered through a commercial platform, integrated course support is required. Support requirements include:
? Technical (e.g., videography, editing, graphic design)
? Instructional (e.g., instructional design, teaching assistant support)
? Library (e.g., resource discovery, copyright clearance)
Institutions intending to self-host MOOCs will need a sophisticated, highly scalable LMS-like platform, the ability to effectively market the courses, and the capacity to offer technical sys- tem support remotely and at scale.

Where do MOOCs fit into our institution’s e-learning strategy?
MOOCs should fit in the overall portfolio of course offerings. Do they complement or substi- tute for current course models? And if MOOCs are not an option, will faculty with stature, confidence, and teaching experience go outside the institution to offer a MOOC?

As now I’ve started reading some of the Educause research papers, you’ll all be delighted to know I’m developing a new techie obsession- learning analytics.

Wigan Athletic – FA Cup Winners

It has to be done, a quick article with tortuous parallels between university performance and Wigan’s defeat of Manchester City in the FA Cup Final this weekend.

1007276-16327426-640-360

Like most English people, I’ll support the underdog, and especially when that underdog is a team up against a collection of expensive thoroughbreds.

As Prof Patrick McGhee (former VC of UEL and former head of million+) said on Twitter, “Annoying when large parts of Wembley are empty due to millionaires not turning up. But that’s the Man City midfield for you”

This was obviously a fairytale football match, with the expected winners struggling to play and with the winning goal in added time for Wigan, but it shows a few of things which translate nicely to universities:

  • you can still be a great success, despite what the league table says
  • having a chairman who believes in you is important
  • having the whole community believing in you is powerful
  • great managers get results

1368378980_extras_mosaico_noticia_1_g_0

As Roberto Martinez would write – “Sin Miedo”.

(and yes, I do know what team my VC supports….)

This week’s MOOCtastic news.

As usual the Times Higher and other outlets carry a a number of articles about MOOCs. The question has to be when will the topic cease to be newsworthy? Presumably when every little university (see previous post) has got one?

Firstly, I picked up on Twitter that Edge Hill University have launched a MOOC in Vampire Fictions with the claim that this is the first worldwide that potentially offers 20 credits.

Module leader Dr Ben Brabon, Senior Lecturer in English Literature and SOLSTICE Learning and Teaching Fellow, has spearheaded the development of this ground-breaking credit-bearing MOOC. Dr Brabon said: “There has been much debate on the impact of MOOCs on Higher Education. There is no denying that MOOCs are going to play an important role in the delivery of degree programmes over the coming years. In this respect, we are adopting a pioneering approach by validating our first MOOC on a subject within the Humanities with the option to gain credit. There’s nothing else quite like it in the world at the moment and ultimately we’re looking to provide more choice in the MOOC market, improve the student learning experience of MOOCs and also showcase to a global audience the outstanding courses we have to offer at Edge Hill University.”

“What’s so great about our MOOC format is that students can test the waters for free and if they like learning at this level, they can opt to take an assessment for a small fee and gain credit for their work. The credit that they earn on the course can be used as part of a degree at Edge Hill or recognised as offering prior learning credit for studies at another institution. It’s a concept that allows for flexible learning opportunities and the chance to become part of a unique global learning experience.”

I’m not sure they can guarantee that credits will be used in recognition of prior learning schemes – the waters have not been tested on this yet. The interesting aspect of this proposal is that “proper”” credit will be available, meaning potential massive workloads in marking. Also, the university is not using one of the big companies (hardy surprising since they are known to be choosy about who they will work with) and are using Blackboard CourseSites to deliver the course.

And the subject? Well in a week when a Foundation Degree in Heavy Metal was launched, a reminder that all aspects of culture are valid topics for study.

Moving onto the Higher, four more universities (Sheffield, Glasgow, Loughborough and Strathclyde have joined FutureLearn, the UK MOOC provider led by Open University.

MOOC completion rates are shown to be below 7%,in new research by Katy Jordan

Although she acknowledged that many people would benefit from taking a course even if they did not reach the end, she said completion rates were indicative of how successful a course had been.

“People might have no intention of completing assessment when they register, but I don’t agree that completion rates are entirely meaningless.”

This has prompted a number of online comments where  it is recognised that some may take the course with no intention of completing the assessment.

Another article questions whether the existence of MOOCs, and availability of materials from top academics s at Yale etc will have an impact on FE colleges and sixth forms, with them losing students to the technology. I think we’re back in the realms of hyperbole again. Surely the answer is “no”.

