According
to Simonson et al (2012), “open source software is intended to be freely shared
and can be improved upon and redistributed to others.” There are many schools
such as Yale, Harvard, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Stanford that
are supplying open courses in order to share the information from their schools
to those around the world. Learners who participate in open courses do not
receive a degree just further knowledge on a given topic. An instructional designer still needed to go
through and plan the course so it benefits learners outside of the classroom as
well. The instructional designer on Yale’s open English 291 course (http://oyc.yale.edu/english/engl-291) did a good job but the course could
still use a little bit of work.
One good thing the instructional designer
considered was the learners. The open course allows leaners to download a
transcript of the course in case they are hard of hearing or cannot download
the video. The videos are also available to be downloaded with high or low
bandwidth for those all around the world to be able to watch. Simonson et al (2012) and Dr. Piskurich (Laureate Education, n.d.) state that
it is necessary to always consider the type of technology the learners will
have in order to help them be successful in the course. This is a very
important part of the planning process and the designer for the English 291
open course did a great job.
Another thing the designer looked at
was the students motivation. Many learners who would take this course would
have to be highly motivated to learn about the novels and topics in English 291
since it would require a lot of self regulation and work. Since this would be
an optional course to further someone’s interest in American novels since 1945,
the instructional designer took into consideration that the learners would have
high motivation. This allowed the designer to forego some activities. However, the instructional designer does not
help the learners to transfer the knowledge since they do not allow for
application of material within the open course (Simonson et al, 2012).
Activities that would further
enhance the learning process were missing as well. The lectures for English 291
were recorded and separated into parts for easy stopping and returning so the
learner can go at his or her own pace, but there are no activities provided on
the site to test the learners knowledge or to incorporate them further in the
learning process. The course site also
does not mention anything about what resources should be read or completed
before each lecture—only what was included in the lecture.
It seems that the designer did a lot
of the up front work with the analysis stage of A.D.D.I.E. with some more work
in the design stage but not the full amount. It may not have been up to the
designer to not include these extra activities and Yale’s decision. However,
the instructional designer should have suggested doing some type of quiz at
then end of each video or another activity in order to make the courses worth
the time of the learners
References
Laureate Education (Producer). (n.d.). Planning and designing online courses [Video
file]. Retrieved from https://class.waldenu.edu
Simonson, M.,
Smaldino, S., Albright, M., & Zvacek, S. (2012). Teaching and
learning at a distance: Foundations of distance education (5th ed.)
Boston, MA: Pearson.