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Disrupting and democratising higher education provision or entrenching academic elitism: towards a model of MOOCs adoption at African universities

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dc.contributor.author Rambe, Patient
dc.contributor.author Moeti, Mamello
dc.date.accessioned 2018-08-29T07:08:33Z
dc.date.available 2018-08-29T07:08:33Z
dc.date.issued 2017
dc.identifier.issn 1042-1629
dc.identifier.issn 1556-6501
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/11462/1600
dc.description Published Article en_US
dc.description.abstract Challenges of broadening access, escalating cost, maintaining desirable quality and enhancing meaningful learning experiences in African higher education (HE) have spurred debates on how to restructure higher education delivery to meet the diverse needs of heterogeneous learners and adapt pedagogical models to the educational realities of lowincome African countries. In view of these complexities, Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) have been advanced by Western Consortia, universities and online platform providers as panaceas for disrupting/transforming existing education models African universities. MOOCs have been touted as disruptive innovations with the potential to create new niche markets for HE courses, disrupt traditional models of instruction and content delivery and create new revenue streams for higher education. Yet academic elitism which manifests in the exclusive selection of top American universities to develop, host and deliver MOOCs, MOOC providers’ use of university brand and reputation as benchmarks for charging recruitment fees on headhunters recruiting MOOC graduates and their complex business models involving the sale of students’ big data (e.g. learning analytics) for profit seem to be inconsistent with claims about philanthropic and egalitarian drive of MOOCs. Drawing on disruptive innovation theory and a review of mainstream literature on MOOCs adoption in American and African tertiary sectors, this study argues that behind the MOOC rhetoric of disrupting and democratizing higher education lies the projection of top academic brands on the marketing pedestal, financial piggybacking on the hype and politics of academic exclusion. en_US
dc.format.extent 926 468 bytes, 1 file
dc.format.mimetype Application/PDF
dc.language.iso en_US en_US
dc.publisher Educational Technology Research and Development en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries Volume 65;
dc.subject Disruptive innovation theory en_US
dc.subject Democratisation en_US
dc.subject Academic elitism en_US
dc.title Disrupting and democratising higher education provision or entrenching academic elitism: towards a model of MOOCs adoption at African universities en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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