Finally in THE, a piece about comments made by Martha Kanter, the US undersecretary of education on appraisal of MOOCs, She identified three areas for research and appraisal:

  • the need to assess the impact and efficacy of these innovations with discipline and rigour.
  • the need for careful analysis of the reach and apparent value of Moocs in serving those currently outside the system. 
  • the issue that many households lack internet access because of the cost of connectivity and sustained use.

And the last comment on MOOCs this week – I’ve submitted the final assessment for my Coursera course on Surviving Disruptive Technologies. Having scored well in the mid-term assignment, I have high hopes for the case study I’ve prepared on the impact of MOOCs and other education technology on a teaching-led UK university.

 

BME Success – L&T Conference at University of Hertfordshire

I really pleased to be invited to this year’s Learning and Teaching Conference at University of Hertfordshire, where the topic was BME Success.

As previously noted in this blog, there is an attainment gap between white and BME students across the university sector in the UK. Uni of Herts have set themselves the challenge of addressing this throughout the institution, hence the focus of their annual conference.

This blog article is a summary of the notes I took on the day from certain talks- apologies to any of the speakers if I have misrepresented what you said.

Welcome Talk

The conference was opened by Andrew Clutterbuck, PVC Student Experience, who introduced the 3 reasons for needing to deal with BME success issues:

  1. Education transforms lives. Poor degree classifications can lead to significant detrimental effects and lost opportunities
  2. Academics should be challenged by the data and be prepared to reflect on it. Teaching without reflection has no soul.
  3. Business case. As data on the performances of universities becomes more and more widely available, there is a significant business risk to universities who have a significant attainment gap.

University of Hertfordshire have recognised that things are not right, and that something needs to be done, so BME attinment is embedded into their plan and policies.

Keynote Address – Winston Morgan

The keynote speaker was Dr Winston Morgan of UEL, a PL in chemistry, who has also researched BME attainment.

This gripping and detailed talk was of why the HE sector cannot continue to ignore the attainment gap. Some in academia understand some of the factors, but some, such as sense of self or identity, and policies and practices are more difficult to tackle.

Starting with the prospectus – all uni prospectuses tell the same story “come to us, and be set up for life”. Provided you are a certain kind of student.

The attainment gap is significant – 20% of UK HE students can be classified as BME, (a higher percentage than for the population as a whole). Indeed, in some institutions this might be 50% and others have high proportions of international students.

League table criteria are affected by the attainment gap – in terms of degree classification and subsequent factors such as student satisfaction, completion rates and graduate prospects.

Other issues for HEIs to consider are the impact of the new fee regime on students – how happy will they be if they do not see an equitable economic return on their investment and of course universities have a legal obligation to ensure that their practices are not discriminatory.

Dr Morgan had looked extensively at data provided by HESA, HEIDI, ECU etc. Here’s some highlights:

  • A black student with AAB at A-level is less likely to obtain a first from a Russell Group university than a white student with CCD at a million+ university
  • the attainment gap in Russell Group unis is 11%
  • the attainment gap in million+unis is 22%
  • the attainment gap in Russell Group unis in London is 15%
  • the attainment gap in million+ unis in London is 27%

The entry profile of students (qualifications on entry, age, socio-economic background) affects degree classification. Howver, when statistics are adjusted for these factors, the attainment gap still exists.

One of the factors that has the greatest impact is the level and type of entry qualifications

Entry qualifications are the greatest predictor of degree classification and universities at the top of league tables have the highest entry qualifications and number of good degrees awarded.

Post-92 universities, with their history of widening participation, tend to take students with a much broader range of entry qualifications. A-levels are the best predictor of HE success, and the best preparation for the style of HE study. However BME entrants are those most likely to have alternative qualifications. The students who are most likely to fail core modules in their awards are those who have entered through access courses or BTEC qualifications rather than A-levels. BME students being the most likely to have these qualifications, and so therefore the most likely to fail.

The impact of university policies and practices was considered using assessment offences as an example. The points raised were:

  • are a disproportionate number of BME or international students investigated for assessment offences?
  • are BME students more likely to be guilty of breaching policies?
  • are BME students more likely to receive negative outcomes from panels?
  • BME students quickly go from high to low academic confidence – could this lead to an increased likelihood of assessment offences

In considered the attainment gap of students Dr Morgan discussed the identity that might exist between staff and students, and categorised this as racial, educational and cultural.

