R. John Robertson1, Sheila MacNeill1, Phil Barker2, Lorna Campbell1 and Li Yuan3
1Centre for Academic Practice and Learning Enhancement, University of Strathclyde, 2Institute for Computer Based Learning, Heriot-Watt University, 3Institute for Cybernetic Education, University of Bolton
This paper examines CETIS experience of supporting a nationwide programme to release Open Educational Resources (the JISC Higher Education Academy UKOER Pilot Programme ). We consider how our model of support could inform others and be adapted to encourage sustainable technical support networks for Open Course Ware initiatives. As a national initiative involving universities throughout the UK, the UKOER programme involved a diverse range of OER providers, including individual educators, discipline-based consortia and institutions. Given this diversity it was recognised from the outset that no single technical solution would fit all projects, and therefore no specific tools, descriptive standards, exchange or dissemination mechanisms were mandated (apart from a requirement that the resources produced be represented in a national repository of learning materials ). In supporting this programme we have had to address diverse approaches and communities and it is likely that any similar pan-institutional initiative for supporting the release of OERs would face similar challenges.
Our approach to programme support has sought to move from the detail of specific support issues towards underlying support principles; thereby anticipating other issues and promoting good practice.
Our method has been: to provoke conversation through technical presentations and discussion opportunities at meetings or through blog posts; to investigate the technical choices made by individual projects through technical review conversations and record summary details of these conversations publicly online through an interface supporting searching and browsing; and to respond to issues arising from these calls or from project blogs.
In considering how this approach could be used more widely we will look at the challenges of working openly, the organisational overhead of this approach, its adaptability, and the role we think it has played in supporting the management and dissemination of OERs for this programme.
Approaches to supporting Open Educational Resource projectsR. John Robertson
Approaches to supporting Open Educational Resource projects, OCWC2010 Hanoi, May 5-7 2010.
R. John Robertson1, Sheila MacNeill1, Phil Barker2, Lorna Campbell1 and Li Yuan3
1Centre for Academic Practice and Learning Enhancement, University of Strathclyde, 2Institute for Computer Based Learning, Heriot-Watt University, 3Institute for Cybernetic Education, University of Bolton
1. The document summarizes the findings of a study on the choices made by 29 UK pilot projects in describing and sharing open educational resources.
2. The projects used a diverse range of existing technologies, including eLearning platforms, repositories, and web 2.0 applications, to manage and share resources.
3. The descriptive standards and packaging formats used were often embedded within the chosen systems rather than selected independently.
2010-06-30 (UC3M) Sheila MacNeill, CETIS, I jornadas eMadrideMadrid network
This document provides an overview of developments in technology enhanced learning (TEL) in the UK higher education sector from the perspective of JISC CETIS. It discusses the context and mission of JISC CETIS, emerging views of the UK TEL landscape including different models of distributed learning environments, and key programs that JISC CETIS supports related to curriculum design, delivery, and interoperability standards.
This document provides an overview of a Broadcast Technology programme offered as a one-year full-time or part-time top-up to a Foundation Degree. The programme includes four pathways in audio, systems, computing, and outside broadcast. It aims to develop practical skills into professional skills to prepare students for careers in areas like production, post-production, and transmission. The programme structure, educational aims, teaching and learning strategies, and learning outcomes are described in detail over multiple sections.
This document provides an overview of the Broadcast Technology Cluster (BTC) at Ravensbourne College of Design and Communication, which includes four foundation degree programmes: Broadcast Audio Technology, Broadcast Technology, Broadcast Information Technology, and Outside Broadcast Technology. The programmes aim to provide both intellectual and practical skills for students to enter the broadcast industry. Courses involve project-based learning, work placements, and focus on developing skills applicable to jobs in areas like systems design, production, and transmission. Teaching methods include lectures, seminars, and industry speakers, while assessments evaluate knowledge, skills, and professional competencies.
This document discusses a project to develop a classification system for European higher education institutions. The goals are to increase transparency, provide a tool for research and policymaking, and help institutions with profiling and benchmarking. The project involves stakeholders and will create multidimensional schemes based on objective data like degrees offered, research output, student profiles and community engagement. An initial set of schemes was tested and a second set with revised indicators is being developed. The resulting classification aims to help various groups understand institutional characteristics while respecting diversity across European higher education.
Paper presented at EDUCON 2012 (April), talking about an experience of using social network, web2.0, microblogging and virtual worlds in the teaching of programming techniques.
