1st Edition

Posthumanism and the Massive Open Online Course Contaminating the Subject of Global Education

By Jeremy Knox Copyright 2016
    238 Pages 26 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    238 Pages 26 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Posthumanism and the Massive Open Online Course critiques the problematic reliance on humanism that pervades online education and the MOOC, and explores theoretical frameworks that look beyond these limitations. While MOOCs (massive open online courses) have attracted significant academic and media attention, critical analyses of their development have been rare. Following an overview of MOOCs and their corporate means of promotion, this book unravels the tendencies in research and theory that continue to adopt normative views of user access, participation, and educational space in order to offer alternatives to the dominant understandings of community and authenticity in education.

    Preface

    List of Figures

    Introduction

    The Massive Open Online Course

    MOOC structures

    MOOC Reactions: disrupting and ‘making sense’

    Chapter 1: (Post)Humanism and Education

    Introduction

    Humanism

    Humanism and education

    Critical Posthumanism

    New Materialism

    Rethinking Educational Dualisms

    Posthuman knowledge and the (non)representational

    Conclusions

    Chapter 2: Masters of the Universal: MOOC Education and the Globe

    Introduction

    Humanism and colonialism

    The Corporate World of the MOOC

    World-leaning MOOC research

    The MOOC Platform

    Conclusions

    Chapter 3: Colonising Communities and Domesticating Data

    Introduction

    Immunizing communities and the anthropological machine

    Measuring MOOC communities

    Identifying participants and categorising participation

    Connectivism and community

    Lurking and the tyranny of participation

    The Personal Learning Network

    Individualism in the connectivist MOOC

    Conclusions

    Chapter 4: Housing the MOOC: Space and Place in ‘ModPo’

    Introduction

    Modern and Contemporary American Poetry

    Spatiality and Mobilities Theory

    The House of Possibility

    The Kelly Writers House Tour

    Other voices, other rooms: power and potency in the ModPo fora

    The immutable mobile of MOOC pedagogy

    Conclusions

    Chapter 5: Monstrous Openings in the EDCMOOC

    Introduction

    The E-learning and Digital Cultures MOOC

    The Monstrous

    Outside of bounded educational space

    Calls for cohesive community

    Outside of the humanist subject

    Conclusions

    Conclusion

    Summarising Posthumanism and the MOOC

    Suggestions for MOOC practice, pedagogy and research

    In closing

    Index

    Biography

    Jeremy Knox is Lecturer in Digital Education at the University of Edinburgh, UK, where he designed, developed, and taught the pioneering MOOC 'E-learning and Digital Cultures'.

    "A much needed critical examination on MOOCs through the lens of humanism and educational philosophy has been conducted and described eloquently by Jeremy Knox. Anyone who wants to have a closer look at the intricate and somewhat paradoxical nature of today’s MOOCs experiment in higher education will greatly appreciate this timely work."

    --Paul Kim, Chief Technology Officer and Assistant Dean of the Graduate School of Education at Stanford University, USA

    "Drawing on posthumanist and new materialist approaches, Knox breaks with utopian MOOC narratives, challenging readers to consider not only what it means to educate the masses but also what it means to be a student and what it means to be an educational site—questioning whether most MOOCs, despite the hype, have merely privileged the orthodoxy of established educational frameworks.

    Knox offers a thorough consideration of the technopedagogical systems that purport to serve a universal community—providing an in-depth exploration of the evolution of educational philosophy and aspirations of MOOC providers—elucidating long standing Western educational ideals and models as a way to better understand the future design and delivery of education to a diverse audience."

    --Karen J. Head, Ph.D., Director of The Communication Center and Assistant Professor in the School of Literature, Media, and Communication at The Georgia Institute of Technology, USA, and Editor of Southern Discourse in the Center: A Journal of Multiliteracy and Innovation

    "Jeremy Knox provides a refreshingly critical take on a high-profile area of educational innovation which has been generally under-theorised. He does not shy away from addressing the ‘big questions’ surrounding massive open education, and in doing so he tackles with insight and clarity the shifting terrain of higher education itself."

    --Siân Bayne, Professor of Digital Education in the Moray House School of Education at the University of Edinburgh, UK