ONBOARDING XMOOC PROJECT TEAMS
Designing learning for professional development
Abstract
Purpose: The goal was to design and test a best-practice Onboarding approach, informed by
literature and an instructor survey, to address challenges in executing MOOC projects,
and to improve the Onboarding experience for MOOC instructors and project teams.
Theory: The author compiled challenges and best practices into the ADDIE framework as
inspiration for selecting critical learning objectives for an Onboarding curriculum,
employing the 70-20-10 model (McCall, Lombardo, Lombardo, & Morrison, 1988).
Iterative design techniques were informed by thoughtful interaction design
(Stolterman & Löwgren, 2004). Evaluation of a beta prototype was conducted using
the framework proposed by (McKenney & Reeves, 2012)
Method: The project team previewed the alpha prototypes of a MetaMOOC learning design.
The beta prototype was developed with indicative content and formally evaluated
with five experts using qualitative interviews. Coding of the feedback included
categories to inform future iterations.
Results: Evaluations of the beta prototype learning (formative) objectives and content provided
showed these to be largely appropriate with suggested improvements. The design
(summative) objectives were proven to be unrealistic. The author recommends a more
comprehensive curriculum as well as project management toolkit, spanning the entire
project lifecycle.
Degree
Student essay
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2020-11-17Author
Hull, Kristin Erika
Keywords
MOOC
instructor
onboard
ADDIE
70-20-10
constructive alignment
TPACK
Series/Report no.
VT20-2920-005-PDA699
Language
eng