The MOOC Phenomenon: Who Takes Massive Open Online Courses and Why?

Resource type
Report
Authors/contributors
Title
The MOOC Phenomenon: Who Takes Massive Open Online Courses and Why?
Abstract
Massive open online courses (MOOCs) have commanded considerable public attention due to their sudden rise and disruptive potential. But there are no robust, published data that describe who is taking these courses and why they are doing so. As such, we do not yet know how transformative the MOOC phenomenon can or will be. We conducted an online survey of students enrolled in at least one of the University of Pennsylvania’s 32 MOOCs offed on the Coursera platform. The student population tends to be young, well educated, and employed, with a majority from developed countries. There are significantly more males than females taking MOOCs, especially in BRIC and other developing countries. Students’ main reasons for taking a MOOC are advancing in their current job and satisfying curiosity. The individuals the MOOC revolution is supposed to help the most — those without access to higher education in developing countries — are underrepresented among the early adopters.
Report Number
ID 2350964
Report Type
SSRN Scholarly Paper
Place
Rochester, NY
Institution
Social Science Research Network
Date
2013/11/06
Language
en
Short Title
The MOOC Phenomenon
Accessed
15/09/2020, 12:06
Library Catalogue
Extra
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.2350964 shortDOI: 10/ghgngt
Citation
Christensen, G., Steinmetz, A., Alcorn, B., Bennett, A., Woods, D., & Emanuel, E. (2013). The MOOC Phenomenon: Who Takes Massive Open Online Courses and Why? (SSRN Scholarly Paper ID 2350964). Social Science Research Network. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2350964