Understanding openness through (in)visible platform boundaries: a topological study on MOOCs as multiplexes of spaces and times

Abstract Among new technologies in education, the Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) is one of the phenomena that received much attention. However, controversy developed around the meaning of the word ‘open’ as integrated in the acronym. Despite the disagreements, studies on MOOCs generally do not fo...

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Main Authors: Karmijn van de Oudeweetering, Mathias Decuypere
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2019-07-01
Series:International Journal of Educational Technology in Higher Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41239-019-0154-1
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spelling doaj-a7341e8599d545c5a06968de984e90b72020-11-25T03:07:19ZengSpringerOpenInternational Journal of Educational Technology in Higher Education2365-94402019-07-0116113010.1186/s41239-019-0154-1Understanding openness through (in)visible platform boundaries: a topological study on MOOCs as multiplexes of spaces and timesKarmijn van de Oudeweetering0Mathias Decuypere1KU LeuvenKU LeuvenAbstract Among new technologies in education, the Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) is one of the phenomena that received much attention. However, controversy developed around the meaning of the word ‘open’ as integrated in the acronym. Despite the disagreements, studies on MOOCs generally do not formulate clear conceptual or operational descriptions of what openness implies for their research. Without explicating these descriptions, it becomes impossible for HE practitioners and researchers to gain a sense of how the proclaimed open nature of MOOCs is and can be realized in practice. This study aims to respond to this debate and the prevailing ambiguity and confusion around the concept ‘openness’ by examining the relevance of an alternative view. That is, through the lens of social topology, this study considers how openness is enacted in multiple forms that interact. The study further examines whether and how openness is performed through the specific way in which boundaries operate. Based on an empirical case study on a MOOC platform developed and administered by several European universities, the study presents a combination of descriptions, sketches and legends that describe multiple spaces and times of openness in the MOOC platform. The study therewith provides strong arguments for the pertinence of this alternative view, and invites further research on higher education initiatives to examine the various yet specific ways openness can be established.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41239-019-0154-1MOOCsOpen educationOpennessBoundariesImaginariesSocial topology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Karmijn van de Oudeweetering
Mathias Decuypere
spellingShingle Karmijn van de Oudeweetering
Mathias Decuypere
Understanding openness through (in)visible platform boundaries: a topological study on MOOCs as multiplexes of spaces and times
International Journal of Educational Technology in Higher Education
MOOCs
Open education
Openness
Boundaries
Imaginaries
Social topology
author_facet Karmijn van de Oudeweetering
Mathias Decuypere
author_sort Karmijn van de Oudeweetering
title Understanding openness through (in)visible platform boundaries: a topological study on MOOCs as multiplexes of spaces and times
title_short Understanding openness through (in)visible platform boundaries: a topological study on MOOCs as multiplexes of spaces and times
title_full Understanding openness through (in)visible platform boundaries: a topological study on MOOCs as multiplexes of spaces and times
title_fullStr Understanding openness through (in)visible platform boundaries: a topological study on MOOCs as multiplexes of spaces and times
title_full_unstemmed Understanding openness through (in)visible platform boundaries: a topological study on MOOCs as multiplexes of spaces and times
title_sort understanding openness through (in)visible platform boundaries: a topological study on moocs as multiplexes of spaces and times
publisher SpringerOpen
series International Journal of Educational Technology in Higher Education
issn 2365-9440
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Abstract Among new technologies in education, the Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) is one of the phenomena that received much attention. However, controversy developed around the meaning of the word ‘open’ as integrated in the acronym. Despite the disagreements, studies on MOOCs generally do not formulate clear conceptual or operational descriptions of what openness implies for their research. Without explicating these descriptions, it becomes impossible for HE practitioners and researchers to gain a sense of how the proclaimed open nature of MOOCs is and can be realized in practice. This study aims to respond to this debate and the prevailing ambiguity and confusion around the concept ‘openness’ by examining the relevance of an alternative view. That is, through the lens of social topology, this study considers how openness is enacted in multiple forms that interact. The study further examines whether and how openness is performed through the specific way in which boundaries operate. Based on an empirical case study on a MOOC platform developed and administered by several European universities, the study presents a combination of descriptions, sketches and legends that describe multiple spaces and times of openness in the MOOC platform. The study therewith provides strong arguments for the pertinence of this alternative view, and invites further research on higher education initiatives to examine the various yet specific ways openness can be established.
topic MOOCs
Open education
Openness
Boundaries
Imaginaries
Social topology
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41239-019-0154-1
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