CYHCAug 11, 2020

Social Engagement versus Learning Engagement -- An Exploratory Study of FutureLearn Learners

arXiv:2008.04811v12 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This research addresses the contradiction between MOOC popularity and low completion rates by focusing on social engagement, which is incremental as it builds on existing work but introduces a novel temporal and social perspective.

The study analyzed learner engagement in MOOCs by examining both social interactions and study progression on the FutureLearn platform, using a fine-grained temporal approach to explore how learners progress and interact with peers, with preliminary results suggesting potential predictive models for learner behavior.

Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) continue to see increasing enrolment, but only a small percent of enrolees completes the MOOCs. Whilst a lot of research has focused on predicting completion, there is little research analysing the ostensible contradiction between the MOOC's popularity and the apparent disengagement of learners. Specifically, it is important to analyse engagement not just in learning, but also from a social perspective. This is especially crucial, as MOOCs offer a growing amount of activities, which can be classified as social interactions. Thus, this study is particularly concerned with how learners interact with peers, along with their study progression in MOOCs. Additionally, unlike most existing studies that are mainly focused on learning outcomes, this study adopts a fine-grained temporal approach to exploring how learners progress within a MOOC. The study was conducted on the less explored FutureLearn platform, which employs a social constructivist approach and promotes collaborative learning. The preliminary results suggest potential interesting fine-grained predictive models for learner behaviour, involving weekly monitoring of social, non-social behaviour of active students (further classified as completers and non-completers).

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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