Top Banner
A Case Study of an Open Online Course Suzan Koseoglu Doctoral Dissertation Proposal
25

A Case Study Of An Open Online Course

Jan 15, 2017

Download

Education

Suzan Koseoglu
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: A Case Study Of An Open Online Course

A Case Study of an Open Online Course

Suzan Koseoglu Doctoral Dissertation Proposal

Page 2: A Case Study Of An Open Online Course

Massive Open Online Course (MOOC): An online course made available to a large number of people without charge (http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/MOOC) Top reasons for institutions to offer MOOCs: •  increase institution visibility •  drive student recruitment •  innovative pedagogy •  flexible learning opportunities (Allen & Seaman, 2014)

Background

Page 3: A Case Study Of An Open Online Course

Typical instructional design characteristics: •  technically able to handle a large number of students •  has an open enrollment, free to anyone with access and free from any

prerequisites •  offered via online distance learning technologies •  has a definable topic, a goal to stimulate learning, a pace, and a beginning and

end (Kuna & Parrish, 2014, p. 61)

Background

Page 4: A Case Study Of An Open Online Course

Current state of the literature: Two types of MOOCs: cMOOCs (based on connections) and xMOOCs (based on pre-designed content) Call for shift from content to community (going beyond broadcasting lectures) Problems with generalization: MOOC is a misnomer (Wiley, 2012). More acronyms: DOCC: Distributed Open Collaborative Course POOC: Participatory Open Online Course bMOOC: Blended Massive Open Online Course SMOC: Synchronous Massive Open Online Course

Literature

Page 5: A Case Study Of An Open Online Course

Framing MOOCs: Focus on openness instead as a defining quality (Kuna & Parrish, 2014). Openness as access and process: What is open and how? (Knox, 2013) Both are connected to our educational visions: For what purpose?

Literature

Page 6: A Case Study Of An Open Online Course

Openness as access: 4Rs of open education (Wiley, 2009) •  Reuse, Revise, Remix (combining content with other content), Redistribute Openness as process: an ethos (Groom, 2013) •  develops with practice •  it can refer to many things: organization of the material, •  selection of instructional tools, how we go about open educational practices I look at openness from a Communities of Practice perspective with an emphasis on instructional practices.

Literature

Page 7: A Case Study Of An Open Online Course

Implications on pedagogy: Open is a purposeful path towards connection and community (Woodward, 2014). We need to create a culture of sharing and transparency (Cormier & Siemens, 2010; Wiley, 2010). Challenges: •  know how •  massive participation •  doesn't always fit formal learning structures: problems with credentials,

organization, grading... •  teacher roles:

•  the human touch (e.g., Kop, Fournier, & Mak, 2011; Kilgore & Lowenthal, 2015)

•  the automated presence (e.g., Ross et al., 2014)

Literature

Page 8: A Case Study Of An Open Online Course

Need for the study: •  there are not many studies looking at the process •  most studies are survey based, use big data; we need more qualitative studies

(Collier, 2014; Veletsianos, 2013)

Literature

Page 9: A Case Study Of An Open Online Course

•  What did community involvement look like in an open online course? •  How did openness develop in this open online course? I will elicit from those (because I want to focus on the pedagogy and instructional design at the end) •  How did the instructor facilitate the course? •  How did the instructor approach openness and open participation in this open

course?

Research Questions

Page 10: A Case Study Of An Open Online Course

•  eight week-long open online course offered by a higher education institute in

summer 2014 •  a general education course in research writing •  the course was connected to five others sections Two types of participation: •  formal (registration limited to 20 students) •  informal (open participants)

Context

Page 11: A Case Study Of An Open Online Course

What were learners asked to do? Read articles and blogged intensively for eight weeks. Practiced research writing and how to go about inquiry. Who was involved in the course? (to the best of my knowledge) •  formal students (blogged almost everyday, sometimes tweeted) •  open participants (blogged and often tweeted) •  experts (these are the professionals who were following the course and

interacted with the instructor or learners occasionally via Twitter and blogs) •  lurkers?

