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Engaged learning in MOOCs: a study using the UK Engagement Survey

Engaged learning in MOOCs: a study using the UK Engagement Survey
Engaged learning in MOOCs: a study using the UK Engagement Survey
This study sets out to answer the question: how can we know what learning is taking place in MOOCs? From this starting point, the study then looks to identify MOOCs’ potential for future use in HE? Using a specially-adapted version of the HEA’s UK Engagement Survey (UKES) 2014, the research team at the University of Southampton asked participants who had completed one of two MOOCs delivered through the FutureLearn platform and designed and run at the university about their experiences as learners and their engagement with their respective MOOC. The results also show that both of the MOOCs were successful in enabling many participants to feel engaged in intellectual endeavours such as forming new understandings, making connections with previous knowledge and experience, and exploring knowledge actively, creatively and critically. In response to the open access approach – in which no one taking part in a MOOC is required to have a minimum level of previous educational achievement - the report shows that persistent learners engaged, regardless of prior educational attainment.
Higher Education Academy
Wintrup, Julie
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Wakefield, Kelly
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Davis, Hugh C.
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Wintrup, Julie
9f1df4c7-aae8-4d0e-9176-8e33b7417370
Wakefield, Kelly
dbccdc42-41c0-40d0-a41d-ffa4efa01a92
Davis, Hugh C.
1608a3c8-0920-4a0c-82b3-ee29a52e7c1b

Wintrup, Julie, Wakefield, Kelly and Davis, Hugh C. (2015) Engaged learning in MOOCs: a study using the UK Engagement Survey York, GB. Higher Education Academy 72pp.

Record type: Monograph (Working Paper)

Abstract

This study sets out to answer the question: how can we know what learning is taking place in MOOCs? From this starting point, the study then looks to identify MOOCs’ potential for future use in HE? Using a specially-adapted version of the HEA’s UK Engagement Survey (UKES) 2014, the research team at the University of Southampton asked participants who had completed one of two MOOCs delivered through the FutureLearn platform and designed and run at the university about their experiences as learners and their engagement with their respective MOOC. The results also show that both of the MOOCs were successful in enabling many participants to feel engaged in intellectual endeavours such as forming new understandings, making connections with previous knowledge and experience, and exploring knowledge actively, creatively and critically. In response to the open access approach – in which no one taking part in a MOOC is required to have a minimum level of previous educational achievement - the report shows that persistent learners engaged, regardless of prior educational attainment.

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More information

Published date: 22 January 2015
Organisations: Web & Internet Science, Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 373640
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/373640
PURE UUID: 491351cb-d736-43fd-94cc-0664d82e76de
ORCID for Hugh C. Davis: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1182-1459

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 23 Jan 2015 09:34
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:36

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Contributors

Author: Julie Wintrup
Author: Kelly Wakefield
Author: Hugh C. Davis ORCID iD

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