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Are Micro Community Courses (MiCCs) the future of online education?
Coursera, Udacity and edX sprang up nearly a decade ago as high-profile university experiments known as MOOCs, for massive open online courses. They were portrayed as tech-fueled insurgents destined to disrupt the antiquated ways of traditional higher education. But few people completed courses, grappling with the same challenges now facing student... See more
Steve Lohr • Remember the MOOCs? After Near-Death, They’re Booming (Published 2020)
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Online education 1.0 featured MOOCs, which were akin to banner ads in the early days of the internet - a clumsy attempt to bring the offline paradigm online. 1.0 was the Wild West - fragmented, scam-ridden, noisy, and uncredentialed. A much-cited MIT study highlighted MOOCs’ abysmal 4% completion rate.
Packy McCormick • Hamilton & Disney's Education Flywheel (Audio Edition)
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Online education 2.0 is about group courses, community, vocational training, and edutainment. A lot of smart people are experimenting with new approaches. Teachable is taking the Shopify approach of “arming the rebels” by enabling anyone to easily set up an online course. David Perell, Tiago Forte and Nat Eliason are building online-first schools f... See more
Packy McCormick • Hamilton & Disney's Education Flywheel (Audio Edition)
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Large class live instruction combined with peer group collaboration can lower the price of delivery by an order of magnitude, but is much more engaging than MOOC-style courses.
John Danner • Education Trends 2020 Part 1/4
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self-development, intellectual curiosity, and peer-learning, these communities have widely varying business models, from freemium to premium.
Anne-Laure Le Cunff • The state of personal knowledge management
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Education 3.0 created companies that were designed to replicate the social experience of college, a book club, or group class online. Part of the fun of learning a new skill is the social aspect, which is lost on 99% of edtech startups who think too transactionally and — dare I say — too efficiently.
Greg Isenberg • The Unbundling of Udemy
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What if new technologies could allow us to understand the varied backgrounds, goals, and learning styles of our students—and provide educational material customized to their unique needs? What if we could deliver education to students via on-demand platforms that allowed them to study whenever, wherever, and whatever they desired, instead of requir... See more
Michael D. Smith • Are Universities Going the Way of CDs and Cable TV?
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