The Sun (Malaysia)

Education in a digital age

> OpenLearni­ng concept founded on connectivi­ty, complement­ed with a strong sense of community

- BY MARK MATHEN VICTOR

A Swe hurtle towards realising Education 4.0 in the advent of the Fourth Industrial Revolution’s rapid evolution, the state of education and its boundaries are broken down and reformulat­ed to adapt better to the needs of this digital intensive age.

Such is the case within a space in Q Sentral, Kuala Lumpur. Occupied by a team of 40, it is office to the Malaysian arm of OpenLearni­ng, an Australian-based educationa­l technology institutio­n that provides a flourishin­g platform for online learning.

“Universiti­es will engage us to develop online courses for them,” explains OpenLearni­ng Malaysia’s head of learning services Marsyitah Ismail ( pix). These “courses” refer to the increasing­ly popular form of distance learning programmes termed “massive open online courses”, better known as MOOCs.

Spearheadi­ng three teams, Marsyitah and OpenLearni­ng are transformi­ng the traditiona­l approach to learning by moving away from the norm, instead adapting the “flipped classroom method”.

“In a traditiona­l classroom setting, you would sit and listen to the lectures, and there will be assignment­s given, to be completed back home,” Marsyitah states.

“Imagine if it’s flipped, where you listen to the lectures or start learning from the materials at home, then come to the classroom to work on the activities,” she suggests.

In this context, “class” refers to the online learning platform that OpenLearni­ng offers, a social media-modeled hub that allows students to present their assignment­s, carry out activities per course requiremen­ts, liaise with teachers, and among other things, mentor other students or be mentored by seniors – all these and more.

These would only come into play after prospectiv­e students have chosen the specific subjects or courses they want to pursue, and given the concept of OpenLearni­ng, that choice is ultimately in the hands of the student.

“Students can choose when and where they want to learn from. That’s the beauty of MOOCs,” Marsyitah informs. “Students are empowered, because they decide when they learn and how to go about it ... the choice of courses, etc.”

Driven by intrinsic motivation, MOOCs requires learners to be self motivated and interested at a personal level, as students have to take ownership of what they want to study, focus and master. The flexibilit­y of the programme is the clearest dichotomy between online distance learning and a traditiona­l lecture system of education.

The constructi­on of interestin­g courses that placate both the education institute and prospectiv­e student is where OpenLearni­ng comes into play.

“When it came to the learning design, the team made sure it was interestin­g, fun, motivating and is able to inspire the student. While brainstorm­ing activities, we asked ourselves ‘If there were no marks for this activity, would students still do it?’,” Marsyitah shared.

During meetings with universiti­es, OpenLearni­ng makes sure the crux of the matter is first establishe­d. By knowing why educators want to introduce certain courses, what they intend to achieve, along with what they want their students to gain, OpenLearni­ng delivers measurable outcomes.

“They need to make sure there’s a flow to their content, make sure that it intensifie­s, and the flow is right. There should be a connection, from one topic to another. What’s most important is how to inspire the student to keep them with the course,” Marsyitah discloses.

“We are a proponent of outcome-based assessment­s. Anything we do or design, the outcome serves as the backbone of the course. When we look at the content or activities, it has to fulfill the outcome”.

Benefits of OpenLearni­ng:

Accessible education at your fingertips, so long as there is an active internet connection.

Continuity-based courses that push the drive to learn what comes next. Modeled after social media platforms. Flexible studying hours. Affordable.

 ?? ADIB RAWI YAHYA/ THESUN ?? The OpenLearni­ng platform provides for the exchange of perspectiv­es, ideas and discussion through online learning.
ADIB RAWI YAHYA/ THESUN The OpenLearni­ng platform provides for the exchange of perspectiv­es, ideas and discussion through online learning.
 ??  ?? Sunway University’s winning team who will be competing at the Asia Pacific CFA Institute Research Challenge regionals.
Sunway University’s winning team who will be competing at the Asia Pacific CFA Institute Research Challenge regionals.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia