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The MOOC Revolution That Wasn't

An anonymous reader writes: Dan Friedman at TechCrunch is ready to call Massive Open Online Courses a failure. Originally hailed as a revolution in learning, MOOCs have seen disappointing course completion numbers. Coursera and Udacity, two of the most prominent online learning hubs, have seen about 8 million enrollments in the past few years. Unfortunately, half of those students didn't even watch a single lecture, and only a few hundred thousand completed the course they signed up for.

Friedman says, "[N]ew technologies enable methods of "learn by doing" that just weren't possible before we could deliver immersive experiences to people's laptops and phones. In the 1960's, Jerome Bruner expanded an educational theory known as constructivism with the idea that students should learn through inquiry under the guidance of a teacher to grasp complex ideas intuitively. That process of trial, failure, and then being shown the correct path has been proven to drive student motivation and retention of learning. What we don't yet know is if that process of trial and failure can become 10x more engaging when delivered through a new medium such as Minecraft or Oculus. ... These new immersive worlds promise to hold the attention of students in ways textbooks never could."

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  1. I can explain the failure[s] by bogaboga · · Score: 2, Funny

    Well I have a theory. I has help up in all circumstances I have observed over the few decades I have spent as a tax paying citizen.

    When things are free, expected outcomes, which would generally benefit subject populations never materialize..."

    I have a few examples:

    1: Collapse of the Canadian cod fishery industry

    2: The extreme stress experienced by the so called "socialist" medical care system wherever it can be found. Result will be failure inevitably.

    3: The obvious poor quality elementary and post elementary pupils western countries produce compared to kids from the Asian subcontinent where monies paid by hard-working parents, or even students themselves.

    4: Hunger in some so called underdeveloped countries where starvation is obvious in the midst of lush green vegetation.