• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content

e-Literate

Present is Prologue

  • Home
  • About
  • Get Help (Services)
  • Do More (EEP)
    • ALDA Design/Build Workshop Series
  • un-Webinars
  • Contact
  • Show Search
Hide Search

Combining MOOC Student Patterns Graphic with Stanford Analysis

By Phil Hill. Posted on October 1, 2013

In part 1, part 2, and part 3 of this series of posts on MOOC student patterns, I shared a description of five student patterns emerging from open-enrollment MOOCs (excluding those with an associated student fee) based on anecdotal data.  In part 4 I compared the overall course completion pattern against an MIT study of the first edX […]

Digging into the Purdue Course Signals Results

By Michael Feldstein. Posted on September 26, 2013

Update: Mike has written another post clarifying the intuitions behind his math. The spectacular Mike Caulfield casts a skeptical eye on the Course Signals data: Only a portion of Purdue’s classes are Course Signals classes, so the chance any course a freshman takes is a Course Signals course can be expressed as a percentage, say 25%. […]

Lack of online course evaluation leads to accreditation warning

By Phil Hill. Posted on September 25, 2013

ACCJC, the accrediting commission behind the City College of San Francisco crisis, issued an warning to Honolulu Community College in February of this year, with a report required by October 15. As described in Hawai’i News Now: Honolulu Community College has been placed on warning accreditation status by the Accrediting Commission for Community and Junior […]

Two MOOC curriculum announcements in one week

By Phil Hill. Posted on September 18, 2013

In two apparently unrelated announcements, both MIT and Wharton announced they were moving beyond just courses and putting significant parts of their curriculum into MOOC platforms, both with identity verification. MIT is putting several undergraduate sequences online through MITx (their implementation of  edX), while Wharton business school is putting a “foundation series” of first-year courses […]

Layoffs and reorganization at Blackboard

By Phil Hill. Posted on September 17, 2013

Bill Flook, who covers the DC technology scene for Business Journals, just interviewed Blackboard CEO Jay Bhatt about last week’s layoff. The full article can be found here. From a quick read, it looks like Blackboard is executing on two key priorities: Trimming the fat caused by years of acquisitions and redundant operations; and Completing […]

MOOC Discussion Forums: barrier to engagement?

By Phil Hill. Posted on September 16, 2013

Robert McGuire wrote an article for Campus Technology, Building a Sense of Community in MOOCs, that touches on an important topic – is the centralized discussion forum a barrier to student engagement? But more students can also mean more isolation within the crowd. “Online classes can be really lonely places for students if they don’t feel […]

More Blogging on Automated Essay Grading

By Michael Feldstein. Posted on September 15, 2013

Sometime guest blogger and friend of e-Literate Elijah Mayfield has another great post up on using machine learning tools in the service of improving student writing over at his company blog. However you may feel about the technology, the exploration that he’s doing raises some important question about what good feedback on writing is. This aspect of […]

« Previous Page
Next Page »
Creative Commons License

 

  • Home
  • About
  • Get Help (Services)
  • Do More (EEP)
  • un-Webinars
  • Contact