Cunningham to speak at Learning with MOOCs conference

Doctoral student Paige Cunningham will participate this week in the conference, Learning with MOOCs III: Being and Learning in a Digital Age, to be held October 6-7 at the University of Pennsylvania.

Cunningham will present her paper, “Massive Data, Individual Learners: Challenges for Developing Holistic Views of MOOC Participants.” She will address the challenges of drawing meaningful insight from learner data regarding MOOCs offered by the University of Illinois.

When the University of Illinois and Coursera first partnered in 2012, the number of offered courses was small, so the large amounts of learner data provided was manageable. Since then, the number of course offerings has risen and the data provided to the university from Coursera has changed. While an increase in volume of learner data initially sounds rich for developing a holistic view of learner engagement and performance, the data produced is not necessarily meaningful.

For example, learner grade data is relatively easy to extract regardless of platform, but such data only provides a superficial understanding of learner engagement. More meaningful glimpses into such engagement can be acquired from in-depth lecture watching data and clickstream data. However, these data sources are not currently available for on-demand courses, making accurate comparisons between engagement in session-based and on-demand courses problematic.

Previously both free and paid learners could complete all course activities, allowing for collection of all learners’ data. A new shift towards only permitting students to complete graded assessments after paying for a certificate means that evaluation of their levels of engagement will be based on sparse lecture watching and forum participation data.

Finally, the University of Illinois is pioneering several degree-granting graduate programs based on the Coursera platform, adding an additional layer of complexity to the data collection process. Integrating such different data sources makes defining an overall picture of learner engagement still more difficult.

Cunningham is a fourth-year doctoral student whose research interests focus on how information technologies connect people who are spread out in space and time. She explores issues such as how social media and online learning systems connect geographically dispersed peoples, both for community building and educational purposes.

Updated on
Backto the news archive

Related News

Pila awarded Ruth Fine Memorial Student Loan

MSLIS student Nathaniel Allen (Nat) Pila has been selected as the 2025 recipient of the Ruth Fine Memorial Student Loan, awarded annually by the District of Columbia Library Association (DCLA). The award will support Pila as he begins his studies in the iSchool at the University of Illinois. 

Nathaniel Allen Pila

Internship Spotlight: National Endowment for the Humanities

PhD student Owen Monroe reflects on his internship with the National Endowment for the Humanities Office of Digital Humanities, held from May to December 2024. Last month, the NEH programs officer Monroe worked with during his internship discussed some of their work at the Digital Humanities conference in Lisbon, Portugal. 

Owen Monroe

Maimone to receive ALISE Youth Services Graduate Student Travel Award

Doctoral candidate Jessie Maimone has been selected as the recipient of the 2025 Association for Library and Information Science Education (ALISE) Youth Services Graduate Student Travel Award. She will be honored at an awards presentation during the ALISE 2025 Annual Conference, which will be held October 6–8 in Kansas City, Missouri.

Jessie Maimone

iSchool students named 2025-2026 ALA Spectrum Scholars

Eight iSchool master's students have been named 2025-2026 Spectrum Scholars by the American Library Association (ALA) Office for Diversity, Literacy, and Outreach Services. Since 1997, the Spectrum Scholarship Program has assisted over 1,600 graduate-level students pursuing degrees in library and information studies through ALA-accredited programs. This year's scholars were selected based on their commitment to community building, leadership potential, and planned contributions to making social justice as part of everyday work in LIS. The highly competitive scholarship program received four times as many applications as there were available scholarships.

iSchool Building

Bhupal recognized by Research Park for business innovation

MSIM student Shravani Bhupal was honored for her internship performance at the 19th Annual Research Park Intern Awards ceremony on July 24. The University of Illinois' Research Park is home to over 120 companies and more than 800 interns. Bhupal, who served as an intern at COUNTRY Financial DigitaLab, received the Best Business Innovation Award for her work. 

Shravani Bhupal