- Scholarly Journal
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Webinar with John Covach (May 1, 2014)
[1] At colleges and universities across North America, online education is a topic that has generated a significant amount of discussion in the past year or so. In many ways, the idea of online education is only the most recent version of something that got its start in the nineteenth century: the correspondence course. (1) The development of radio and television in the twentieth century, and then the rise of the internet over the last twenty years, has made it possible to conduct courses with far less time lag than was present in the early days of distance learning, when lessons and assignments were carried by surface mail. Each issue of the Chronicle of Higher Education seems to bring word of some new development or wrinkle in the rapid development of online courses, and perhaps no topic is more controversial than MOOCs (Massive Open Online Courses). (2) While many embrace the idea that MOOCs make college-level learning available to thousands who would otherwise not have pragmatic access to it, others worry that MOOCs threaten to put traditional college courses out of business.(3)
[2] In February 2013, the University of Rochester officially joined Coursera, one of the largest providers of MOOCs in the world.(4) The university had considered several options regarding online education, some of these claiming to offer the prospect of revenue generation and increased ease and flexibility for students, as well as the possibility of functioning as an alternative to conventional classes and counting for credit. In choosing to partner with Coursera, the university chose to place availability of knowledge above the concern for revenue: Rochester MOOCs are free, open to anyone who wants to enroll, and do not count for college credit. (5)
[3] I was chosen to teach one of our first MOOCs and based my Coursera courses on the History of Rock class I currently teach at the University of Rochester. Coursera recommends that regular semester courses of twelve or more weeks be broken up into six- to eight-week courses. Accordingly, History of Rock Part 1 runs seven weeks, while History of Rock Part 2 is six weeks in length. The courses are offered consecutively, with Part 2 immediately following Part 1; students electing the sequence thus have a similar experience to those taking the regular semester-length course at Rochester. Coursera has found that students tend not to stick with lectures that extend longer than about fifteen minutes; they strongly recommend breaking up the week's lectures into a series of shorter videos. Correspondingly, within each week of my courses there are several lectures, each ranging from about five minutes up to fifteen minutes in length, making a total of about ninety minutes of lecture each week. Students can either stream the videos from the Coursera site or download the videos for later viewing offline. Coursera also suggests putting a quick quiz at the end of each of these videos, and perhaps one in the middle as well. I decided to use these quizzes as an opportunity to review the main points of each video rather than test details from the lecture.
[4] Consider the following video, which is drawn from Week Four of Part 1, "The Beatles and The British Invasion (1964-66)." This video discusses the development of Beatles music from what I call a "craftsman" approach to an "artist" approach. It is the fifth of ten videos from that week of the course.
Video. "The Beatles from Craftsmen to Artists"
The following quiz appears at the very end of the video, after the lecture has concluded but just before the copyright notices.(6) The correct answers are shown with asterisks.
Which of the following statements describe the career of the Beatles and rock authenticity as discussed in the video (mark all that apply)?
*The idea of authenticity in rock music means that artists write their own songs and play their own instruments on recordings. The songs are thought to represent "who you are."
*The Beatles shifted from an approach that reflected a "craft" in making their music to one increasingly dominated by the "artist" model.
The Beatles rejected most of Bob Dylan's work, finding it pretentious and vague.
As you can see, all three responses deal with the most general points made in the video-authenticity, craft to art, and Dylan's influence. If a student does not answer the question correctly, s/he can try again until the correct answer is submitted or even skip the quiz altogether. These quizzes do not figure into the grade and thus serve only as study aids.
[5] Each of the videos that make up both of the courses (sixty-two in Part 1, fifty-four in Part 2) was recorded once and they were done in sequence. I stopped a few times to redo sections, but mostly the lectures were delivered as one would in class-straight through and without stopping. You may notice that I seem to be looking off camera to my left at certain points; I have a music stand just out of the shot containing my lecture notes. As I soon found, the notes had to be much more detailed than the ones I would normally use in class because the video format is far less forgiving of inaccurate data. In class you can admit you're not sure of a fact and maybe have a student look it up while you lecture; but in the videos it has to be right the first time. From this perspective, the lectures are more like a textbook than a typical in-class teaching presentation.
[6] The grades for each course are based on quizzes taken at two-week intervals. These quizzes are automated, with all grading done by the Coursera software and with students able to take each exam up to three times (the highest grade is the one that counts). Students who earn 70% or more of the available points receive a Statement of Accomplishment; those who score 90% or more receive a Statement with distinction. (8) There is a discussion forum for the course; each week I post three questions and students will often pose their own as well. Participation on the forum, however, does not figure into the grade. Though students may receive Statements of Accomplishment, no student earns college credit from Coursera or the University of Rochester.
