Opportunities and Threats of the MOOC Movement for Higher Education: The European Perspective
Author(s)
Schuwer, Robert; Fontys University of Applied SciencesGil Jaurena, Ines; Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia
Aydin, Cengiz Hakan; Anadolu University
Costello, Eamon; Dublin City University
Dalsgaard, Christian; Danish Association of Open Universities
Brown, Mark; Dublin City University
Jansen, Darco; EADTU
Teixeira, Antonio; Universidade Aberta
Contributor(s)
European Commission, DG EACKeywords
Education; Distance Education; Open Learning; Open Education; Online EducationMOOC; Europe; Opportunities; Threats
Full record
Show full item recordOnline Access
http://www.irrodl.org/index.php/irrodl/article/view/2153Abstract
The Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) movement is the latest ‘big thing’ in Open and Distance Learning (ODL) which threatens to transform Higher Education. Both opportunities and threats are extensively discussed in literature, comprising issues on opening up education for the whole world, pedagogy and online versus campus education. Most of the literature focus on the origin of the MOOC movement in the US. The specific context of Europe with on the one hand autonomous countries and educational systems and on the other hand cross-border cooperation and regulations through the European Union differs from the US context. This specific context can influence the way in which the MOOC movement affect education in Europe, both reusing MOOCs from other continents (US) as publishing MOOCs, on a European platform or outside of Europe. In the context of the EU funded HOME project, a research was conducted to identify opportunities and threats of the MOOC movement on the European institutions of higher education. Three sources of data were gathered and analysed. Opportunities and threats were categorized in two levels. The macro level comprises issues related to the higher education system, European context, historical period and institutional level. The micro level covers aspects related to faculty, professors and courses, thus to the operational level. The main opportunities mentioned were the ECTS system as being a sound base for formal recognition of accomplishments in MOOCs, the tendency to cooperate between institutions, stimulated by EU funded programs and the many innovative pedagogical models used in MOOCs published in Europe. The main threats mentioned were a lacking implementation of the ECTS system, hindering bridging non/formal and formal education and too much regulation, hindering experimenting and innovation.Date
2015-12-03Type
info:eu-repo/semantics/articleIdentifier
oai:www.irrodl.org:article/2153http://www.irrodl.org/index.php/irrodl/article/view/2153
10.19173/irrodl.v16i6.2153
Copyright/License
Copyright (c) 2015 The International Review of Research in Open and Distributed LearningRelated items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Student Leadership Conference Report 2010Santiago, Joseph A; Edmonds, Maxwell; Knoll, Christina (DigitalCommons@URI, 2010-02-17)This is the Student Leadership Conference Attendees Report from the retreat. This is the start of the I AM U-URI Unity in Difference group on campus.
-
The National Council for Higher Education and the Growth of the University Sub-sector in Uganda, 2002-2012Kasozi, A.B.K. (Dakar, SenegalCODESRIA (Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa), 2019-03-25)I am very pleased to write this short forword to this book. It is clear in retrospect
 that the NCHE made considerable contributions to the development of higher
 education in Uganda in the period 2002 to 2012. In that period, a regulatory
 institution was started from scratch, its administrative structure put in place,
 benchmarks for assuring the delivery of quality higher education designed,
 higher education institutions licensed, nurtured, and monitored, research in
 universities encouraged, publications and displays of higher education ideas
 initiated through journals and public exhibitions. The NCHE supervised the
 expansion of universities from ten in 2002 to over thirty in 2012 and a growth
 of enrollment from 80,000 to 180,000 students in the same years. Above all, a
 culture of transparency and integrity in the conducting of public administration
 at the NCHE was established.
-
Cyrillic Manuscript Heritage: Vol. 36Johnson, M.A.; Jones, Jessi; Matejic, Predrag; Haviernikova, Nina; Bloomfield, Kevin J.; Matejic, Predrag; Jones, Jessi; Johnson, M.A.; Matejic, Predrag; Haviernikova, Nina; et al. (The Resource Center for Medieval Slavic Studies, 2015-02-20)Biannual newsletter of the Hilandar Research Library (HRL) and the Resource Center for Medieval Slavic Studies (RCMSS), The Ohio State University. Includes: features by guest contributors, which may appear under the column heading of "HRL Journal" – where Cyrillic Manuscript Heritage asks researchers who have used the resources of the HRL in the past year to describe their experience and work; a column, "Director's Desk," by the Director of RCMSS; "RCMSS & HRL News Notes," i.e., reports on recent visitors, research, events, exhibits, projects, updates, etc.; contributors to both the Hilandar Endowment Fund and Hilandar's Friends of the Library Fund are listed, as are donors of "Gifts in Kind." Also included may be seasonal announcements regarding the International Hilandar Conference series and the Medieval Slavic Summer Institute.