Under racial identity:

  • are there BME tutors in the faculty?
  • staff must be able to see themselves in the students that they teach
  • students must feel they can “own” the university and attain the highest level
  • there needs to be a critical mass of BME staff in senior positions

Under educational identity:

  • do we acknowledge the difference in educational background between staff and students?
  • most academics have very traditional academic backgrounds
  • many students don’t have A-levels
  • there is a limited understanding of the educational background of WP students

Under culture

  • do academic staff recognise the cultural background of their students
  • are they aware of different cultural norms

Reference was made to the work of Jacqueline Stevens at Leeds, who identified a gap in behaviours between white and BME students based on ther perceived identities. White students were better and translating their confidence into actions They were: able to use all resources and create a strategy to enable them to do so; able to interact with tutors in and out of class; never questioning of their right to be at university; vociferous in demanding feedback and they rarely missed lectures. BME students on the other hand, lacked confidence in their ability to access all the resources of the university; were less likely to interact with lecturers and were more likely to adopt behaviours that minimised their chances of getting a good degree.

It is worth considering, as Dr Morgan did at this point, the following definition from the MacPherson report

“The collective failure of an organisation to provide an appropriate and professional service to people because of their colour, culture, or ethnic origin. It can be seen or detected in processes, attitudes and behaviour which amount to discrimination through unwitting prejudice, ignorance, thoughtlessness and racist stereotyping which disadvantage minority ethnic people.”

The question is – are our universities institutionally racist?

Life After University – Sarah Flynn

Using data from DLHE and the Equality Challenge Unit, this talk showed that BME graduates were 3 times more likely to be unemployed that white graduates. In addition, BME graduates were less likely to be in full time employment and more likely to be underemployed (ie not in a graduate level job).

The question was raised of how this could be linked to the work being doe on graduate attributes, particularly around employability and professionalism.

It was suggested that BME students are aware of potential discrimination that they might experience in the workplace, post-graduation, and that this might reduce their expectations of university.

It was proposed that as well as improving degree classifications to fully deal with student outcomes a university also has to deal with: the impact of social deprivation; low levels of social capital and poor self esteem of learners.

Implications of Unconscious Bias (Thomas Baker)

Thomas posited that there were three forms of bias:

  • conscious bias
  • unconscious bias
  • unintended but perceived bias

All of these would be an obstacle to learning and may reduce student performance.

However it was also pointed out that the bias and behaviour works in two ways between tutor and student, and can have a range of detrimental effects.

Looking at the diagram below, and considering the various possible attitudes that the tutor and student bring to the class:

baker

If they both come with a positive attitude and bias, then things are going to go well.

If the tutor is positive, but the student isn’t, then the tutor needs to work to raise the attitude of the students

If the student approaches the work with a positive bias, but the tutor doesn’t, then the student will be pulled down very quickly.

And if both are negative, then not very much learning is likely to take place.

The plan then is to try to cultivate positive bias, and to continually monitor this. In terms of simple practical idea: learn students’ names; shake hands with them if culturally appropriate (some students will only ever shake hands with one member of staff, and that is the VC at graduation) and learn and respect other customs. It was noted that all of these can be faked, but just like a lot of the literature on leadership, authenticity is crucial.

Interestingly, Thomas was from South Africa, and pointed out that South Africans were more likely to want to talk about the “elephant in the room”. This might be a good starting point when looking at attainment and ethnicity.

Conclusions

All in all, a really interesting day. Uni Of Herts have clearly done a lot of work in starting to tackle these issues, and got the message out to a large number of their staff. As we move through the year, we’ll be doing a lot more at Staffordshire, and I’m hoping that we can work with colleagues from Herts.

 

 

More on the Complete University Guide

Looking at the data for all universities in the 2014 Complete University Guide, I couldn’t resist plotting a few graphs.

Firstly the relationship between entry qualifications and the number of students awarded good honours degrees.

degree-quals

 

Maybe this isn’t too much of a surprise – it appears to show that students who arrive at university with better qualifications are more likely to get a good degree.

It does however also suggest that those universities who recruit students with lower qualifications are not adding as much value to those students as they might like to claim.

Secondly, we can look at the relationship between graduate prospects and entry qualifications.

job-quals

 

again, not surprisingly, this seems to show a link between entry qualifications, and gaining a graduate job. We are all aware of the tales of employers who are not interested now in anyone with less than a 2(i), so if students are not able to get to this level of qualification, based on their entry into HE, they are going to struggle to get graduate jobs.

