Factors leading to effective teaching of MOOCs

Author:

Wong Billy Tak-ming

Abstract

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to survey the factors which facilitate effective teaching through massive open online courses (MOOCs). Design/methodology/approach A descriptive meta-analysis was conducted to first examine the literature covering the characteristics of teaching in MOOCs, the profile of participants, the instructional design of course materials and/or the course assessment methods – and then to summarise the factors which are conducive to the teaching effectiveness of MOOCs. A random sample of MOOCs was then reviewed to sort out the extent to which the factors can be identified in these courses. Findings The factors leading to effective teaching of MOOCs revolve around six areas according to the stages of course delivery, namely, preparation, attraction, participation, interaction, consolidation and post-course support. They address the application of technology to achieve educational purposes, while coping with the potentials and constraints of the MOOC environment. In practice, however, existing MOOCs show varying degrees of the implementation of the factors. Research limitations/implications As this is an exploratory study summarising and categorising the factors, further work should be done, in particular on the proper adoption of these factors in teaching, their effectiveness and ways of assessing such effectiveness. Originality/value The factors identified will help institutions and academics who plan to offer MOOCs to be aware of how teaching can be best delivered to promote effective student learning.

Publisher

Emerald

Reference49 articles.

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3. MOOC pedagogy: gleaning good practice from existing MOOCs;MERLOT Journal of Online Learning and Teaching,2014

4. Bremer, C. (2012), “New format for online courses: the open course future of learning”, paper presented at the eLearning Baltics (eLBa 2012), Rostock, pp. 63-90.

5. Bremer, C. and Weiss, D. (2013), “How to analyze participation in a (C)MOOC”, paper presented at the International Conference on Education and New Learning Technologies (EDULEARN13), Barcelona, pp. 992-1002.

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