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Engaging with massive online courses

Published:07 April 2014Publication History

ABSTRACT

The Web has enabled one of the most visible recent developments in education---the deployment of massive open online courses. With their global reach and often staggering enrollments, MOOCs have the potential to become a major new mechanism for learning. Despite this early promise, however, MOOCs are still relatively unexplored and poorly understood.

In a MOOC, each student's complete interaction with the course materials takes place on the Web, thus providing a record of learner activity of unprecedented scale and resolution. In this work, we use such trace data to develop a conceptual framework for understanding how users currently engage with MOOCs. We develop a taxonomy of individual behavior, examine the different behavioral patterns of high- and low-achieving students, and investigate how forum participation relates to other parts of the course.

We also report on a large-scale deployment of badges as incentives for engagement in a MOOC, including randomized experiments in which the presentation of badges was varied across sub-populations. We find that making badges more salient produced increases in forum engagement.

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    • Published in

      cover image ACM Other conferences
      WWW '14: Proceedings of the 23rd international conference on World wide web
      April 2014
      926 pages
      ISBN:9781450327442
      DOI:10.1145/2566486

      Copyright © 2014 Copyright is held by the International World Wide Web Conference Committee (IW3C2).

      Publisher

      Association for Computing Machinery

      New York, NY, United States

      Publication History

      • Published: 7 April 2014

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      WWW '14 Paper Acceptance Rate84of645submissions,13%Overall Acceptance Rate1,899of8,196submissions,23%

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