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Monday, March 31, 2014

Moving Forward without a Backward Glance: MOOCs and Technological Innovations | Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice

Moving Forward without a Backward Glance: MOOCs and Technological Innovations | Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice:



Moving Forward without a Backward Glance: MOOCs and Technological Innovations


In a recent commentary on the rock star Sting’s dipping back into his childhood to revitalize his song writing, David Brooks said: “how important it is to ground future vision in historical consciousness.” I agree with Brooks when it comes to the half-life  of technological innovations. The experience of Massive  Open Online Courses (MOOCs) over the past few years is an unexpected example of what Brooks meant.
Much has been written about MOOCs  since they went viral in the past three years (see hereherehere, and here). This vision of creating platforms for college-level courses that would give anyone with an Internet connection access to college courses while reducing ever-escalating costs of higher education has turned some professors into academic entrepreneurs. Here is a two-for-one innovation (increased efficiency and equity) that has married new technologies with global access to higher education. MOOCs spread rapidly among elite institutions (e.g., Harvard, MIT, Stanford) and some second- and third-tier universities. For those familiar with the Gartner hype cycle–which many acolytes of MOOCs somehow either missed or ignored–the first two phases of the cycle were textbook examples:
“Technology Trigger: A potential technology breakthrough kicks