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A phenomenology of learning large: the tutorial sphere of xMOOC video lectures
Authors:Catherine Adams  Yin Yin  Luis Francisco Vargas Madriz  C. Scott Mullen
Affiliation:1. Department of Secondary Education, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canadacaadams@ualberta.ca;3. Department of Secondary Education, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada;4. Department of Educational Psychology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada
Abstract:The current discourse surrounding Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) is powerful. Despite their rapid and widespread deployment, research has yet to confirm or refute some of the bold claims rationalizing the popularity and efficacy of these large-scale virtual learning environments. Also, MOOCs’ reputed disruptive, game-changing potential for education remains unsubstantiated. A sober counterbalance is needed, in particular, via attending to students’ everyday accounts of the complex realities of learning in these massive online courses. This article reports on an exploratory, phenomenological study of the xMOOC learning experience. Our interest was not the xMOOC experience of students in general, but in its singular, lived particularities. What we discovered was a unique and intimate tutorial sphere that seemed to develop for some xMOOC students in the context of the video lectures, an experience sometimes marked by a sense of fandom surround.
Keywords:eventedness  MOOCs  phenomenology  student–teacher relation  tutorial sphere  video lectures
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