e-Learning Ecologies MOOC’s Updates

Essential Update #1 - The Ubiquitous Learning - Web 2.0

As a girl, I learned how to cook and sew from my mother, how to knit (never very well unfortunately) from my aunts, and how to embroider from my older sister who had learnt it herself from our grandmother. As a young adult, I purchased some books to help me get better in each of these areas.

I now have a daughter who was born in 2004. For her eighth birthday, she got some polymer clay. The following day, after school, she went on the Internet and found some “how to” videos. With the help of these short videos, she was able to furnish a doll house and make a variety of small attractive objects.

I have also relied on online videos to learn how to renovate furniture, revive an old laptop computer, and edit html scripts.

I did a simple Google search on “how to video” and got about 2 940 000 000 results.

In a Forbes article published in June 2015, “Education as Entertainment: YouTube Sensations Teaching the Future” Karen Hua writes that education videos on YouTube are viewed twice as often as those found in the Animals and Pets category. She goes on with the example of Khan Academy which was at the time “one of the leading digital education platforms, delivering some 440 million free micro-lectures to 2.2 million YouTube subscribers. The videos have been viewed over 500 million times.”

Educational videos provide ubiquitous learning opportunities to anyone with Internet access. We may watch them while searching for an answer to a specific question, or just for fun because some people are simply interesting to watch.

Although not all educational videos are “how to videos”, they are all helping to create learning communities online. As John Green, in his 2012 TED talk on “The nerd's guide to learning everything online”, explained, people are not just passively absorbing information while watching an educational video as they have the opportunity to ask questions and engage in discussions with other members of the online community through posts and discussion forums.

  • Craig Fletcher
  • Robert R Daniel