By Morten Flate Paulsen
In Reflections after 25 years with online teaching I wrote about some of the long time trends in online education. In such a long perspective, the following five developments are promising, but immature. One important challenge is how learning
providers could develop sustainable business models to maintain these services
as an important part of the future learning environment.
Open Educational Resources (OER)
Open educational resources (OERs) are freely
accessible documents and media resources that are useful for teaching,
learning, education, assessment and research purposes. These resources are
growing in numbers, usefullness and popularity along with international,
national and institutional support. UNESCO has for example named several
prominent open education institutions as Chairs of OER. Another example is the
European POERUP project (www.poerup.info/)
that provides national surveys of available OERs.
Social neetworks and Web2.0 services
Online learners are facing a growing number of social
networks and web2.0 services that can be used for flexible and informal
learning. The social networks provide access to experts and peers that can be
very helpful for advice and learning. The Web2.0 services allow people to share
a vast diversity of multimedial learning resources. Some of these opportunities
are for example discussed in the article “Transparency in Cooperative Online
Education” http://www.irrodl.org/index.php/irrodl/article/view/671/1267
Personal learning environments (PLEs)
All the open educational resources, social networks and
web2.0 services allow people to set up their personal learning environments
(PLEs) according to their interests, learning styles and ambitions. This is
both an oppurtunity and a challenge for the individual learner, as well as a
challenge for the traditional educational institutions and providers that are
used to be in control of the curriculum.
Open Badges
One challenge related to all the available OER and informal
learning in the social networks is how this informal learning could be
acknowledged and sertified. As a result of this the open badge movement (See
for example http://openbadges.org and http://badgestack.com/) which challenge the
traditional education institutions “monopoly” in issuing certificates and
diplomas.
Moocs
Moocs are Massive Open Online Courses, and there is a
growing number of such courses that could be of interest for adult learners.
The design of and participation in a MOOC may be similar to college or
university courses, but MOOCs typically do not offer credits awarded to paying
students at schools. The open badge initiatives could therefore be of special
interest for Moocs. More information on moocs is available on http://mooc.ca/ and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Massive_open_online_course
My suggestions (you can probably find more...)
SvarSlett• Game-based learning which helps students to engage in the learning process
• More universities will offer online learning as a strategic institutional approach
• Tablet and mobile Learning, despite than the adoption of tablets in education may be a slow process
• Hybrid learning or Blended learning combining in-classroom with online learning
• Affordable tuition options
• Given the financial crisis, the online learning can become an attractive option