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A Conceptual Model for cMOOCs

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    In this video, I'm going to go through a conceptual model of cMOOCs,
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    based on my experience with a number of MOOCs,
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    but particularly the Learning Creative Learning cMOOC
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    that's currently running at Mitch Resnick's Lifelong Kindergarten Group
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    at the MIT Media Lab.
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    So - so a couple of things, before I'm getting started here:
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    This is just an experiment, like LCL: I hope people take it.
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    in the spirit I make it, which I'm just playing around with ideas.
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    As I get down into the model, the cubes you see represent the roles we play
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    It's important to remember that, that they represent
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    like the whole person just representing certain things that - certain roles that each of us take on.
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    Reality is vastly more complex than the model I present here,
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    so this is just a little attempt to just try to get an understanding of MOOCs
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    with a subset of the reality that is a cMOOC.
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    This model - this conceptual model certainly derives
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    the work of George Siemens and Steven Downes
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    who were the people who made the first MOOC - or developed the idea of MOOCs
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    and as you can see from the two tweets above, at the top of the screen,
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    George Siemens certainly is not opposed to the idea
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    of viewing the networks that are created in MOOCs as similar to networks of neurons
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    and Stephen Downes has explicitly said that he was thinking of neural networks
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    when he was developing MOOCs.
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    So, with those caveats, let's get started.
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    So this is an overview, in the background here, of MIT.
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    Sorry, Cambridge from the left, Boston on the right, Charles River over here,
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    and MIT is just under that - those white dots.
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    So, let's go and take a look.
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    So, here I have the artifacts that have been created by the MOOC,
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    some of them again, right, not all of them.
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    Here I have sort of the cloud of us, of the participants in the MOOC,
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    again, representing our roles as MOOC participants, not the entirety of our entity.
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    And then down here these dots represent people at MIT.
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    So, this is the Media Lab,
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    this is Mitch Resnick's group here,
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    these are other groups, other buildings at MIT
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    and again, right, this is just a small set, subset of reality.
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    There are literally, you know, hundreds of these groups at MIT,
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    thousands of students at MIT, it's just one university in dozens of universities in Boston and Cambridge.
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    So Mitch and his group developed LCL, and
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    -- let me just turn on something here for a second --
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    and the lines here represent exchange of information between people.
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    And obviously, Mitch is exchanging lots of information with his own team, as they are with him,
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    and Mitch is also exchanging information with other groups at MIT,
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    people leading other groups at MIT,
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    and, obviously, the administration at MIT.
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    So there's work related to LCL going on at this level, sort of you know,
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    making the course happen and providing the resources for it.
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    I'm not going to focus too much on that, but just want to sort of start there.
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    And I'm going to turn the edges off for a bit.
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    So we all start off, as we begin the MOOC with this, with this sort of cloud of us --
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    we are obviously from all over the world, but through the internet, we sort of are connect--
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    have gathered here over MIT and the Media Lab to be part of this MOOC,
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    but at the start of the MOOC, we're very disconnected, right?
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    it's just a bunch of us who've shown up for this experience.
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    And, you know, we all go to the web site and we read about it, and we listen to Mitch,
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    and we get a sense of what we're in for and we can connect to resources
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    that Mitch and his team have put up to get it started.
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    Again, at this point, there are very few connections between people.
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    And, as we join the Google+ community, and start blogging about it and tweeting about it,
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    we start making links between ourselves -- up here --
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    And then the course gets started.
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    I've represented that as this first lecture, a presentation that Mitch did,
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    and it sends out a lot of information to all of us, right?
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    to all participating in the group.
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    Now obviously, his - Mitch and his team are also paying close attention
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    to this stream of information coming out of that first presentation.
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    And, associated with the video presentation are readings for each of these...for each of the weeks
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    and - well I think that's all I wanted to say here.
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    And immediately after, or even before, that first presentation
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    people were starting to tweet, were starting to add to the ...
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    ... the main Google+ group and were also starting
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    to get to know the people in our own little groups
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    and posting there, and some of us are
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    starting to blog about LCL.
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    Right? Lots of us writing blogs,
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    or some of us writing blogs, so there's
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    this information that starts really flowing rapidly.
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    And, as we do that we start to form connections here.
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    And if I did this again I would have these connections
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    gradually thicken and intensify, but I was working out
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    these ideas as I made the model, so we have
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    the fully networked collection of us here.
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    And, through these colored lines I'm just
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    representing the information that we're exchanging
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    via the Google+ group, on Twitter,
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    via the blogs, and ...