Finally, there is the relationship between research score and overall league table score. It’s reasonably strongly weighted in this and other tables.

research

 

 

So the message would seem to be – to be successful in a league table such as this:

  • increase the number of good degrees awarded
  • recruit better qualified students who are more likely to get good degrees
  • with better degrees, more graduates will get graduate entry jobs
  • increase research assessment scores

In terms of how to do this, there are not likely to be simple answers, however here’s a few questions:

  • how could a learning and teaching strategy be used to enable a step change in the development of academic skills to improve degree outcomes?
  • what instruments and data can be used to identify which subjects, awards or even modules are not allowing their students to reach their full potential?
  • are particular groups of students less likely to be successful – and what interventions could be developed that would benefit all students?
  • how could a university help to develop students’ social capital to improve graduate prospects?
  • how do teaching led universities  ensure they have the right kind of research, that can provide a boost in league tables  but which can support their core mission?

 

 

 

Boring University Lectures are Doomed

Or so says Jimmy Wales, founder of Wikipedia in a BBC News article.

“I think that the impact is going to be massive and transformative,” says Mr Wales, describing the importance of the MOOCs (massive open online courses) that have signed up millions of students.

“It’s also been slower than anyone would have anticipated. But I’m not a person who thinks that people will be able to just go online and get a complete education without the guidance of the teacher. That sort of simplistic model shouldn’t be our framework.”

Instead he thinks that universities need to use online technology where it really works

This is a slightly less hyped view that we usually see from the technological gurus of our age – all of a sudden the MOOC might not be about to consume all that is in its path, and the guidance of a teacher is again needed.

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Mind you he does say:

from his own experience as a student, the traditional university lecture should have been condemned decades ago and replaced with an online video recording that can be stopped and started.

Knowing what we know of lectures – no-one is listening after 15 minutes, the students get bored, the staff sometimes are bored, we really should start to question how the relatively simple technologies that the MOOC companies are using could be used to enhance on campus teaching.

For instance, using the video lecture to transmit information, and using staff for the more valuable tutorials or seminars that students so badly need?

For instance, recruiting lecturers to create videos who have the presence and skill to deliver material?

For instance rethinking the way in which we design modules? The way in which we design the physical estate? The way in which the academic year works? Do students even need to attend for all of their modules in every year? Is there a way in which by changing the learning and teaching environment and pedagogy we could massively improve the outcomes for students?

Obviously if I had all the answers, I wouldn’t be asking the questions. But these are the kind of questions we might want to think about asking in the very near future.

And as for the lecture? It’s probaby time to get rid of the boring ones. Let’s work out why and when we need to lecture to people.

The Complete University Guide 2014

And as the football season creaks to an end with its promotions and relegations gradually becoming apparent, so the University league table season begins.

Today we have the Complete University Guide 2014, and there are few surprises in the top 10:

  1. Cambridge
  2. Oxford
  3. LSE
  4. Imperial
  5. Durham
  6. St Andrews
  7. UCL
  8. Warwick
  9. Bath
  10. Exeter

Full details of how this table works are presented here. A summary of the League Table scores is given below:

Student Satisfaction

Research Assessment

Entry Standards

Student Staff Ratio

Academic Services Spend

Facilities Spend

Good Honours

Graduate Prospects

Completion

Mean

4.0

2.2

350

18.3

1088

407

65.5

64.2

85.9

Max

4.2

3.0

608

32.9

5448

1071

90.9

92.1

98.9

Min

3.7

1.1

213

10.0

132

67

41.9

39.4

62.9

The Z-scores on each measure were then weighted by 1.5 for Student Satisfaction and Research Assessment and 1.0 for the rest and summed to give a total score for the University. This does mean that for a university with a lower research profile, that its overall score might be depressed all other things being equal.

For Staffordshire , we have moved from 108th to 113rd in the overall league table.

 

Student Satisfaction

Research Assessment

Entry Standards

Student Staff Ratio

Academic Services Spend

Facilities Spend

Good Honours

Graduate Prospects

Completion

2014

4.0

1.62

251

20.3

823

386

56.3

48.9

79

This compares with our results in the 2013 table as follows:

Student Satisfaction

Research Assessment

Entry Standards

Student Staff Ratio

Academic Services Spend

Facilities Spend

Good Honours

Graduate Prospects

Completion

2013

3.9

1.62

246

21.6

760

384

50.6

58.9

76

So this shows overall improvements in:

  • student satisfaction,
  • SSR,
  • number of good honours degrees awarded
  • rise in entry standards
  • degree completion rates.
  • services and facilities spend

The one area that seems to be hitting us hard is in graduate prospects. As a university with a higher level of local recruitment, this could be a reflection of our local economy, and to quote the website:

“A relatively low score on this measure does not mean that many graduates were unemployed. It may be that some had low-level jobs such as shop assistants, which do not normally recruit graduates. Some universities recruit a high proportion of local students. If they are located in an area where graduate jobs are hard to come by, this can depress the outcome”

For those who wish to delve further, individual subject league tables are available on the site. along with regional subject tables. Graphs can be plotted by subject area and overall performance as a function of time, so there’s lots to delve into.

