This document discusses the rapid development of a graduate course in an EMBA program. It begins by introducing the author and their background in online education. It then describes a graduate course called EKLI 682 on knowledge, learning, innovation and performance that was created in a few days. The course focuses on contemporary issues shaping Canada's future competitiveness. It explores how the course was designed using a community of inquiry model to engage executive students in challenging projects and discussions. Key aspects of the design included leveraging students' existing expertise, focusing on enabling skills and reflection over content, and co-creating the learning experience. The document concludes by noting that revision of such rapidly developed courses takes much less time and can be continuously improved based
1. Better Courses in Half the
Time
THE RAPID DEVELOPMENT OF A GRADUATE COURSE IN AN EMBA PROGRAM
Stephen Murgatroyd, PhD FBPSS FRSA
2. About Me
Open University 1971-1985
Athabasca University 1986-1998
/ and 2003-5
Axia NetMedia (Executive VP
European Operations) and
Visiting Professor, Middlesex
University Centre for Work-
Based Learning and
Accreditation, 1998-2003
Provost, Canadian University of
Dubai 2006
Contact North | Contact Nord
2006 –
Murgatroyd Inc 2005 –
3. What This
Session is
About
Look at how we created a
specific graduate course in a
few days
Look at how we revise the
course
Explore the possibilities of this
approach through a
conversation in the room
4. In 1983-5 I Chaired the OU(UK) Statistics
Course Team
Budget = $4 million (£2.4 million)
Team of 11 (8 academics, 1 instructional designer, 1 technology advisor, 1
BBC Producer)
9 BBC production quality TV programs of 24.5 minutes and 6 radio
programs of 28 mins.
10 course modules of between 30 and 50 full colour graphically
designed pages.
25,000+ students a year
Expectation was that the course would last between 6 and 10 years
6. Course Overview
The course focuses on some of the contemporary critical issues that will shape
Canada’s future—competitiveness, productivity, and innovation. The main objective
is to learn about how innovation could help with firm performance and strategy by
leveraging knowledge management and leadership.
We will explore some of the structural challenges for Canada’s competitiveness and
learn about organizational and inter-organizational factors that can thwart or
facilitate innovation at the regional and firm level.
We then study how to implement change that will enable Canadian firms to
become more productive through organizational learning in a knowledge-driven
economy.
7. We Know
There will be 30-50 students in the course most almost at the end of their MBA – we
arrange them in teams of 7-8. All students are executive managers with significant
responsibilities and (usually) all are full-time employees with leadership
responsibilities.
That they already have done a lot of reading / formal learning before entering the
course
That they are highly skilled
That they are in positions of authority / responsibility in organizations – firms,
government agencies, non-profits
They they are networked..
That these topics are in the news all the time and are always current…
8. We Also
Want to challenge them to engage and learn
Get them to do somethings they have not done before
Get them to really think about their own work from a reflective-action
perspective – this is action learning in a networked community of inquiry
To see the course as a co-creation process – they know as much (if not more)
than we do – we’ve just been thinking about the issues longer (i.e. we are old!)
9. Our Learning Platform: IBM Notes
In 1993-4 this was the ONLY platform we considered to be a learning space – its
still pretty robust
Permits dialogue and team-based work
Operates both online and offline
Permits ”chat”, document sharing, video sharing etc.
Learning is asynchronous – students can be anywhere in the world – but
sometimes students create their own “synchronous” components
11. A COURSE IS AN EXPERIENCE IN LEARNING..
You need PRESENCE
Cognitive Presence – challenge, activity, exploration, substance
Teaching Presence – engaging with learners, groups, knowledge, sharing experience,
insights and having fun
Social Presence – engagement with social networks, peer networks, international
networks..
Learner Presence – the learners voice needs to be heard and understood..they need
channels to ensure that their ideas can be explored…
12. Community of
Inquiry Model
GARRISON, ANDERSON AND ARCHER
HTTP://CDE.ATHABASCAU.CA/COI_SITE/DOCUMENTS/GARRISON_A
NDERSON_ARCHER_CRITICAL_INQUIRY_MODEL.PDF
13. TEACH LESS,
LEARN MORE
You DO NOT NEED a lot of
CONTENT – content is everywhere, what you
need are roadmaps, insights infographics and
coaching for use
ASSESSMENTS – you need some, but not every
10’
INSTRUCTION – in higher education, we need
to develop the skills of exploration, critical
review and assessment, communication,
teamwork and knowledge building…peer
learning is a key component of this design
14. HOW MUCH TIME EACH
WEEK DO WE HAVE?