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    and that was after the first week.
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    The second week, we get the lecture from the...
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    the presentation [mumbles],
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    and we're assigned to talk about a gear,
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    learning gear from our childhood based on Papert's (?) writings.
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    And we start posting, sharing information
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    on our small LCL groups, and some of us
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    on the big LCL group.
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    And again, blogging about it and sharing the information in other ways.
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    There is communication going between
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    Mitch and the other LCL group moderators,
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    between all of us here in the network cloud.
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    So there's this flow of information from
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    first Mitch and his team put it up here,
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    and it comes out to us,
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    we comment upon it, and sometimes directly talk
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    with Mitch and his team.
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    And mostly we're sending information out here
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    to these streams, and sharing that way.
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    Which, of course, Mitch and his team are watching
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    what appears out in these various streams.
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    There's a lot of information flowing around.
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    And then, the third week was ...
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    the Dale Dowerdy (?), and Buckly (?),
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    and we were supposed to create scratch projects
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    which many of us did.
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    We shared those and learned from eachother.
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    And the density of our network is increasing up here.
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    And then the fourth week, it was the
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    infamous Alan Kay-dominated lecture.
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    That certainly generated a lot of,
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    a lot of feedback.
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    Mostly, at least most of what I saw,
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    was on the LCL main group.
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    Our assignment was to work with
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    the drawing program...
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    <chuckles> whose name is escaping me right now.
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    Oh...anyway.
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    Obviously dozens and dozens,
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    if not hundreds of these programs were created,
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    and I've just shown two here.
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    And then, the last week's lecture on
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    open learning, again generating more artifacts,
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    stream of more artifacts,
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    some of us working with the stack exchange
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    and some of us offering courses and hangouts, et cetera.
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    And again there were lots more than
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    I'm showing here.
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    And as the course continues we will be
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    producing more artifacts.
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    And as I've said before,
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    Mitch and his team are watching all of this happen.
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    They're probably not looking at
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    every single scratch project put up on
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    the scratch website, or every single
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    sub-group on Google+, but they're
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    keeping an eye on things and sortof
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    trying to understand how this is all developing.
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    And of course, that gets fed back to us,
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    in the form of, you know,
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    upcoming lectures where they share what they've seen.
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    And the chat, which is becoming a part
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    of each presentation, and just direct communication
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    back and forth with us, all of us or some of us.
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    And so we have this, we have this
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    network that we've built very quickly,
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    which is <clears throat> doing something, maybe.
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    Exactly what is not clear to me,
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    since we're certainly producing a lot of information.
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    I guess the question I have is,
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    what are the potentials here?
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    What emergent properties might this have, I don't know,
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    but in a sense there are interesting possibilities.
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    I think, we know that most of the world
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    is going to be living in cities within
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    a hundred years, and cities are...
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    we're going to have to get a lot smarter
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    about how we run our cities.
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    There's in fact a whole movement with the
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    urban studies community called
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    "Smarter Cities" ...
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    and I think part of the emergent properties
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    that are possible with cMOOCs
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    is we're sort of training a lot of us
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    to work in these networks
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    that can be developed very quickly
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    with the current tools of the internet,
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    which I assume will become even easier
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    to build in the future,
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    and so the cMOOC experience is, in a way,
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    sort of training us to be better at
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    running our communities in the future,
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    making our communities much smarter.
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    So that's, that's where I am with this.
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    I would love feedback.
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    I will post the model online,
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    so that anybody who wants it can download it.
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    And, again, this is just very experimental.
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    Just playing around with ideas.
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    So. Thanks!
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    Thanks for watching.
Title:
A Conceptual Model for cMOOCs
Description:

A walkthrough of a SketchUp model representing the Learning Creative Learning cMOOC.

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Video Language:
English
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Duration:
15:07
E B edited English subtitles for A Conceptual Model for cMOOCs
Claude Almansi added a translation

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