“For most of the 20th century, lectures provided an efficient way to transfer knowledge, but in an era with a perfect video-delivery platform — one that serves up billions of YouTube views and millions of TED (technology, entertainment, design) Talks — why would anyone waste precious class time on a lecture?,” write Associate Medical School dean, Charles Prober and business professor, Chip Heath, in The New England Journal of Medicine.
2. 2007. MIT OpenCourseWare – “Unlocking Knowledge,
Empowering Minds” - celebrates the publishing of the
1800th course.
2008. MOOC is one way of learning. It is a course open,
participatory, distributed, lifelong networked learning, a
way to connect and collaborate, engaging in a learning
process.
2011. Reinventing Education with Khan Academy and
Stanford AI Class.
2012. MIT and Harvard announce edX. “edX represents a
edX. “edX
unique opportunity to improve education on our own
campuses through online learning, while simultaneously
creating a bold new educational path for millions of learners
worldwide,” MIT President Susan Hockfield said.
2
3. Open Educational Resources 101, Zaid Ali Alsagoff,
http://www.slideshare.net/zaid/the-oer-101-workshop
Open Education Revolution: From “Open Access” to
“Open Credentialing”, Una Daly
http://www.slideshare.net/UnaDaly/open-education-
revolution-from-open-access-to-open-participation
Cover image: revolution_fist.gif, erepublik.com
Knowledge in a MOOC
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bWKdhzSAAG0
edX: The Future of Online Education is Now
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SA6ELdIRkRU
3
4. Higher Education Revolution
MIT OCW (Open CourseWare)
OCW Consortium
Khan Academy
Community College Consortium
OER (Open Educational Resources)
MOOC
Peer-2-Peer University
OER University (OERu)
Stanford AI MOOC
Udacity
Coursera
edX
4
5. Coursera, edX, Udacity 2012
Stanford AI MOOC 2011
OER University (OERu) 2010
Peer-2-Peer University 2009
MOOC 2008
2007 Community College Consortium OER*
2006 Khan Academy
2004 OCW Consortium
2002 MIT OCW (Open CourseWare)
2001 Creative Commons
*OER Open Educational Resources
5
6. Source: mitocw.png, ddu.edu.et
mitocw.png
Oct 2002 MIT OCW
MIT OpenCourseWare, available at http://ocw.mit.edu, makes
the materials used in teaching all MIT subjects available on the
Web, free of charge, to any user in the world.
6
7. MIT OCW (OpenCourseWare) is a free publication of MIT
course materials that reflects almost all the
undergraduate and graduate subjects taught at MIT.
importantly
◦ OCW is not an mit education.
◦ OCW does not grant degrees or certificates.
◦ OCW does not provide access to mit faculty.
◦ materials may not reflect entire content of the
course.
Source: http://ocw.mit.edu/about/
7
8. On April 4, 2001, MIT announced it would publish
educational materials from all of its courses freely and
openly on the Internet. Ten years later, OCW has shared
materials from more than 2000 courses with an
estimated 100 million individuals worldwide.
OCW's Next Decade: Reaching One Billion Minds by
2021
8
9. 2004 OCW Consortium
Mission: To advance formal and informal learning through the
worldwide sharing and use of free, open, high-quality
education materials organized as courses.
9
10. Incorporated as an independent non-profit organization
in 2008, the OCW Consortium is a community of over
250 universities and associated organizations worldwide
committed to advancing OpenCourseWare sharing and
its impact on global educational opportunity.
The mission of the OCW Consortium is to advance
formal and informal learning through the worldwide
sharing and use of free, open, high-quality education
materials organized as courses.
Collectively, OCW Consortium members have published
materials from more than 13,000 courses in 20
languages.
10
12. Watch. Practice.
Learn almost anything for free.
With over 3,200 videos on everything
from arithmetic to physics, finance,
and history and hundreds of skills to
practice, we're on a mission to help
you learn what you want, when you
want, at your own pace.
