Ģż
FutureLearn, a multi-institution provider owned by the Open University, announced the details of 20 pilot courses including the schedules for eight which are set to begin between October and December this year.
Most courses will last six to ten weeks, although āmini-Moocsā lasting just two weeks will also be on offer, FutureLearn chief executive Simon Nelson told 51³Ō¹Ļ.
Speaking at the launch, he said that 20,000 students from 158 different countries had registered for courses in the 24 hours since those who had already expressed an interest were able to officially register.
Courses include āFairness And Nature: When Worlds Collideā from the University of Leeds, āThe Secret Power of Brandsā from the University Of East Anglia and a course on āEngland in the Time of King Richard IIIā by University of Leicester.
51³Ō¹Ļ
The first eight courses will also cover building mobile games, human psychology, dental photography, ecosystems and web science.
Mr Nelson said each would provide āreal learning opportunitiesā with universities keen to ensure their first Moocs represented āthe best of what that university could offerā.
51³Ō¹Ļ
Available until early next year in āopen betaā format, the Moocs will be optimised for mobile devices and encourage āsocial learningā.
FutureLearn was set up in December 2012 and includes 23 university partners as well as the British Library, British Museum and British Council.
Speaking at the launch, vice-chancellor of the OU, Martin Bean said: āFor FutureLearn Moocs to succeed in the face of much larger competition, we needed the whole higher education sector to come together, and thatās exactly what has happened.ā
Mr Nelson said FutureLearn was looking forward to āunleashingā some of the OUās thinking and their expertise in a way that took advantage of developments in technology as well as changes in student expectations.
Universities and science minister David Willetts said that although there were currently no formal credentials available through the platform, he was āsureā there would be in the future.
āThe moment will come when someone is applying for a jobā¦and [is] able to say Iāve participated in the following online programme and here is a certificate of completion, and that will be taken seriously by the employer,ā he said.
Mr Willetts stressed the potential role for Moocs in increasing access to higher education and fulfilling the demand that might not be met by ābricks and mortarā conventional education.
51³Ō¹Ļ
He also highlighted the roles they will play as a recruitment tool for universities. āI personally think online learning is more of a challenge to agents recruiting to universities around the world than to universities themselves,ā he said.
51³Ō¹Ļ
The UEAās Mooc will be the first to go live following the launch.
Helena Gillespie, associate dean for learning, teaching and quality in the universityās Faculty of Social Sciences, said UEA saw open online courses as āa key part of the 21st Century higher education experienceā.
Neil Morris, director of digital learning at Leeds, said interest from staff at his institution had been āhugeā with academics coming up with āmore ideas than we can possibly deliverā.
āThere are concernsā¦around issues of assessment and replacement of face-to-face learning. But a large proportion of those answering [a staff survey] could see that a mixture of Moocs with face-to-face delivery would be a good educational experience,ā he said.
Further courses are currently being created with the next wave expected to be unveiled over the coming months. The number of students able to take part in the first phase will be limited.
Learner feedback will be used to inform the on-going development of the website, said Mr Nelson, with the quality of the learner experience being the main criteria of success against which it will be judged.
Although not completing a Mooc will not necessarily be seen as a failure, completion rates would also be measured, he added. āWeāre going to be analysing the hell out of that as a metric alongside dozens of others,ā he said.
Although FutureLearn will announce a few additional partners in coming months, Mr Nelson said that the platform was deliberately starting small and with ābrands that are internationally recognisedā.
51³Ō¹Ļ
āWeāre very happy with the quality of the institutions weāve got and also the size of FutureLearn for the time being, it feels like the right place to start,ā he said.
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to °Õ±į·”ās university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?
