Bültmann & Gerriets
Massive Open Online Courses and Higher Education
What Went Right, What Went Wrong and Where to Next?
von Rebecca Bennett, Mike Kent
Verlag: Taylor & Francis
E-Book / PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM


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ISBN: 978-1-317-09961-1
Erschienen am 21.04.2017
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 206 Seiten

Preis: 54,99 €

Klappentext
Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis

This is the first volume that addresses Massive Open Online Courses from a post-MOOC perspective. We move beyond the initial hype and revolutionary promises of the peak-MOOC period and take a sober look at what remains. The book explores the future of the MOOC in higher education by examining what went right, what went wrong and where to now for the massification of higher education and online learning. The chapters in this collection address these questions from a wide variety of different backgrounds, methodologies and regional perspectives. They explore learner experiences, the move towards course for credit, innovative design, transformations and implications of the MOOC in turn.



Rebecca Bennett is the Academic Support Programs Coordinator in the Kulbardi Aboriginal Centre at Murdoch University, Australia. She is a cross-disciplinary academic whose research and teaching interests include Cultural Studies and the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning. She has authored journal articles on critical tourism, digital pedagogy, academic identity, cross-cultural communication and queer/international student intersections.

Mike Kent is a senior lecturer and Head of Department of Internet Studies at Curtin University, Western Australia. Mike's research focus is on higher education, particularly online education, as well as online social networking platforms. His other area of interest is in people with disabilities and their use of, and access to, information technology and the internet.



1. What was all that about? Peak MOOC hype and post-MOOC legacies

Mike Kent and Rebecca Bennett

Part 1 - Barriers and opportunities

2. Any colour as long as it's black! MOOCs, (post)-Fordism and inequality

Rebecca Bennett and Mike Kent

3. Envisioning post-colonial MOOCs: Critiques and ways forward

Maha Ayham Bali and Shyam Sharma

4. Global footprints and localisation: The rise of MOOCs in China

Xin Wang

5. MOOCs for credit: Making the idea work

Jenny Ng and Leanne McRae

Part 2 - Teachers' and students' insights and experiences

6. Autoethnography: The story of 'doing a MOOC' or knowing 'the beast' from within

Melanie James

7. Exploring 'success' in MOOCs: Participants' perspective

Tharindu Rekha Liyanagunawardena, Partrick Parslow and Shirley Ann Williams

8. Learning from learners: How one MOOC's social media engagement created new insights

Sara Moseley and Hannah Scarbrough

9. Developing a MOOC: Factoring in disability

Louisa Smith, Karen Soldatic, Leanne Dowse and Mike Kent

Part 3 - Where to next?

10. Mentored open online communicites (MOOCs) as a third space for teaching and learning in higher education

Sue Ringler Pet, Katarina Silvestri, Stephanie Loomis, W. Ian O'Byrne and William Kist

11. Reframing MOOCs in higher education: Exploring professional development options

Vanessa P. Dennen and Jiyae Bong

12. The Selfie Course: More than a MOOC

Kath Albury, Tama Leaver, Alice Marwick, Jill Walker Rettberg and Theresa Senft


andere Formate