2006 Khan Academy
The Khan Academy is a non-profit educational organization
with the stated mission of "providing a high quality
education to anyone, anywhere”
www.khanacademy.org/ 12
13. All of the site's resources are available to anyone completely
free of charge. It doesn't matter if you are a student,
teacher, home-schooler, principal, adult returning to the
classroom after 20 years, or a friendly alien just trying to get
a leg up in earthly biology.
Students can make use of the extensive
Source: www.khanacademy.org/
video library (over 3’200 videos
covers K-12 math, science topics such
as biology, chemistry, and physics, and
even reaches into the humanities with
playlists on finance and history. ),
interactive challenges, and assessments
from any computer with access to the
web.
13
15. Founded 2007
Growth to 200+ colleges
Joined OCW Consortium
Promote adoption of OER to enhance teaching
and learning.
Expand access to education
Support faculty development to find, create, and
reuse OER.
Advance community college mission
15
17. MOOC (Massive Open Online Course) is a course
where the participants are distributed and
course materials also are dispersed across the
web (en.wikipedia).
Massive (> 1000 students)
Open (enrollment, content)
Online (social networks)
Course (expert facilitators)
17
18. MOOCs are large-scale online courses where an expert or
group of experts from a particular field both
1. create the large draw to the course,
2. facilitate a multi-week series of interactive lectures
and discussion forms on critical issues from that field.
Participants are expected to self-organize, to share and
discuss the course material, and to create and publish
new artifacts that represent their learning.
Additionally, MOOC participation is recorded and
published openly so that those who come upon it later
may follow peripherally.
18
19. “For most of the 20th century, lectures provided an efficient
century,
way to transfer knowledge, but in an era with a perfect
knowledge,
video-delivery platform — one that serves up billions of
YouTube views and millions of TED (technology,
entertainment, design) Talks — why would anyone waste
precious class time on a lecture?
write Associate Medical School dean, Charles Prober and
business professor, Chip Heath, in The New England Journal
of Medicine, May 2012.
They call for Flip Teaching, a form of blended learning which
encompasses any use of Internet technology to leverage the
learning in a classroom, so a teacher can spend more time
interacting with students instead of lecturing.
19
20. The traditional pattern The student first studies
of secondary education has the topic by himself,
been to have classroom typically using video
lectures, in which the lessons.
teacher explains a topic, In the classroom, the
student then tries to apply
followed by homework, in the knowledge by solving
which the student does problems and doing
exercises. practical work.
The role of the classroom The role of the classroom
teacher is to impart the teacher is to tutor the
initial lesson. student.
Traditional Teaching Flip Teaching
20
22. mozilla-p2pu.jpg, technologysalon.org
p2pu.jpg,
2009 Peer-2-Peer University
Peer-
At P2PU, people work together to learn a particular topic by
completing tasks, assessing individual and group work, and
providing constructive feedback (p2pu.org).
22
23. The Peer 2 Peer University (P2PU) is a grassroots
open education project that organizes learning
outside of institutional walls and gives learners
recognition for their achievements.
P2PU creates a model for lifelong learning
alongside traditional formal higher education.
Leveraging the internet and educational materials
openly available online, P2PU enables high-quality
low-cost education opportunities.
P2PU - learning for everyone, by everyone about
almost anything.
Source: p2pu.org
23
24. Source: OERU-logic-model.png
apletters.blogspot.com
OER SUPPORT INFRASTRUCTURE
OER university (#oeru)
(#oeru)
Towards free learning opportunities for all
students worldwide
24
25. Open Educational Resources OER include full courses,
(OER) are materials used to
support education that may course materials,
be freely modules,
accessed, textbooks,
reused,
research articles,
modified and
videos, and
shared by anyone.
other materials used to
OER creators own the support education.
intellectual property and
copyrights of the OER they
create.
Source: Guidelines for open educational resources (OER) - Documents ...
unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0021/.../213605e.p...
