Give MOOCs some credit: a system-divergent innovation accrediting an AI mass-market MOOC at a Swedish university
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift, 2025

Lifelong learning in higher education (HE), epitomised by Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs), is valuable for re-skilling and upskilling Sweden's industry workforce in (advanced) digital competencies to remain globally innovative and competitive. Meanwhile, Sweden's non-regulatory approach towards MOOC deployment in HE meant that their accreditation by universities faces strenuous systemic challenges. However, since 2019, one university began accrediting an AI mass-market MOOC following a nationally unique system-divergent innovation, which this case study unpacks by responding to three research questions. First, what were the underlying processes of this system-divergent innovation, and how and why did it occur? Second, what were its key success factors? Furthermore, how sustainable is it? This reflexive case study draws on eight semi-structured interviews with university staff and faculty, which were deductively analysed based on topical literature and concepts from system-divergent innovation and structuration theory. Generated themes were called challenges-as-opportunities and spanned bureaucracy, finances, technological infrastructures, deroutinisation, internal conflicts and external pressure. These themes and their discussion inform policy on three tiers: governmental, sectoral, and institutional. This original work highlights that mmMOOCs' accreditation by universities can play a significant role in bridging lifelong learning and HE in Sweden, and calls for digital maturity and national contagion.

System-Divergent innovation

Adult Education and Lifelong Learning

lifelong learning

digitalisation

MOOCs

Social Sciences

higher education

Digitalisation

Higher Education

Sweden

Författare

Hugo-Henrik Hachem

Linköpings universitet

Mattias Wiggberg

Kungliga Tekniska Högskolan (KTH)

Tanya Osborne

Science, Technology and Society 01

Jan Gulliksen

Kungliga Tekniska Högskolan (KTH)

Fredrik Heintz

Linköpings universitet

Cogent Education

2331186X (eISSN)

Vol. 12 1 2529421

Advanced Digital Skills Policy Lab for Academic Transformation (ADAPT)

VINNOVA (2023-02579), 2023-11-01 -- 2026-12-31.

Ämneskategorier (SSIF 2025)

Pedagogik

Lärande och undervisning

Pedagogiskt arbete

DOI

10.1080/2331186X.2025.2529421

Mer information

Senast uppdaterat

2025-07-22