The acronym Mooc has made the Oxford
Dictionaries Online – a web-based lexicon of current English by the
publishers of the Oxford English Dictionary
Defined
as “a course of study made available over the Internet without charge
to a very large number of people”, the word Mooc has become commonplace
in academia over the last 18 months, after many higher education
institutions began offering such courses.
The phrase can be traced
back to 2008, when a group of Canadian scholars developed a course
called Connectivism and Connective Knowledge, which was delivered to
more than 2,000 online students.
However, it was in late 2011 when
the Stanford University Mooc “Introduction to Artificial Intelligence”
attracted around 160,000 enrolments that massive open online courses
became more widely known.
Angus Stevenson, head of dictionary
projects at Oxford Dictionaries, said: “New words, senses, and phrases
are added when we have gathered enough independent evidence from a range
of sources to be confident that they have widespread currency in
English.”
Mooc is not the only education-related word to be making
its debut in the online dictionary. BYOD, an abbreviation of “bring
your own device” has also been added. It refers to the practice of
people using their own computers, smartphones, or other devices for work
purposes, and is increasingly being used in universities, with
lecturers encouraging students to use their own gadgets during class.
Each
month, Oxford Dictionaries adds around 150 million words to its central
database of English usage examples, and approximately 1,000 of these
are added to Oxford Dictionaries Online each year.
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