Fostering solar technology in the Mediterranean area - Communication PlanFOSTEr in MED
The communication plan outlines strategies for promoting the FOSTEr in MED project, which aims to foster solar technology adoption in the Mediterranean region. Key actions include developing a graphic identity, launching a project website, producing promotional materials, organizing conferences, utilizing media and social media, and publishing a monthly newsletter. The plan coordinates internal communication between partners and ensures external stakeholders are informed of project activities, opportunities, and results throughout its duration from 2013-2015.
Approaches to supporting Open Educational Resource projectsR. John Robertson
Approaches to supporting Open Educational Resource projects, OCWC2010 Hanoi, May 5-7 2010.
R. John Robertson1, Sheila MacNeill1, Phil Barker2, Lorna Campbell1 and Li Yuan3
1Centre for Academic Practice and Learning Enhancement, University of Strathclyde, 2Institute for Computer Based Learning, Heriot-Watt University, 3Institute for Cybernetic Education, University of Bolton
1. The document summarizes the findings of a study on the choices made by 29 UK pilot projects in describing and sharing open educational resources.
2. The projects used a diverse range of existing technologies, including eLearning platforms, repositories, and web 2.0 applications, to manage and share resources.
3. The descriptive standards and packaging formats used were often embedded within the chosen systems rather than selected independently.
2010-06-30 (UC3M) Sheila MacNeill, CETIS, I jornadas eMadrideMadrid network
This document provides an overview of developments in technology enhanced learning (TEL) in the UK higher education sector from the perspective of JISC CETIS. It discusses the context and mission of JISC CETIS, emerging views of the UK TEL landscape including different models of distributed learning environments, and key programs that JISC CETIS supports related to curriculum design, delivery, and interoperability standards.
This document provides an overview of a Broadcast Technology programme offered as a one-year full-time or part-time top-up to a Foundation Degree. The programme includes four pathways in audio, systems, computing, and outside broadcast. It aims to develop practical skills into professional skills to prepare students for careers in areas like production, post-production, and transmission. The programme structure, educational aims, teaching and learning strategies, and learning outcomes are described in detail over multiple sections.
This document provides an overview of the Broadcast Technology Cluster (BTC) at Ravensbourne College of Design and Communication, which includes four foundation degree programmes: Broadcast Audio Technology, Broadcast Technology, Broadcast Information Technology, and Outside Broadcast Technology. The programmes aim to provide both intellectual and practical skills for students to enter the broadcast industry. Courses involve project-based learning, work placements, and focus on developing skills applicable to jobs in areas like systems design, production, and transmission. Teaching methods include lectures, seminars, and industry speakers, while assessments evaluate knowledge, skills, and professional competencies.
This document discusses a project to develop a classification system for European higher education institutions. The goals are to increase transparency, provide a tool for research and policymaking, and help institutions with profiling and benchmarking. The project involves stakeholders and will create multidimensional schemes based on objective data like degrees offered, research output, student profiles and community engagement. An initial set of schemes was tested and a second set with revised indicators is being developed. The resulting classification aims to help various groups understand institutional characteristics while respecting diversity across European higher education.
Paper presented at EDUCON 2012 (April), talking about an experience of using social network, web2.0, microblogging and virtual worlds in the teaching of programming techniques.
Fostering solar technology in the Mediterranean area - Communication PlanFOSTEr in MED
The communication plan outlines strategies for promoting the FOSTEr in MED project, which aims to foster solar technology adoption in the Mediterranean region. Key actions include developing a graphic identity, launching a project website, producing promotional materials, organizing conferences, utilizing media and social media, and publishing a monthly newsletter. The plan coordinates internal communication between partners and ensures external stakeholders are informed of project activities, opportunities, and results throughout its duration from 2013-2015.
The document discusses the start-up of Phase III of the UKOER synthesis and evaluation project. It will be led by Allison Littlejohn, Helen Beetham, Isobel Falconer, and Lou McGill at Glasgow Caledonian University. The project aims to make a wide range of existing digital learning resources freely available and discoverable by educators and learners. It also seeks to bring about sustainable changes in culture and practices around open sharing and reuse of educational resources.
MAGHRENOV deliverable 2.1: Roadmap of an EU-MPC entrepreneurial education pro...Maghrenov
Executive Summary : this report is a practical approach to plan the development of educational programs intended to create a new generation of game changers in the Maghreb Partner Countries (MPC)
D2.4 e participation-bestpractices_v0.5George Zhukov
This document provides guidelines and best practices for engaging university stakeholders and increasing e-participation in university decision-making. It summarizes the MyUniversity project, which equipped universities with an e-participation platform. It then outlines eight ground rules for effective e-participation, including transparency, respect, trust, and inclusion. The document also presents a conceptual model for managing e-participation initiatives, including phases for programming, planning, design, implementation, and evaluation. It provides details on stages for each phase and guidelines for successful e-participation.
