Making meaningful decisions about time, workload and pedagogy in the digital age: the Course Resource Appraisal Model

Making meaningful decisions about time, workload and pedagogy in the digital age: the Course Resource Appraisal Model

Eileen Kennedy, Diana Laurillard, Bernard Horan, Patricia Charlton

04 May 2015

This article reports on a design-based research project to create a modelling tool to analyse the costs and learning benefits involved in different modes of study. The Course Resource Appraisal Model (CRAM) provides accurate cost-benefit information so that institutions are able to make more meaningful decisions about which kind of courses—online, blended or traditional face-to-face—make sense for them to provide. The tool calculates the difference between expenses and income over three iterations of the course and presents a pedagogical analysis of the learning experience provided. The article draws on a CRAM analysis of the costs and learning benefits of a massive open online course to show how the tool can illuminate the pedagogical and financial viability of a course of this kind.


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External Link: https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1475686/3/Kennedy_1475686_CRAM%20paper%20for%20Distance%20Education.pdf