Total time for learning
Time for exploring /
understanding
Time for sharing
Time for writing
15. Understand Purpose and Meaning
What is the purpose of this experience?
What meaning(s) should we be seeking
to enable?
What “shocks” and “surprises” do we
hope to create for our learners?
What communities are we seeking to
connect to?
WHAT DO WE HOPE LEARNERS WILL
LEARN AND EXPERIENCE?
Knowledge
Capabilities
Skills
17. Add to the
Map
ACTIVITIES WHICH WOULD
ENGAGE THE LEARNER
RESOURCES – ALWAYS OPEN
EDUCATION RESOURCES AND
EASY ACCESSIBLE
CHALLENGES WHICH THE
LEARNERS COULD UNDERTAKE
IN TEAMS
INDIVIDUAL TASKS..
18. By Topic, Build an Asset Inventory
For a topic - e.g. Innovation – what assets could we deploy which would change
the assumptions learners often make about the topic and open up new ways of
thinking..
Videos / Ted-Talks
Podcasts
Research Summaries and Articles (e.g. Harvard Business Review, Forbes)
Research Papers
Working principle: each topic needs a variety of different kinds of resources to
keep peoples interest, reflect different preferences (visual versus text) and
stimulate challenge and encourage a quest for more..
19. Now We Are Ready to Link Time and Purpose..
For each week:
What is the purpose of
this weeks work?
What knowledge,
capability and skill are we
seeking to enable?
KNOWLEDGE CAPABILITY SKILLS
Week Understand the
competitive challenges
Canada faces
Understand key
constructs and
concepts which inform
the analysis of
competitiveness
Be able to articulate
Canada’s
competitiveness
challenges
Be able to give an
explanation for
Canada’s poor
productivity
performance
Review and
analyze a
range of
different
sources of
information
and utilize
these sources
to produce an
action plan
Contribute and
create value in
a virtual team.
20. Mapping Time Available to Enable
Purpose and Meaning
EACH WEEK
Instructional Video –
Content Finding / Exploring –
Finding Their Own Content and Sharing it
with Comments
Engaging in Dialogue
Reflective Writing
Project Work
Other Activity
WEEK 1 Canada’s Competitiveness
WEEK 2 Productivity in Canada
WEEK 3 (No Coursework – Project)
WEEK 4 Canada’s Innovation Ecosystem
WEEK 5 Firm Level Innovation
WEEK 6 Change Management
WEEK 7 Leadership
WEEK 8 (No Course Work – Assignment)
21. Each Week
3-5’ Video from “The Coach” – all shot in
one day
4-8 Pages of Challenge Material – key
challenge statement and supporting bullet
points (with links).
4-5 Study Materials – video, text, etc. =
5-6 hours of time
1-3 Challenge Questions for Dialogue (2-
3 hours)
Background Assessment Task
Requirement to Add to the Community
Library
2 Assignments
Team Project (weeks 1-3) –
Industry Analysis of an Industry
They Chose from a List (35%)
Personal Project (week 4-7) – a
1:1 interview as a “hook” for a
capstone paper on leadership and
change management for
innovation and productivity (35%)
30% of assessment links to
participation
22. What We See
Real energy and investment
Students typically post 115-160
observations, comments and ideas over 8
weeks
Students typically share 25-30 OER
resources in the library (creating a library of
over 1,000 unique items in 8 weeks).
Students will never before have used an
interview with a person as the basis for an
assignment
Students engage in quality industry
analysis with 6-7 peers they have never
worked with before in a virtual team
Students use the coach for clarification and
challenge, but are essentially a self—
managing community of inquiry
Students create new resources of value to
them.
Students invest a lot of time in this
learning – it has purpose, meaning and
value for them…they know that time
in=value out.
Students say this course “shook them up!”
23. My 5 Big Learning Points
Less is more.. For both content and instruction
Challenge leads to more learning than textbooks
Co-creation and a community of inquiry produces surprisingly deep learning
The authenticity of the content they co-create leads to deeper learning for all
Peer to peer feedback is faster and often more critical / challenging than coach’s
feedback
25. Course Revision
1 weeks work now takes 1 day to
create
Revision points (where data needs
change and be updated) flagged in
the master copy and student work
triggers continuous revision while
the course is running.
Links to OER checked at the time
revision and 2 weeks before release
– links still get broken and have to be
replaced.
The student library becomes a
hunting ground for “better” OER
the revision