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Policy perspectives on Open Educational Resources
Scaling up the use of Open Educational Resources in the Nordic countries
Gard Titlestad, Secretary GeneralInternational Council For Open and Distance Education
Copenhagen, Denmark, 18 June 2015
Nordic OER
Outline
• ICDE and the topic• A new educational policy – a global shift• The Global Challenge – Higher Education• Drivers for Opening up for Knowledge• Policy for Less used Languages• What about Norden?• End
• To be the leading global network for making quality learning accessible throughout the world using open, distance, flexible and online education.
• To connect institutions, organisations and professionals from across the globe so that they can share ideas, resources and best practices, partner on major projects and advocate together.
• To be the official partner of UNESCO, that shares that agency’s key aim – the attainment of quality education for all
• ICDE believes that in pursuing education as a universal right, the needs of the learner must be central.
• To organize members in all regions of the world
25 Years SupportFrom Norway
Why ICDE?
Partner with UNESCO50 years
Professor Alan TaitDirector, International Development and Teacher Education, Open University, UK represented ICDE in Incheon together with the ICDE Secretary General.
http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0023/002331/233137e.pdf
Here, the ministers sign the Qingdao declaration. ICDE was represented by the Secretary General
http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0023/002333/233352E.pdf
Open Educational Resources and Open Solutions – the Qingdao declaration:”Open Educational Resources (OERs) provide education stakeholders with opportunities to improve the quality of, and expand access to, textbooks and other forms of learning content, to catalyze the innovative use of content, and to foster knowledge creation. We commit to developing sector-wide strategies and capacity building programmes to fully realize the potential of OERs to expand access to lifelong learning opportunities and achieve quality education.”
EducationAverage years of education
The world Africa south of SaharaYears of education West-Europe
This is ourChallenge
Source: Aftenposten/OECD. How Was Life? Shows long-term progress in key areas of well-being
20442030
320
4002007 - 2030
Mill. students
EU/OECD projections the need for HEby 2030: 410 mill.
This is ourChallenge
Cannot be solved by bricks and mortar
Combine Bricks and Clicks
• Increasing quality of education and enrolment in higher education is key issues for the African economy – now.
The future hot spots for higher
education- Asia
- Africa
Credit: A. Raftery / UWWorld population stabilization unlikely this century. Science, 18 September 2014
But also Latin America and the Caribbean
Openknowledge
Societal needs
Technology
Students needs and
expectations
OERCost
Trends, within
the framwork of globalisation and internationalisation
HE needs – 1 U a week
Demographics
Globalisation
Enabling economic growth
Access
Open Access
eInfrastructureseScience
Automation
Robots Sensors
2020 – 80% connectedInternet of things Open Research
Open Data
Open Innovation
US quadruppling
Southern Europe….
Developing economies
ICT Habitus
Flexibility
Employability
Lifelong
Disruptive Innovations
Open upfor
knowledge
3 recommendations12 languages
9 – 11 JUNE 2015, UNESCO HEADQUARTERS, PARIS, FRANCE.
BE PART OF A DIFFERENT FUTURE FOR HIGHER EDUCATION.
GLOBAL HIGH LEVEL POLICY FORUM:
ONLINE, OPEN AND FLEXIBLE HIGHER EDUCATION
FOR THE FUTURE WE WANTFROM STATEMENTS TO ACTION: EQUITY, ACCESS,
AND QUALITY LEARNING OUTCOMES
June 2015
SURVEY RESULTS
What We Heard – Perspectives and Experiences from 105 Educational
Leaders from 53 Countries
The findings verify the policy recommendations!
E-Learning in Higher Education in Latin America
Rec. 1: For Governments to Adopt national policies in support of Open Educational Resources in less used languages.
Rec 2: For Governments to Facilitate in partnership with private, public and the educational sector, market places and collaborative arenas for quality OER.
• The USAID led initiative works on the same as policy recommendation no 3:– Frameworks and
standards
Rec 3: For Governments to Take the leadership in facilitating the development of open frameworks and standards to ease the ability of OER repositories and systems to work together (provide and accept educational content, compatible applications and contextualised services).
Creating momentum through policy fora: 2 done, 1 to come
20 November 2014: Open EducationKey issues in policy for higher education
High Level Policy Forum 17 October 2015, Pretoria, South Africa: “Higher education for the sustainable future we want. The way ahead for Online, Open and Flexible learning: Opportunities and Actions.”ICDE in partership with UNESCO, CoL and OEC
Interventions, from UNESCO, ICDE and key experts and senior management:The Bali Message
Global High Level Forum in Paris9 – 11 JUNE 2015:Online, open and flexible higher education for the future we wantUNESCO – in partnership with ICDE
?A great point of departure
And a wake up call
Where the Digital Economy Is Moving the FastestBhaskar Chakravorti Christopher Tunnard Ravi Shankar Chaturvedi FEBRUARY 19, 2015
NowUsed to
be
Should Nordic higher education policies be revised?
Mainstream the Open Approach- and:
- Collaboration is key
OER and Open and Distance Learning can increase the impact of
investments in knowledge
OER &ODL
Open Access – open scienceResearch based OERResearch based teaching
Innovation in education – open innovationInnovate the learning system – flip the classroomKnowledge supply for innovation
High quality educationResearch based educationResource based educationOpen education
Sunset or Sunrise for businesses?
• Position your business for the sunrise and the open landscape
• Avoid fighting for your last turf in the sunset
“It is not only having equal access that leads to equity; it is having equal access to success, regardless of learning difficulties, social backgrounds, and other barriers.”
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