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Reflections

Online learning: a New Testament

Pages 133-140 | Received 28 Nov 2013, Accepted 16 Jan 2014, Published online: 28 Feb 2014
 

Abstract

The statement by Hunter R. Rawlings III that “there are no good studies on what constitutes bad online pedagogy” coincides with the creation of a Global Learning Council to define the guidelines that previous online educators have allegedly failed to identify. This article discusses these disparaging remarks by the President of the Association of American Universities about the distance education (DE) field and the likely influence on the Council’s deliberations by the motives of its members—American university presidents, corporate representatives, and providers of support for massive open online courses. The influence of their conclusions on public attitudes to new educational practices is anticipated, and the distorted pedagogical principles being offered in support of massive course practices are defined as arising from a form of plagiarism. A formal response by DE and online learning specialists to the rejection of their previous literature is encouraged; and an analysis of the situation is offered by a fictitious educational historian in the year 2031.

Notes

1. The origins of massive open course notions in blogs by as Siemens (Citation2008–2012) and Downes (Citation2008–2013) have been discussed in preceding articles (Baggaley, Citation2014) and need not be revisited here.

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