Making education more open July 2011 Andy Lane

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Presentation given by Andy Lane at the short term fellowship course. July 2011

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Making Education More Open with OER

Professor Andy Lane, Senior Fellow, SCORE

The Opportunity: being open to change

Open Educational Resources are “… digitised materials offered freely and openly for educators, students and self learners to use and reuse for teaching, learning and research. “ Giving Knowledge for Free: The Emergence of Open Educational Resources, OECD 2007

“The most promising initiative in e-learning is the concept – and the developing reality, of open educational resources.” Sir John Daniel (OU, UNESCO, Commonwealth of Learning)

“There is no point duplicating effort to create content that is already available and has been proven to work. Institutions can build on the existing open educational resources initiative to achieve economies of scale and efficiencies. In addition they can pull in the best content and openly available learning resources from around the world and adapt them for particular courses.” On-line Learning Task Force, 2011

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The meaning of open in OER?

Spend 5 minutes talking to the person next to you about what you believe are the answers to the following questions:

• Is it enough for resources to be openly accessible online?• Should they also be openly licensed? • Do you want open resources in open formats?• Should you use open source software to create and use OER?

The meaning of open in OER? (Geser, 2007)

The Four Rs of OER and teaching and learning practices

• Reuse – Use the work verbatim, just exactly as you found it• Rework – Alter or transform the work so that it better meets your

needs• Remix – Combine the (verbatim or altered work) with other works

to better meet your needs• Redistribute – Share the verbatim work, the reworked work, or the

remixed work with others.

David Wiley, 2007

Open educational practices

Educational materials can act as a mediating object between teachers and learners

Educational material

Teachers Learners

Open educational practices

The implications of OER for mediating teaching and learning opportunities

• Granularity– the size and inter-dependence of modules• Judging the appropriate mix between:

- Pedagogic support (built into content)

- Personal support (self reflection and guidance)

- Peer support (mutual reflection and guidance)

- Professional support (expert reflection and guidance)• The use of new social computing technologies in facilitating

support and interaction• Greater sharing of practice amongst teachers and learners

Open communities as much as open content

http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/news/munroes-map-for-social-networksrsquo-lost-souls-2111356.html

OER are what you make of them

• OER can be:– Designed explicitly for educational use– Other content used for educational purposes

Spreading ‘wild’ seeds

For individuals the greater availability and accessibility of resources has been found to help them to:

• Learn new things or enrich other studies;• Share and discuss topics asynchronously or synchronously with

other learners;• Assess whether they wish to participate in (further) formal

education; • Decide which institution they want to study at;• Improve their work performance;• Create or revise OER themselves• But …• They often need guidance

For teachers, individually and collectively, OER make it possible for them to:

• Create courses more efficiently and/or effectively, particularly using rich media resources that require advanced technical and media skills;

• Investigate the ways in which others have taught their subject;• Create resources or courses in collaboration with others rather

than doing it all themselves;• Join in communities of practice which help improve their teaching

practices as they reflect on the community use of new open tools and technologies;

• Customise and adapt resources by translating or localising them;• But …• They must remember that technology only supports not supplants

good teaching.

For governments and national agencies OER offer scope to:

• Showcase their country’s educational systems;• Attract international students (to higher education at least);• Help drive changes in educational practices;• Develop educational resources in ‘minority’ languages that

commercial publishers are reluctant to do so;• Develop educational resources that reflect local cultures and

priorities;• Cooperate internationally on common resources to meet common

needs;• But …• They need to provide seed funding and supportive policies.

Stages in open educational resources development in institutions

1. Legal: release of copyright through creative commons

2. Practical: provide access to content

3. Technical: develop an environment for open access

4. Pedagogic: understand the designs that work

5. Economic: devise a model for sustainable operation

6. Transformative: change ways of working and learning

So why make educational resources open?

• A growing momentum behind OER worldwide and emergence of creative commons licences

• Consistent with the OU’s commitment to social justice and widening participation

• Helps build markets and reputation• Bridges the divide between formal and informal

learning• A test bed for new e-learning developments and

an opportunity to research and evaluate them• A way of drawing in materials from other

organisations• Provides the basis for world-wide collaborations

OpenLearn is …

• An institution-wide programme;• A sub-brand for OU’s open educational media• Making some of the OU’s educational materials freely

available in a web-based open learning environment;• Seeking to advance open educational practices by:

– Deploying leading-edge learning management tools for learner support;

– Encouraging the creation of non-formal collaborative learning communities;

– Encouraging other institutions to reuse and rework the content;– Enhancing international research-based knowledge about modern

pedagogies for higher education.

OpenLearn’s website architecture

Long form content for learners Long form content for educators

Information and short form content

Researcher network

External sites

YouTubeEDU

iTunesU

Facebook

Bridging informal and formal learning

• Learner comes first

• Content is the hook

• Flexibility

• Mix and match

• Self pacing

Impact on recruitment, preparation and progression

Designing for open learning

Volunteer students• Use exercises and submit

work• Custom portfolios for skills

development• Whole courses with pay-as-

you-go, on-demand accreditation

Social learners• Extending learning into

social networks• Store and reveal the actions

of learners• Self certification using data

on user interaction

Collaborate and cooperate

• Preparation

• Curriculum extension

• Professional development

• Narrow the digital divide

• Work based learning

• A common knowledge base

• Remote communities

A test bed

• Different cultural settings

• Informal collaboration

• Experiments

• Uptake of new technologies

• Supporting other universities

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