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Page 1: Illinois Slides (UIS & OER)

Start – “Coal Mining” / 3:49 - end

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How Digital, Networked Technologies and Sharing

Changes Education

Dr. Cable GreeneLearning Director

Page 3: Illinois Slides (UIS & OER)

Let’s talk about the big trends & how to prepare for inevitable change & how Illinois Higher Education can think in new

ways to leverage digital, networked technologies…

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“We are in the midst of a technological, economic, and organizational

transformation that allows us to negotiate the terms of freedom, justice, and productivity in the

information society”Yochai Benkler

http://www.flickr.com/photos/lonewolf23/1570632701/

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Yes… We Really are Networked… seamless connection of

people, resources & knowledge

digitization of content mobile, personal global platform for

collaboration outsourcing Anyone notice our

global economy?

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"According to an IBM study, in 2010, the amount of digital

information in the world will double every 11 hours."

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And we can makeall of our “digital stuff”available toall people…and most of itwill get used...by someone.

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“Long Tail” of Publishing

long tail

$

HarryPotter

Hyper-geometricpartial differential

equations

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http://wiki.elearning.ubc.ca/ComingApart

We All Get to Participate

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So how do we prepare students for jobs that don’t yet exist, using

technologies that haven’t been

invented, to solve problems we

don’t even know are problems yet?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xHWTLA8WecI

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(1) Engage Participatory /

“Web 2.0”

Tools & Practices

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RSS

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Social Networking

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Share Photos

http://www.flickr.com

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Wiki

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Share Slides (and use others’)

http://www.slideshare.net

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Share Video

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Blo

g

http://www.blogger.com

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Tweet

http://twitter.com

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(2) eLearningWhy call it

“eLearning?”

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“Distance” is about geographic separation.

“eLearning” is about leveraging the unique affordances of digital, networked technologies to support new ways of learning in new spaces. Online, Hybrid, Enhanced

“eLearning”

Page 27: Illinois Slides (UIS & OER)

Going to Web and Mobile

1998-99 1999-00 2000-01 2001-02 2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-080%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

51%

4%

Telecourse as Percent of Total eLearning FTEs

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20,583

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Ongoing eLearning Growth

Over 96,600 students learn online each year + 34,000 Hybrid

Online FTE up more than 22% Hybrid FTE up more than 45% 18% (and growing) of all state

instruction is delivered via online or hybrid instruction.

29

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Ongoing Online Learning Growth

45% of all CTC graduates earn 15 or more credits online or hybrid

23 colleges offer 86 different degrees and certificates online

16 colleges offer an AA degree online

30

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Why does this growth matter?

Page 32: Illinois Slides (UIS & OER)

Educate More Citizens

HECB Master Plan I. Raise educational attainment to

create prosperity, opportunity Policy Goal: Increase the total number of

degrees and certificates… By 2018, raise mid-level degrees and

certificates to 36,200 annually, an increase of 9,400 degrees annually.

Page 33: Illinois Slides (UIS & OER)

2008-09 Online + Hybrid LearningGas / Trips / CO2 Savings

2.2M round trips avoided = reduced traffic congestion

3.3M gallons of gas saved

64.4M pounds of CO2 not in the air

33http://www.fhcrc.org/about/pubs/center_news/weekly/img/2007_0806_i5_traffic.jpg

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(3) Open Educational Resources

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When we cooperate and share, we all win Faculty have new choices when building learning

spaces. …the more eyes on a problem, the greater chance

for a solution. Affordability: students can’t afford textbooks Self-interest: good things happen when I

share It’s a social justice issue: everyone should

have the right to access digital knowledge.

Why is “Open” Important?

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Definition of OER

Digitized materials, offered freely and openly for educators, students, to use and re-use for teaching, learning and research.

Page 39: Illinois Slides (UIS & OER)

OpenLearn (UK) - DEMO OCW – MIT (MIT HS)

China Open Resources for Education has translated 109 MIT OCW courses into Simplified Chinese.

