One of the adaptations needed when participation in a MOOC grows and crosses international lines is the need for translation into other languages. Simon Thrun and Peter Norvig of Stanford taught one of the earliest MOOCs, Introduction to Artificial Intelligence (Rodriguez, 2012). It was offered free to anyone in the world, and attracted 160,000 enrollees. Of those, 20,000 from 190 different countries completed the course. With the help of more than 2,000 volunteers, the course was translated into 44 different languages (Murray, 2012). In an unplanned, grassroots movement, many participants connected on social media as well, in languages other than English, making the MOOC both more accessible and more relevant to their needs (Murray, 2012).
Coursera (https://www.coursera.org/) provides an ongoing example of an approach to overcoming geographinc, linguistic, and cultural boundaries. Coursera is a non-profit organization started out of
https://www.coursera.org/ |
MOOCs and translation projects like the ones cited here have shown the potential to build language bridges across spans that would otherwise have seemed impassable. The nature of MOOCs leads to collaborative solving of the inherent language issues of the Internet.
References
Beaven, T., Comas-Quinn, A., Arcos, B. de los, & Hauck, M. (2013). The Open Translation MOOC: creating online communities to transcend linguistic barriers. In OER 13 Creating a virtuous circle (pp. 26–27). Nottingham. Retrieved from http://oro.open.ac.uk.libproxy.boisestate.edu/37583/1/980574D7.pdf
Haynie, D. (June 25, 2013). 5 Reasons International Students Should Consider MOOCs. US News and World Reports. Retrieved from http://www.usnews.com/education/online-education/articles/2013/06/25/5-reasons-international-students-should-consider-moocs
Murray, P. (2012). Sebastian Thrun aims to revolutionize university education with Udacity. Retrieved from http://singularityhub.com/2012/01/28/sebastian-thrun-aims-to-revolutionize-university-education-with-udacity/.
Omollo, K. L. (2013). New language captions for health videos: Translation update. Blog post March 22, 2013. Retrieved from https://open.umich.edu/blog/2013/03/22/new-language-captions-for-health-videos-translation-update/.
Rodriguez, O. (2012). MOOCs and the AI-Stanford like Courses: two successful and distinct course formats for massive open online courses. European Journal of Open, Distance, and E-Learning, 1–13. Retrieved from http://www.eurodl.org/materials/contrib/2012/Rodriguez.htm
4 comments:
Hi Molly and Dennis,
I don't know a lot about MOOCs and am looking forward to reading your paper. How fascinating to have people from so many countries taking the same course at the same time! I know you probably won't be addressing this, but I'm wondering about the business model. How do people/colleges/organizations make money if they are giving everything away? I have been wondering about that more and more lately given the many free conferences and classes that I have stumbled across.
Hi Dennis and Molly. I've done some research on MOOCs, though I haven't directly participated in one yet. Maybe you remember I talked about them as part of my Leadership paper I did last semester. If you want you can take a look at my paper again at this link http://goo.gl/LPcpIu. I especially recommend this article which describes the differences between xMOOCs and cMOOCs http://publications.cetis.ac.uk/2013/667
I'm sure you two will explore them in much more depth than I went. I look forward to reading your report.
Patty, I don't know about all of the business models. But here is one thing that some of those universities do: They let you enroll in the MOOC for free without being an "actual" student of the university. That means you can complete the MOOC course, but you will not be getting credits from Stanford (Or whichever university is hosting the MOOC). You have to be a Stanford (for example) student, paying regular fees/tuition in order to get credit from the university.
Anthony, thank you for sharing that. No doubt that will help us with our paper!
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