What can we learn from developments in online music education?

One byproduct of the pandemic was that practically every subject taught in higher education had to be adapted to be taught online. Whilst a number of subject areas like business & management have a legacy of being taught online, there are a number of subjects for which that isn’t the case. There’s also a number of subjects that many people feel, almost intuitively, just can’t be taught well online.

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What's AI's impact on asynchronous online learning?

The vast majority of engagement and interaction with online learning experiences is asynchronous. Students engage in activities, tasks and interact not simply at a set time for a set duration, but across time when they want to or are able to do so.

Whilst there are myriad types of activities, interaction, content etc that can form part of asynchronous online learning - over the years a core menu of common activity types and associated online technologies has been established.

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EdTech, Online learningNeil Mosley
What's AI's impact on synchronous online learning?

Although many other things get much more attention - one of the notable changes in higher education in respect to edtech in recent years is the greater usage of video conferencing technology. Many HEIs had this technology in their edtech suites before the pandemic, but usage for learning and teaching was minimal and largely for online distance learning programmes with a synchronous element.

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Is your website optimised for online education marketing and recruitment?

I recently spoke at the Online Learning Summit at the University of Leeds, sharing my analysis of the evolving online education landscape in UK higher education. Whilst that inevitably touched on a range of trends and developments, a key message was one of steady growth in the number of online degrees on offer at UK higher education institutions (HEIs) and more institutions becoming serious about online distance education.

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Online postgraduate students in UK higher education: What's the current picture?

Online education as a relatively new mode of teaching & learning in the grand timeline of education is often, as if by default, accompanied by a narrative of it being the growing modality of the future. Whilst there’s a lot in that - higher education institutions (HEIs) need to build foundations on something firmer than hyperbolic predictions as they look to successfully offer online distance education.

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How are online education companies managing through turbulent times?

Towards the end of 2022 I wrote a post about the turbulence being experienced by online education companies that partner with universities. This was on the back of a raft of negative company announcements about their performance and financial health.

There’s been a number of changes since then and there’s still plenty of dark clouds looming. What we’re seeing is a more prolonged shake-out of some of these companies.

So it’s an interesting juncture to reflect on what’s unfolded over the most recent period of turbulence. It’s also worth considering what turbulence-driven changes might mean for the way online education companies operate in the future and what we might be left with.

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What's the current state of OPM and UK university partnerships?

As a type of technology company, several online education companies have experienced the kind of turbulence that’s been prevalent across the tech sector as a whole. For some, their lack of profitability and/or valuation has been exposed by an altered macroeconomic climate and there have been layoffs as well as several acquisitions, changes in strategies and leadership.

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OPMsNeil Mosley
2022: What's the current state of OPM and UK university partnerships?

One of the big changes of the past couple of years has been the number of universities getting serious about what they are doing in the online distance education space.

Whilst the number of online distance education courses on offer in UK higher education has been steadily growing, the events of the last couple of years have spurred some universities to more intentionally consider what they are doing in this space.

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OPMsNeil Mosley
Data and learning: Does more = better?

There’s a valuable lesson here for anyone seeking to leverage data in digital and online learning, in that, the promise of data will never be truly realised if there isn’t skill to design the means of gathering relevant and useful information related to the learning process, and the conditions and capabilities of taking that information and doing something with it. 

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5 tips for programme-level learning design

The effective design of programmes is so critical because if you get the fundamentals and foundations wrong you’ll be building on sand. There are too many instances of programmes that are disjointed collections of modules and in which holistic thought of how learning happens, develops and is supported through teaching, activities and assessment is sorely lacking.

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Learning designNeil Mosley
Does digital education research have an integrity problem?

What are we to conclude in terms of the state of digital education research in the UK? Can we trust the outputs of digital education research centres like those at the University of Edinburgh and others? How are we to navigate this space and make sense of it?

Well, I think as things stand we almost have to treat these centres and some of the research as we might do a political think tank or a newspaper or media outlet. 

We can all point to particular publications whose editorial, view of the world and reporting is heavily influenced by their political stance and viewpoint - when we read their output we have to filter it through that lens. 

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Higher educationNeil Mosley