25
26. An overview of the OER
university concept
depicting a stairway to
success for OER learners.
Source:
http://wikieducator.org/OER_
university/About
26
27. increase access to accelerate learning by
education providing educational resources
provide students with an for just-in-time, direct,
opportunity to assess and informal use by both students
plan their education and self-directed learners
choices add value to knowledge
showcase an institution’s production
intellectual outputs, reduce faculty preparation time
promote it’s profile, and generate cost savings
attract students (particularly substantiated for
convert students exploring open textbooks)
options into fee paying enhance quality
enrollments
generate innovation through
collaboration
27
28. The OER university is a virtual collaboration of like-minded
institutions committed to creating flexible pathways for OER
learners to gain formal academic credit.
The OER university aims to provide free learning to all
students worldwide using OER learning materials with
pathways to gain credible qualifications from recognized
education institutions.
It is rooted in the community service and outreach mission to
develop a parallel learning universe to augment and add value
to traditional delivery systems in post-secondary education.
Through the community service mission of participating
institutions we will open pathways for OER learners to earn
formal academic credit and pay reduced fees for assessment
and credit.
Source: http://wikieducator.org/OER_university/Home 28
29. Source: 6011286486_e3ca009358.jpg
darcymoore.net
2011 Stanford AI MOOC
MOOCs are great opportunities to connect with colleagues from
around the world and develop a broad understanding of topics
from diverse perspectives.
29
30. 1. It reflects the logical next stage of education and
openness: as the course authors state in their intro video,
“we want to teach the world”.
2. Education is ripe for change and transformation and
alternative models, that take advantage of global
connectedness, are important to explore.
3. When traditional universities such as University of Illinois
(eduMOOC) and now Stanford start opening up courses, it’s
reasonable to expect that we’ll be seeing more of these in
the next several years.
4. Finally, learning in a global cohort is an outstanding
experience – networking on steroids!
Source: http://www.elearnspace.org/blog/2011/08/04/stanford-university-does-a-mooc/
30
31. 160,000 registrants worldwide
200 on campus students
Homework, Quizzes, Forums
20,000 completion certificates
The Stanford courses seem to have a
technological innovation in the ability to
rank individuals’ course performance.
31
33. Udacity is a totally new kind of learning experience.
You learn by solving challenging problems and pursuing
udacious projects with world-renowned university instructors
(not by watching long, boring lectures).
At Udacity, we put you, the student, at the center of the
universe.
2012 Udacity: 21st Century University
Udacity:
33
34. Udacity is a private educational organization founded
by Sebastian Thrun, David Stevans, and Mike Sokolsky, with
the stated goal of democratizing education.
It is the outgrowth of free computer science classes offered
in 2011 through Stanford University.
As of June 2012, Udacity has eleven active courses.
Thrun has stated he hopes half a million students will enroll,
after 90,000 students had enrolled in the initial two classes
as of March 2012.
Udacity, announced at the 2012 Digital Life Design
conference, is funded by venture capital firm, Charles River
Ventures, and $200,000 of Thrun's personal money.
34
35. “We believe university-level education can be both high quality
and low cost. Using the economics of the Internet, we've
connected some of the greatest teachers to hundreds of thousands
of students all over the world.”
35
37. “a social entrepreneurship company that partners with the top
universities in the world to offer courses online for anyone to take,
for free. Technology enables the best professors to teach tens or
hundreds of thousands of students.”
“Classes offered on Coursera are designed to help you master the
material: you will watch lectures taught by world-class professors,
learn at your own pace, test your knowledge, and reinforce concepts
through interactive exercises.”
When you join one of Coursera classes, you'll also join a global
community of thousands of students learning alongside you.
July 2012 Coursera offer 111 courses across 16 categories, spanning
the Humanities, Medicine, Biology, Social Sciences, Mathematics,
Business, Computer Science, etc to improve your resume, advance
your career, or just learn more and expand your knowledge.