[7] History of Rock Parts 1 and 2 were offered over the summer of 2013 with a combined enrollment of over 70,000.(9) Of those enrolled, approximately 44,000 (63%) participated actively. Video views surpassed one million and downloads topped 600,000 . Most students seem to have watched the videos without taking the exams, or maybe only watched the videos that interested them. Less than 10% of the students participated in the discussion forums, though even that level of engagement created a tremendous amount of traffic on the hundreds of threads. At the conclusion of Part 1 we awarded 4747 Statements of Accomplishment, 1460 of those with distinction; for Part 2 we awarded 3545 Statements, 2978 with distinction.. These numbers are roughly consistent with other Coursera courses.
[8] Preparing and teaching this two-course sequence was a lot of work. Simply filming the videos took about 40 hours overall (three hours for each week of the course), while preparing the notes took another 52 hours (four hours for each week). Creating the individual quizzes for each video and the exams required 40 additional hours, with another 26 hours used to monitor the discussion forum and take care of other kinds of online course details. That brings the total time to prepare the course to approximately 158 hours. The video editing and photo research was done by University of Rochester staff, as was a significant portion of the interfacing with Coursera and the course software. (10) These combined tasks add perhaps as much as 300 hours to the total time required to mount a thirteen-week MOOC. Of course, once this work is done, subsequent sections of the course require only a few hours per week of maintenance; the course becomes a bit like a machine that can run almost on its own (or so one hopes).
[9] While I would not recommend this workload for any untenured faculty member, I do not hesitate to admit that teaching this MOOC was one of the most gratifying experiences in my teaching career.(11) One of the things that made this experience so positive for me was the ownership the students took in the course. From the opening moments, the students began answering each other's questions and solving problems that arose. For instance, we could not play or post any music in the course because of copyright restrictions. I worried how this was going to work out once I started mentioning songs in the lectures. But almost immediately students began posting playlists in the discussion forum, employing various servers to get all the music posted (including a server in Russia). One fantastic student began a Facebook page, where students engaged in discussion, shared playlists and video links, and created a community dedicated to the course content with a seriousness of purpose that would gladden the heart of any teacher. It was clear that the course mattered a lot to these students and they were working very hard at it. (12)
[10] There were some surprises regarding the geographic and demographic data on the students.(13) About 68% of the students resided outside of the United States.(14) About 33% of the students were between the ages of 22 and 29, with another 16% in the 30-39 age range. 35% of the students had already earned a bachelor's degree; 26% held a master's and 5% held a doctorate. If those percentages reflect the active students, that would mean that more than half the students are not college undergraduates, and most are not Americans. For those concerned that MOOCs will replace undergraduate college courses in North America, these figures offer some consolation. In terms of gender, 53% of the students were male and 47% female.
[11]There are certainly significant pedagogical limitations to the MOOC format, the most obvious being the lack of real-time interaction with students. The format of the testing also makes it very difficult to employ anything other than multiple-choice or fill-in-the-blanks questions. (15) It is possible to have students write papers, and Coursera reports good results with peer-graded papers (the students grade one another). Ultimately it is the sheer number of students that makes it very difficult to replace the traditional college classroom experience with a MOOC, at least when it comes to humanities courses. Add to this that Coursera is what one might call a "free culture," meaning that the course itself should be as cost-free as possible. This makes requiring a textbook that students must purchase an unpractical option.
[12] My experience has caused me to stop thinking of the MOOC as an alternative to the traditional college course. It is rather something like a very organized series of public lectures based on the structure of a college course. MOOCs are most valuable as a way of bringing the wealth of knowledge we produce and preserve in the academy to the broadest possible public-something, it must be admitted, we probably do not do enough. I use my MOOC video lectures in my regular course at Rochester now; I assign these lectures to students and this frees up class time to focus on particular pieces and discussions that we might not otherwise have gotten to. (16) In fact, I can imagine that a "MOOC-plus" approach-a scheme whereby a MOOC (or part of one) would be employed as part of a regular, credit-earning course-might well be a part of awarding college credit more broadly in the future.(17)
[13] The future of online education is rapidly developing; what it may look like even a year from now is uncertain. It is clear, however, that online education is not going away, at least not in the United States. Last December, thirteen-year olds all across the country got iPads or some other tablet device as holiday gifts. These young people may not be in our classrooms yet, but in a few years they will be. And when they arrive, they will prefer to work from their handheld device (rather than a textbook) and they will be comfortable absorbing content online. They will be veterans of Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, Instagram, and whatever else pops up between now and then. They may even hope that college is a series of TED lectures. It's up to us to be ready for them: love it or hate it, this technology is coming. We are probably wise to own it before it owns us.