 

 

Times Higher Education Student Experience Survey

Today the THE Student Experience Survey was published.

This does rely on a fairly small sample size of students – just over 100 for our institution – so does not provide the level of detail or accuracy that the NSS provides. From the article:

The survey was based on the views of 12,000 students across the country, taken between October 2011 and July 2012. Participants were asked to rate their institution, based on a seven-point scale, against 21 criteria, ranging from campus environment and student welfare to helpfulness of staff and class sizes.

Despite increased movement in the table, in 2012 the methodology remained the same as in previous years. Although the total number of students sampled decreased, as in previous years the number of institutions each returning more than 100 responses, a more useful figure for survey accuracy, increased slightly.

At the top of the table is University of East Anglia.

Staffordshire University has moved from 74th to 60th.

Areas in which we scored well:

  • helpful and interested staff
  • good library and library opening hours
  • cheap shop/bar/amenities

Where SU did less well:

  • good social life
  • good accommodation

We don’t score great on the final question of “I would recommend my university to a friend”.

The biggest rise however is for University of Chester, and it might be useful to look at the reasons that they cite;

Chester’s vice-chancellor, Tim Wheeler, explains this as the result of a concerted effort to address student concerns which began four years ago and is now bearing fruit.

This has included spending £600,000 refurbishing the refectory, around £3 million overhauling the university’s learning resources centre and another £1 million on sports facilities, he says.

One of the biggest improvements in its scores, however, came in the measure of “good industry connections”, an indicator that might receive greater student focus in today’s struggling jobs market.

As well as a university jobs scheme and “boot camp” for young entrepreneurs, the majority of Chester second years do a compulsory work- based learning module at one of about 1,500 employers, says Wheeler. “We place students in internships all over the world,” he adds.

So the learning for us might be to really focus on our Staffordshire Graduate implementation, and make it a bit more of a fun place for students to live and play!

 

David Willetts’ Speech to HEFCE 2013

The Minister for Universities and Science spoke at the HEFCE annual meeting this week. I wasn’t there, but have read his speech and picked out a few points I found interesting.

He invokes the work of Robbins and the establishment of new universities in 1960s, then states that Robbins didn’t need to worry abou money in the way that the current government needs to.

On student numbers:

I have now asked HEFCE to consider the best way to deliver further flexibility for 2014/15 – in line with our white paper commitment that ‘the share of places liberated from number controls altogether rises year on year”.

For 2014/15, we will continue to increase student choice and to enable popular institutions to expand. HEFCE will soon be consulting on a flexible and dynamic way of responding to demand from students who can’t benefit from the current freedoms for those with a high tariff of ABB or above. We want greater freedoms and flexibilities for all institutions, not just those with high-tariff students. 2014-15 will be a step towards that.

Where student demand is low and institutions significantly under-recruit then unfilled places will be moved to those with stronger recruitment patterns. This will give greater flexibility to all institutions. It will remove some of the fear of penalties for over-recruitment and provide a sustainable means of matching supply with demand. Combined with the current ABB+ measure, this will allow for dynamism across the whole sector. It will allow all students more choice about where to study, not just those who achieve a certain attainment level – truly putting students at the heart of the system.

Two things- this is as usual only about full time undergraduate. But, and it is a very big but, this must be deeply worrying for a number of universities who have seen falls in their full time undergraduate applications.

On the public value of universities, Willetts explains that the benefits to the individual are not jus economic:

We fully understand that the value of universities comes in many forms. There is of course a public value to university and that is reflected in the substantial public support we still offer.

On outreach activities:

We have just had the highest rate ever of applications for university from the most disadvantaged quintile. In 2004 it was a scandalous 11 per cent application rate. Now it is up to a barely respectable 19.5 per cent compared with 54 per cent from the most advantaged quintile. I do not believe that just because you come from a poor family you are less suited to go to university. Nor do I believe that if you have had the misfortune of poor quality schooling this should ever bar you from higher education – the evidence is that university can transcend previous disadvantages.

