This study aimed to analyze the student's behaviour in relation to their degree of commitment, participation, and contribution in a MOOC based on a social learning approach. Interaction data was collected on the learning platform and in social networks, both of which were used in the third edition of a social MOOC course. This data was then studied via statistical methods and analysis of social networks.This study assumes that social communities would arise around the course, would remain over time, and that participants would even contribute with new proposals. The findings indicated that social learning communities are built and continue only while the course is open and while the teachers are involved in fostering participation. Although this study is limited, the design criteria of the course, the pedagogical model on which this is supported, and the methods applied for this analysis provide other researchers and educators with clues for better understand the dynamic process of social learning in social MOOCs. to Schuwer et al. (2015), the MOOC movement is the latest "big thing" in Open and Distance Learning (ODL) and threatens to significantly transform higher education.A simple definition, by OpenupEd (2015), says that MOOCs are "courses designed for large numbers of participants, that can be accessed by anyone anywhere as long as they have an internet connection, are also open to everyone without entry qualifications, and offer a full/complete course experience online for free" (p. 1).