Sukaina Walji
University of Cape Town
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Sukaina Walji.
Distance Education | 2016
Sukaina Walji; Andrew Deacon; Janet Small; Laura Czerniewicz
Abstract Massive open online courses (MOOCs) are a new form of educational provision occupying a space between formal online courses and informal learning. Adopting measures used with formal online courses to assess the outcomes of MOOCs is often not informative because the context is very different. The particular affordances of MOOCs shaping learning environments comprise scale (in terms of numbers of students) and diversity (in terms of the types of students). As learning designers, we focus on understanding the particular tools and pedagogical affordances of the MOOC platform to support learner engagement. Drawing on research into learner engagement conducted in the broader field of online learning, we consider how learner engagement in a MOOC might be designed for by looking at three pedagogical aspects: teacher presence, social learning, and peer learning.
Journal of Computing in Higher Education | 2017
Laura Czerniewicz; Andrew Deacon; Michael Glover; Sukaina Walji
MOOCs have been seen as holding promise for advancing Open Education. While the pedagogical design of the first MOOCs grew out of the Open Education Movement, the current trend has MOOCs exhibiting fewer of the original openness goals than anticipated. The aim of this study is to examine the practices and attitudes of MOOC educators at an African university and ask whether and how their practices and attitudes become open after creating and teaching a MOOC. Activity Theory is used to contextually locate the educators’ motivations and to analyse their practices in terms of striving towards an object. With this lens we describe how educators’ openness-related practices and attitudes change over time in two different MOOCs. Two sets of conceptions of open practices are used to detect instances of change, providing four dimensions of changed open educational practices. Semi-structured interviews, focus groups, and artefacts provide data for this rare study, which considers these issues from the perspective of the Global South. Through studying the educators’ practices in relation to openness, it becomes evident how open practices are emergent and responsive.
Journal of Global Literacies, Technologies, and Emerging Pedagogies | 2014
Laura Czerniewicz; Andrew Deacon; Janet Small; Sukaina Walji
Archive | 2016
Laura Czerniewicz; Michael Glover; Andrew Deacon; Sukaina Walji
Archive | 2018
Laura Czerniewicz; Andrew Deacon; Sukaina Walji
Archive | 2017
Thomas King; Cheryl Hodgkinson-Williams; Michelle Willmers; Sukaina Walji
Archive | 2017
Laura Czerniewicz; Andrew Deacon; Michael Glover; Sukaina Walji
Archive | 2017
Laura Czerniewicz; Andrew Deacon; Sukaina Walji; Michael Glover
Open Praxis | 2016
Thomas King; Cheryl-Ann Hodgkinson-Williams; Michelle Willmers; Sukaina Walji
Archive | 2016
Michael Glover; Laura Czerniewicz; Sukaina Walji; Andrew Deacon; Janet Small