Source: coursera.org
37
38. Original partners Johns Hopkins University,
Stanford University, University of Toronto,
University of University of Illinois,
Pennsylvania, University of Washington,
Princeton University CalTech,
University of Michigan Rice University,
Duke University,
University of Virginia
University of California San
Francisco,
Georgia Institute of
Technology,
Source: coursera.org
University of Edinburgh,
EPFL (École Polytechnique
Fédérale de Lausanne).
38
39. edX-1.png, gbacademia.com
1.png,
2012 edX
EdX is a joint partnership between The Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT) and Harvard University to offer online learning
to millions of people around the world.
39
40. Harvard and MIT have ploughed $60m into launching the
collaboration.
A range of courses will be made available which will
include:
• video lessons,
• embedded quizzes and
• online labs.
• There will also be opportunities to engage with
classmates and the course instructor.
More than a million students will be taking part in the
experiment – which certainly looks set to fill edX’s
ambitions and “revolutionise” the world of education.
40
42. Anant Agarwal, president of edX, called the initiative a
“revolution”.
“There is a revolution dawning in Boston and beyond.
This revolution has to do with the pen and the mouse.
It’s unbelievable. We will have students around the
world all collaborating and working together.”
Agarwal, who dubbed the partnership the “next big
thing”, says edX will be available to anyone with an
Internet connection and is currently absolutely free.
“Our goal is to educate 1bn people around the world,”
he added. “We’re giving education on a mass scale and
we’re really excited.”
42
43. “The campus environment offers opportunities and
experiences that cannot be replicated online… EdX is
designed to improve, not replace, the campus
experience.” Susan Hockfield (MIT President)
Daphne Koller, co-founder of edX project, says the
development of online courses will raise difficult
questions:
“This is causing universities to rethink their value to
students,”
“The universities in the middle will really have to
think about their proposition.”
43
44. Private university institute for IT Systems Engineering located in Potsdam,
the capital of German state Brandenburg.
HPI have around 450 bachelor and master students and about 100 PhD
students, most of them are teached in HPI research school.
The mission is to teach students to understand, design and run complex IT
systems.
One of the chairs is led by Prof. Hasso Plattner, one of the founders of SAP,
for enterprise systems and integration.
Global Team-based
Product Innovation &
Engineering initiative in
exclusive partnership
with Stanford University.
44
45. • Designed to overcome the limited capacity of HPI physical
campus, by taking a very open approach using the channel
of the World Wide Web.
• With tele-teaching, internet and social network
technologies, HPI want to widely open the doors of HPI to
anyone in the world who is interested in IT systems
engineering, computer science and informatics, to provide
them opportunities to learn and understand the techniques
behind the digital world and what’s coming up there, like
future enterprise computing, emerging database storage
technologies, semantic web technology, etc.
45
47. “We’re going to make a revolution”, Anant
Agarwal, president of edX says without a trace of
irony. “We’re looking to change the world.”
“This is the future, and we must be part of it”.
“I have a feeling that (these kind of courses) will be
a kind of tsunami in the academic world”, Martin
Vetterli, dean of EPFL’s School of Computer and
Communications Sciences.
“It's moving education from a privilege to a right”.
“It's not a question of whether - but how and how
quickly”, Daphne Koller, co-founder of Coursera.
47
48. Six of the top 10 Fortune 500 executives do not have
an Ivy League degree, and 19 of the top 100 worked
their way up to success without a college degree.
Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, Richard Branson, Larry Ellison,
Mark Zuckerberg, just to mention a few, all dropped
out from the traditional educational institutions that
stifled their creativity and influence.
Today, you advance in the world based on your
performance, not a piece of paper declaring your
expertise in "knowing a little about a lot of things."
Employers are hiring for specific, narrow skills that
aren’t fully learned in college and, when they field
monotonously similar resumes, they’re thinking "What
else have you done other than go to college?”
Source: http://www.fastcoexist.com/1679315/does-the-online-education-revolution-mean-the-death-of-the-diploma
48