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Hi Phillippe and Michael
I agree with you, that MOOCs have great potential to take what we do inside the classroom and make this material available (to quote Michael) “at scale”. Not every course or topic can be best delivered online or at scale,
but this could be a good time to have more conversations about how to facilitate access to online SFU course materials (both for credit, for life-long learning, and as a public service), and accelerate the development of new online courses and programs (esp.
as CODE courses are transitioned to the departments). There is a good discussion about some of these issues on @HigherEdSurge https://www.edsurge.com/higher-ed
As Phillippe mentions below, I have had a some experience with MOOCs, co-developing two courses that curiously continue to attract students from around the world.
Sheep in the Land of Fire of Ice (hosted by University of Iceland on EdX platform) is a shorter 4-Lesson course, and it is probably not suitable to offer for
credit to SFU students (but could be used as a supplemental resource for other courses).
Mountains 101 (hosted by University of Alberta on Coursera platform) is a 12-Lesson MOOC that I have decided to adapt and offer
for-credit as SCI 190 in the Spring 2020 Semester (http://www.sfu.ca/outlines.html?2020/summer/sci/190/d100). There are no prerequistites. So please let your students know about
this in case they are interested (course description below).
cheers
David
David Hik
Associate Dean - Academic, Faculty of Science & Professor Department of Biological Sciences (SSB 8157 - office; B9223 - lab) 8888 University Drive, Simon Fraser University Burnaby, BC, V5A 1S6, Canada Phone: 778-782-6547 (office) https://www.sfu.ca/biology/people/profiles/dhik.html Acknowledging that we live and work on the unceded territory of the Musqueam, Tsleil-Waututh, and Squamish First Nations SUMMER 2020 - SCI 190 D100
SPECIAL TOPICS IN SCIENCE INTERDISCIPLINARITY (3): Intro to Mountain Studies Class Number: 5677 Delivery Method: Distance Education - http://www.sfu.ca/outlines.html?2020/summer/sci/190/d100 Course Description: Mountain Studies is an interdisciplinary field of scholarship emphasizing the interconnections
between the physical, biological, and human dimensions of mountain environments. This introductory course focuses on the physical (geology, climate, hydrology, glaciers, hazards), the physiological (bodies at altitude), the biological (plants, animals, ecology,
conservation), and the social and cultural (mountains in popular imagination, literature, tourism, economies) dimensions of these global landscapes. Focusing on western Canada, we will examine the complex processes of change that are shaping local and regional
mountain environments around the globe, past and present. Melding practice and theory, this lecture-based survey course provides a general introduction draws from scholarship from the earth sciences, biological sciences, applied physiology and environmental
sciences. Crossing conventional disciplinary borders, this course will provide a foundational introduction to further study.
Prerequisite: None. The final exam will be held on August 14 from 12:00 - 15:00.
PS - the uptick in global online learning has been hard to ignore in the past month! - here is the increase in both daily and monthly active learners for Mountains 101 since the start of #stayathome
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