I miss my MOOC!
I just received my certificate in Tropical Coastal Ecosystems, produced by the University of Queensland on the edX platform. As part of the Center for Instructional Technology at Duke, I usually help create MOOCs. In this case, I was on the other side, as a learner.
Tropic101x is an 8-week course that led us through 6 units of basic information about coastal ecosystem communities, ecosystem services and threats, management and research methods, and a two week virtual field ecology project. I expecting to enjoy the course, because of my interest and the gorgeous underwater video. I did, and I also learned more than I expected, looked forward to the release of new material each week and admired the course design. I’m quite sad the course is over.
Why was this online course so compelling? Well, yes, terrific underwater video, but that’s not enough to sustain 8 weeks of commitment; there’s plenty of video on the internet. Three characteristics of this course made it compelling: clear organization, the diversity of materials and assessments, and frequent assessment with feedback.
Organization
Each of the 6 content sections (equivalent to one week), began with an overview, followed by several topics. Each topic included a variety of related content delivered via different types of videos, scientific papers, meeting reports and websites outside of the course, all organized by the topic theme. Interspersed in the content were Knowledge Acquisition Moments, or KAMs, where we learners could apply our newly-acquired knowledge. We spent the final two weeks of the course on a final project.
Diversity
Assessment
I appreciated several features specific to the edX platform. I could see and use the text transcript to navigate though the videos. Sometimes I did not watch the videos, but read or skimmed the text, occasionally clicking on the text to jump to that section of the video, to see the visuals or hear the explanation. Another nice feature is the “Progress” section of the site, which showed my scores and pass rate in graphical form, and lists all assessments, both graded and ungraded. Although I was not concerned about my grade, I found the graph rewarding.
According to a recent email from the course, it will be relaunched as a “self-paced” course soon. I look forward to visiting it again. And did I mention the gorgeous underwater videos?
This sounds terrific! I’ll have to keep an eye out for the self-paced version.