TY - JOUR
T1 - Large scale analytics of global and regional MOOC providers
T2 - Differences in learners’ demographics, preferences, and perceptions
AU - Ruipérez-Valiente, José A.
AU - Staubitz, Thomas
AU - Jenner, Matt
AU - Halawa, Sherif
AU - Zhang, Jiayin
AU - Despujol, Ignacio
AU - Maldonado-Mahauad, Jorge
AU - Montoro, German
AU - Peffer, Melanie
AU - Rohloff, Tobias
AU - Lane, Jenny
AU - Turro, Carlos
AU - Li, Xitong
AU - Pérez-Sanagustín, Mar
AU - Reich, Justin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Authors
PY - 2022/4
Y1 - 2022/4
N2 - Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) remarkably attracted global media attention, but the spotlight has been concentrated on a handful of English-language providers. While Coursera, edX, Udacity, and FutureLearn received most of the attention and scrutiny, an entirely new ecosystem of local MOOC providers was growing in parallel. This ecosystem is harder to study than the major players: they are spread around the world, have less staff devoted to maintaining research data, and operate in multiple languages with university and corporate regional partners. To better understand how online learning opportunities are expanding through this regional MOOC ecosystem, we created a research partnership among 15 different MOOC providers from nine countries. We gathered data from over eight million learners in six thousand MOOCs, and we conducted a large-scale survey with more than 10 thousand participants. From our analysis, we argue that these regional providers may be better positioned to meet the goals of expanding access to higher education in their regions than the better-known global providers. To make this claim we highlight three trends: first, regional providers attract a larger local population with more inclusive demographic profiles; second, students predominantly choose their courses based on topical interest, and regional providers do a better job at catering to those needs; and third, many students feel more at ease learning from institutions they already know and have references from. Our work raises the importance of local education in the global MOOC ecosystem, while calling for additional research and conversations across the diversity of MOOC providers.
AB - Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) remarkably attracted global media attention, but the spotlight has been concentrated on a handful of English-language providers. While Coursera, edX, Udacity, and FutureLearn received most of the attention and scrutiny, an entirely new ecosystem of local MOOC providers was growing in parallel. This ecosystem is harder to study than the major players: they are spread around the world, have less staff devoted to maintaining research data, and operate in multiple languages with university and corporate regional partners. To better understand how online learning opportunities are expanding through this regional MOOC ecosystem, we created a research partnership among 15 different MOOC providers from nine countries. We gathered data from over eight million learners in six thousand MOOCs, and we conducted a large-scale survey with more than 10 thousand participants. From our analysis, we argue that these regional providers may be better positioned to meet the goals of expanding access to higher education in their regions than the better-known global providers. To make this claim we highlight three trends: first, regional providers attract a larger local population with more inclusive demographic profiles; second, students predominantly choose their courses based on topical interest, and regional providers do a better job at catering to those needs; and third, many students feel more at ease learning from institutions they already know and have references from. Our work raises the importance of local education in the global MOOC ecosystem, while calling for additional research and conversations across the diversity of MOOC providers.
KW - Cultural factors
KW - Distance learning
KW - Educational data mining
KW - Equity
KW - Large scale analytics
KW - Learning analytics
KW - Massive open online courses
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85122502949
U2 - 10.1016/j.compedu.2021.104426
DO - 10.1016/j.compedu.2021.104426
M3 - Artículo
AN - SCOPUS:85122502949
SN - 0360-1315
VL - 180
JO - Computers and Education
JF - Computers and Education
M1 - 104426
ER -