Context

Page 12: A Case Study Of An Open Online Course

Why is this course interesting? •  The institution designed its own MOOC using Wordpress. The course

functioned very differently than a typical institutional MOOC. •  6 sections were connected through a shared platform. •  All courses were delivered at the same time. •  Each section had its own website. Instructors had the freedom to modify their

syllabi. All course activities were completely online. •  The course was based on connected learning. •  The course has drawn attention because of its unusual format. Many educators

followed the course and interacted with the instructors and sometimes with the students (I didn't know this when I started observing the course).

•  Communities within a community?

Context

Page 13: A Case Study Of An Open Online Course

Communities of Practice a perspective on knowing and learning (http://wenger-trayner.com/theory/) Assumptions: Learning is a social activity. It happens with social practice. We all belong to many CoPs (formal or informal).

Theoretical Framework

Page 14: A Case Study Of An Open Online Course

Three CoP characteristics: (1) there needs to be a shared domain of interest (2) there needs to be an active community (3) members should engage in the practices of the community (Wenger, 1998) Within my context: (1) shared domain of interest (e.g., research writing, inquiry process) (2) community (interactions within the community, norms, language, etc.) (3) practice (the artifacts, the knowledge the community produces)

Theoretical Framework

Page 15: A Case Study Of An Open Online Course

Why does it fit the study? It is a social learning theory. The focus is on the community and its activities. It specifically acknowledges lurkers (legitimate peripheral participation) and core participants (those who are more active than the others), which are typical in open courses. Caution: A community of practice is not a network of connections between people. There has to be a shared domain of interest. The relationship needs to have purpose. Members develop a shared repertoire of resources: experiences, stories, tools, ways of addressing recurring problems (Wenger, White, & Smith, 2009).

Theoretical Framework

Page 16: A Case Study Of An Open Online Course

Case study •  using qualitative methods

Methodology

Page 17: A Case Study Of An Open Online Course

(1) Observations of the community's activities (2) Document and artifact analysis in the form of:

•  field notes (my description of actions and situations, accounts provided by the participants)

•  analytic notes (thoughts, reactions to field notes) •  analytic memos (detailed reflections, connections to practice and theory)

which will be part of a:

•  field journal (3) Semi-structured interviews with key informant people (for example, instructors, most active members of the community, etc.)

Methods

Page 18: A Case Study Of An Open Online Course

web-based activity interviews I have access to (to the best of my knowledge): •  all blog posts, tweets, instructor videos I don't have access to: •  weekly course announcements, weekly notes, any private learning activity,

student grades (posted on Blackboard)

Data Sources

Page 19: A Case Study Of An Open Online Course

1. Begin the field journal. Examine the educational practice in chronological order (Week 1, Week 2, ...). Also use observations from Summer 2014. 2. Note patterns of community involvement through the CoP framework. •  What is the shared domain of interest? •  What is the practice? What is the outcome of it? •  Who is involved in the practice? What are some norms, the language and history of the

community? What are the interactions like? Any interesting patterns? Focus on how the community functions in an open space. How it changes over time, if at all. Note instructional activity within and in response to the community. 3. Work on analytic memos to refine and elaborate on your notes after you finish examining the community for each week of the class.

Data Collection & Analysis

Page 20: A Case Study Of An Open Online Course

4. Create visual maps, map relationships (if necessary). 5. Meet with key people from the community to gain emic perspective. 6. As you move forward create 1st level thematic categories to identify different types of community involvement. For example, lurkers, core participants... 7. When you reach saturation, create 2nd level themes by digging deeper into 1st level categories. For example, follow key people, trace a pattern. Go back and forth between 1st and 2nd level codes (for example, note somebody fading away, somebody who joined later...)