Rice Connexions

(a few) Open Content Repositories

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The Old Economics

Print, warehouse,

and ship a new book for every student

http://www.flickr.com/photos/nationalmediamuseum/2780164461/

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The New Economics

Upload one copy, and everyone uses

it simultaneously

http://cnx.org/content/col10522/latest/

Making copies, storage, distribution

of digital stuff = “Free”

Page 45: Illinois Slides (UIS & OER)

Comparison of Statistics Textbooks

Publisher: Wiley Open: Connexions & QOOP

Downloadable version: $77.50

Downloadable & online versions: FREE

Printed bound version: $141.95 new $110.25 used

Printed bound version: $31.98 new

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Why do we Need Open Textbooks?

2005 GAO report: College textbook prices have risen at twice the rate of annual inflation over the last two decades

http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d05806.pdf

Page 47: Illinois Slides (UIS & OER)

Why do we Need Open Textbooks?

The College Board reported that for the 2007 through 2008 academic years each student spent an estimated $805 to $1,229 on college books and supplies…

http://www.collegeboard.com/prod_downloads/about/news_info/trends/trends_pricing_07.pdf

Page 48: Illinois Slides (UIS & OER)

Why do we Need Open Textbooks?

The gross margin on new college textbooks is currently 22.7 percent according to the National Association of College Stores.

http://www.nacs.org/public/research/margins.asp

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May, 2007: Dept of Ed.

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http://www.maketextbooksaffordable.org/course_correction.pdf

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Why so urgent?

Consider One High Enrollment Course: English Composition I 42,600+ enrollments / year X $100 textbook = $4.2 Million + (cost to

students) What if we looked at 100, 200,

300 high enrollment courses?

http://rtnl.files.wordpress.com/2007/01/thinker21.jpg

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We must get rid of our “not invented here” attitude regarding others’ content move to: "proudly borrowed from there"

Content is not a strategic advantage

Nor can we (or our students) afford it

Hey Higher Education!

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What Happens if weDon’t Change?

Google, Amazo

n, Apple, O

pen Sourc

e,

Open Content, O

pen Textbooks…

Higher EducationFu

nct

ion

al P

oss

ibili

ties

Time

Harder to catch-up …

Or even understand.

Page 60: Illinois Slides (UIS & OER)

60

How is the fiscal healthof your local newspaper?

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http://techplan.sbctc.edu

61

“We will cultivate the culture and practice of using and contributing to

open educational resources.”

Page 62: Illinois Slides (UIS & OER)

But using open educational resources – and contributing to

them – requires significant change in the culture of higher education. It requires thinking about content as a common resource that raises all boats

when shared. (p.11)

62

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WA Legislation

SSHB1946 – two big ideas – share technology and share content.

(v) Methods and open licensing options for effectively sharing digital content including but not limited to: Open courseware, open textbooks, open journals, and open learning objects…

63

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New State Board Policy

All digital software, educational resources and knowledge produced through competitive grants, offered through and/or managed by the SBCTC, will carry a Creative Commons Attribution License.

64

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Student Advocacy

WA CTC 2009 Student Voice Academy

(1) CUTTING TEXTBOOK COSTS “The high cost of textbooks is a burden to

students….” Top Issue three years running….

65

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Opening 81 Common Courses

Gates + Legislature + SBCTC + Colleges “Open Course Library” Designing 81 highest enrolled courses Courses will be Digital – can be taught online,

hybrid, web-enhanced and/or faculty can re-mix Open CC Licensing – everyone has access < $30 textbooks … or Free

81 courses enrollments = $52M+ / year in textbook costs Develop a culture of sharing content in the WA CTCs

66

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Federal Movement on Open? Obama’s American Graduation Initiative

“$50M / year for the creation of open courseware” DOE talking about part of $2B in Community College spending

Senator Dick Durbin (IL) Talking about “Open Textbooks” – pilot fund

Undersecretary of Education Martha Kanter OER leader when Chancellor @ Foothill-De Anza

Community College District Federal Research Access Act of 2009

increasing public access to academic research that is funded by the federal government (free after 6 mos)

67Principle: http://www.taxpayeraccess.org

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Choices:

(1) Open up andleverage global input

OR

(2) close up shop

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Think Big Crazy Ideas…. We could share all of our

instructional digital resources including: courses, textbooks and library resources … and use others’ digital materials.

Publicly funded digital content = openly licensed and freely available to those that paid for it.

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1.

“Top 50” Courses

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2.

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Blogs: http://blog.oer.sbctc.edu http://blog.elearning.sbctc.edu

Twitter: cgreen

Dr. Cable GreeneLearning [email protected]

(360) 704-4334