From Disruption to Innovation: Thoughts on the Future of MOOCs

  • Sherman Young Macquarie University
Keywords: innovation, MOOC, digital age, disruption, connectivism, network, Silicon Valley, curricular design, xMOOC, cMOOC

Abstract

MOOCs have been heralded by some as disruptive of the higher education sector, but the reality is that they are examples of business rather than educational innovation. By enabling universities to focus on global scale and reach as they navigate the digital environment, current MOOCs largely sustain existing learning practices rather than force pedagogical reconfiguration. Implementations to date have largely focussed on content delivery from superstar professors with little emphasis on the real needs of twenty-first century learners. We have reached a stage when all of our educational approaches need to be better suited for a new information ecology that has demonstrably different characteristics from the past. Information scarcity has given way to ubiquity and learners need the appropriate skills to thrive in a digital life and career—creativity, critical thinking, collaboration and communication. Whilst real innovation to address these challenges is already happening in both fully online and blended offerings at some institutions, they are not so common in the MOOC space. This paper argues that MOOCs offer an opportunity to truly disrupt learning at scale and become exemplars for real educational innovation.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.
Published
2018-11-19
How to Cite
Young, Sherman. 2018. “From Disruption to Innovation: Thoughts on the Future of MOOCs”. Voprosy Obrazovaniya / Educational Studies Moscow, no. 4 (November), 21-43. https://doi.org/10.17323/1814-9545-2018-4-21-43.
Section
Innovation and disruption in the digital age