Universities also need to be confident that they will gain credit for their outreach activity even when the young person chooses another university. With 3,000 secondary schools in England, and over a hundred universities, the number of potential links between them is very large indeed. Again, we have asked HEFCE and OFFA to advise on this. We are asking them to consider if we need some kind of simple infrastructure. It might be a small team of dedicated people to engage with schools and colleges and ensure their pupils get access to the right outreach activities for them. It could ensure some schools don’t fall between the cracks whilst others get a surfeit of attention.

Forgive me if I am wrong, but wasn’t AimHigher set up to do just this. Until it was abolished.

On A level reform where universities are being asked to help develop curricula:

We all understand the problem. Ask a group of university physicists about 18 year-olds’ knowledge of physics and they will be shocked at how limited it is and demand more. The same goes for the historians. For each specific discipline, the pressure from academics can easily be for more specialised knowledge sooner. And as universities control their own admissions in this country – quite rightly – their power can shape the way schools structure subject choices after GCSEs. But we cannot just let each subject discipline shape its own A level without looking at the wider requirement for university students with a breadth of understanding and knowledge: scientists with a knowledge of history; historians who can do some maths; mathematicians with a foreign language. I know that Michael Gove with his broad Scottish education recognises the importance of this point.

So, to everyone who believes in the civilising role of the university in this the fiftieth year of Robbins, I say that the role of universities in A levels reform is an opportunity to advance the cause of a broad liberal education.

I appreciate the call for a broad liberal education, and we should be well aware that such would mean a difference to how we might deliver the first year of degrees. Of course, this does not address the issue of all those students who come to us with alternative qualifications, and who in future might be be more tempted into apprenticeships.

On Key Information Sets:

For many people it is one of the most transformational experiences of their lives. We all need to communicate this. Many university applicants come from families with a history of attending higher education, or are at schools with successful records in sending people to a university. But other applicants are in the dark about the differences between different institutions, different courses and different options. That is why we launched the Key Information Set last year, so that people have access to comparable data on costs, courses and employability.

And in recognition of the limitations thereof, about which I have blogged previously:

A different approach has been proposed by the estimable Graham Gibbs in his work ‘Dimensions of Quality’ and the follow-up report. He argues that student engagement in learning is a good proxy for how well students are learning.

Engagement can be measured by a range of indicators including class/cohort size (which he attaches more importance to than contact hours); who does the teaching; close contact with lecturers; effective feedback on assessments; and student effort.

These are different indicators from those we have in our Key Information Set. The KIS has been constructed to reflect what current students say they want to know. Nevertheless, I hope we can continue to reform the wider information landscape to take account of Gibbs’ important findings. Of course, these are more complex factors to communicate. But I challenge the sector to develop a coherent and common presentation of these key factors so that students can easily access them on institutional websites.

So, some interesting things here. Clearly a man who really understands the benefits of HE, in particular its transformative power to the individual, and who appears to have an understanding of the breadth of HE provision (even if there might be some gaps, but hey, it’s a complex business).

Week 4 of Surviving Disruptive Technologies

Image

20130421-192129.jpg

The fourth week of this course brings a quick examination of the publishing industry, two lectures on education and the details of the mid term assignment and final assessment.

Clearly for me, the section on education was the most interesting- here we have an academic whose expertise is in disruptive technologies and their impact on businesses, using what is claimed to be the big disruption for HE.

And Prof Lucas doesn’t disappoint. He provides a really coherent understanding of how a MOOC might be suitable for graduate education, and the possible limitations for undergraduate. However, unlike so many of the proselytisers he then provides a great description of how online could be used in undergraduate in response to the changing nature of students and the huge levels of tuition fee debt. The disruption then ceases to be just the technology, and becomes the impact on university estates policies, on calculation of credit hours ( this is less of an issue in the UK although still a problem in Europe, as we have accepted the idea of credit mapped to learning hours as opposed to contact), and on the calculation of faculty workloads. He doesn’t shy away from the need to rewrite online materials after 2 years of delivery, as indeed we would expect to carry out a major refresh of conventional lecture materials in that time.

So, having viewed the final assignment, I will be submitting an essay on the response of a lower ranking university to the possible disruption of MOOCs. Hence the cartoon above- if we want to do something like this, let’s make sure we know why we are doing what we’re doing, and not just chasing bandwagons.