{"id":13441,"date":"2013-03-01t16:34:45","date_gmt":"2013-03-01t21:34:45","guid":{"rendered":"\/\/www.imrbdigital.com\/?p=13441"},"modified":"2013-03-01t16:34:45","modified_gmt":"2013-03-01t21:34:45","slug":"a-conversation-about-massive-open-online-courses-moocs","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/www.imrbdigital.com\/2013\/03\/a-conversation-about-massive-open-online-courses-moocs\/","title":{"rendered":"a conversation about massive open online courses (moocs)"},"content":{"rendered":"
by derek bruff, cft director<\/em><\/p>\n <\/a>last thursday, february 21st, the 2022年世界杯中国小组赛积分 and the library hosted “teaching to thousands: a conversation about massive open online courses (moocs)<\/strong>,” an event featuring faculty panelists douglas schmidt (computer science) and jamie pope (nursing). doug and jamie are participating in vanderbilt’s coursera pilot<\/a>, each offering a mooc on the coursera platform this fall: doug’s “pattern-oriented software architectures for concurrent and networked software<\/a>” and jamie’s “nutrition, health, and lifestyle: issues and insights<\/a>.” during the event, doug and jamie shared what they have learned about teaching moocs as they have prepared their courses, and they answered questions about their experiences from the audience.<\/p>\n below you’ll find video of doug and jamie’s opening remarks, as well as my summary of those remarks and the discussion that followed. for more on moocs and vanderbilt’s experiments in this area, see the cft’s teaching guide on moocs<\/a>.<\/p>\n