Data Collection & Analysis

Page 21: A Case Study Of An Open Online Course

Outcome: •  a field journal with:

•  notes (descriptive and analytic) and memos (minimum 8) (these will be available to the committee via a shared Dropbox folder or a Google site).

•  visual maps illustrating relationships •  concept maps

•  which will form the basis of:

•  thematic categorizations

Data Collection & Analysis

Page 22: A Case Study Of An Open Online Course

Mostly manual analysis. I will use HyperRESEARCH to organize data.http://www.researchware.com/products/hyperresearch/hr-nutshell.html With HyperRESEARCH I can create: •  codes, cases (similar to folders), code books; •  frequency reports, annotations, basic maps. I can work on text, audio, video and image files.

Data Analysis Tool

Page 23: A Case Study Of An Open Online Course

Thank you!

Page 24: A Case Study Of An Open Online Course

Allen, I., & Seaman, J. (2014). Grade change: Tracking online learning in the United States. Wellesley MA: Babson College/Sloan Foundation. Collier, A. (2014, Feb 10). Building the "new data science of learning" - #eli2014 reflections [Web log post]. Retrieved from http://redpincushion.me/2014/02/10/building-the-new-data-science-of-learning-eli2014-reflections/ Cormier, D., & Siemens, G. (2010). Through the open door: Open courses as research, learning, and engagement. EDUCAUSE Review, 45(4), 30-32. Groom, J. (2013, February). Futures of engagement: A domain of one's own. Keynote presented at Innovate: OSU's Annual Conference on Technology in Teaching and Learning, Columbus, Ohio. Kilgore, W., & Lowenthal, P. R. (2015). The Human Element MOOC: An experiment in social presence. In R. D. Wright (Ed.), Student-teacher interaction in online learning environments (pp. 373-391). Hershey, PA: IGI Global. Retrieved from http://patricklowenthal.com/human-element-mooc- Knox, J. (2013). The limitations of access alone: Moving towards open processes in education technology. Open Praxis, 5(1), 15-20. Retrieved from http://openpraxis.org/index.php/OpenPraxis/article/view/36/pdf Kop, R., Fournier, H., & Mak, J. S. F. (2011). A pedagogy of abundance or a pedagogy to support human beings? Participant support on massive open online courses. International Review Of Research In Open & Distance Learning, 12(7), 74-93. Retrieved from http://www.irrodl.org/index.php/irrodl/article/view/1041/2025 Kuna, M., & Parrish, P. (2014). How much OOO in your MOOC? Open Journal per la formazione in rete, 14(1), 60-70. Ross, J., Sinclair, C., Knox, J., Bayne, S., & Macleod, H. (2014). Teacher experiences and academic identity: The missing components of MOOC pedagogy. MERLOT Journal of Online Learning and Teaching, 10(1), 56-68. Retrieved from http://jolt.merlot.org/vol10no1/ross_0314.pdf

References

Page 25: A Case Study Of An Open Online Course

Wenger, E. (1998). Communities of practice: Learning, meaning, and identity [Kindle Edition]. Wenger, E., White, N., & Smith, J. D. (2009). Digital habitats: Stewarding technology for communities [Kindle Edition]. Wiley, D. (2009, November 16). Defining Open [Web log post]. Retrieved from http://opencontent.org/blog/archives/1123. Wiley D. (2010, March). Open education and the future. TEDxNYED, New York City. Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rb0syrgsH6M Wiley, D. (2012, July 1). The MOOC Misnomer [Web log post]. Retrieved from http://opencontent.org/blog/archives/2436 Woodward, T. (2014, November 12). Interview by M. Grush. Open Pedagogy: Connection, Community, and Transparency. Campus Technology. Retrieved from http://campustechnology.com/Articles/2014/11/12/Open-Pedagogy-Connection-Community-and-Transparency.aspx?Page=1&m=2 Veletsianos, G. (2013, Jun 5). The research that MOOCs need [Web log post]. Retrieved from http://www.veletsianos.com/2013/06/05/the-research-that-moocs-need/

References