The document outlines plans to develop a sustainable Chilean Telecentre Academy to provide training to telecentre operators. It discusses establishing [1] administrative and economic sustainability through an efficient management model, [2] adapting curricula based on operator needs, and [3] developing e-learning programs. The methodology involves asynchronous e-learning, self-study modules, and evaluations. The curriculum includes courses on managing telecentres, democracy, e-government, and best practices. The goals are to address inequality in operator training and reshape operator profiles to achieve social inclusion objectives.
The document describes the dissemination and implementation plan for the SDI-EDU project. The plan outlines target groups including spatial planners and architects. It details a communication strategy involving a project website, workshops, publications, and networking. Key dissemination tools are listed such as the project website, geoportal, press releases, and branding guidelines. Milestones include partner meetings and conferences to disseminate results.
General education training nuclear securityBidan Zhu
The IAEA aims to contribute to effective global nuclear security by supporting states in developing their nuclear security infrastructure and human resources. It offers education and training programs focused on building sustainable capabilities. These include a master's program in nuclear security, practical training, and establishing Nuclear Security Support Centres within states. The IAEA also coordinates networks to facilitate collaboration and sharing of best practices between academic institutions and support centres. Its priorities are strengthening relationships with academics and supporting faculty development to ensure education is linked to training needs.
What do academic libraries have to do with open educational resourcesR. John Robertson
This paper (preprint for Open Ed 2010) will discuss the possible roles of academic libraries in promoting, supporting, and sustaining institutional Open Educational Resource initiatives. It will note areas in which libraries or librarians have skills and knowledge that intersect with some of the needs of academic staff and students as they use and release OERs. It will also present the results of a brief survey of the views of some OER initiatives on the current and potential role of academic libraries.
One Standard to rule them all?: Descriptive Choices for Open EducationR. John Robertson
R. John Robertson1, Lorna Campbell1, Phil Barker2, Li Yuan3, and Sheila MacNeill1
1Centre for Academic Practice and Learning Enhancement, University of Strathclyde, 2Institute for Computer Based Learning, Heriot-Watt University 3Institute for Cybernetic Education, University of Bolton
Drawing on our experience of supporting a nationwide Open Educational Resources programme (the UKOER programme), this presentation will consider the diverse range of approaches to describing OERs that have emerged across the programme and their impact on resource sharing, workflows, and an aggregate view of the resources.
Due to the diverse nature of the projects in the programme, ranging from individual educators to discipline-based consortia and institutions, it was apparent that no one technical or descriptive solution would fit all. Consequently projects were mandated to supply only a limited amount of descriptive information (programme tag, author, title, date, url, file format, file size, rights) with some additional information suggested (language, subject classifications, keywords, tags, comments, description). Projects were free to choose how this information should be encoded (if at all), stored, and shared.
In response, the projects have taken many different approaches to the description and management of resources. These range from using traditional highly structured and detailed metadata standards to approaches using whatever descriptions are supported by particular web2.0 applications. This experimental approach to resource description offers the wider OER community an opportunity to examine and assess the implications of different strategies for resource description and management
This paper illustrates a number of examples of projects’ approaches to description, noting the workflows and effort involved. We will consider the relationship of the choice of tool (repository, web2.0 application, VLE) to the choice of standards; and the relationship between local requirements and those of the wider community.
We will consider the impact of those choices on the dissemination and discoverability of resources. For example, the implications of resource description choices for discovery services which draw on multiple sources of OERs.
This document provides an overview of a hands-on workshop for understanding and using data from the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NAMCS) and the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS). The workshop covers survey background and data uses, technical considerations, accessing the data online, using raw data files, and advanced topics. NAMCS and NHAMCS collect data on visits to office-based physicians and hospital outpatient/emergency departments, including patient characteristics, visit details, provider information, and mentions of up to six medications per visit.
The document discusses the basic parts and functions of a computer. It explains that computers have input devices like keyboards and mice, processing components like the CPU and memory, and output devices like monitors and printers. The main internal computer components are then listed as the motherboard, microprocessor, memory, hard drive, optical drive, graphics card, sound card, and network card. Units of data such as bytes, kilobytes, megabytes, and gigabytes are also defined.
The document discusses characteristics of banking credit in Latin America across several areas:
1. Credit is scarce and costly in the region, with high interest rate margins and volatility. Recurring banking crises are also common.
2. Sudden stops of capital flows and banking crises are linked, with dollarization exacerbating the effects of abrupt changes in relative prices. Weak regulation and supervision have contributed to crises.
3. Reforms improving creditor rights, increasing foreign bank ownership, and reducing the role of inefficient public banks have helped increase financial depth, competition, and access to credit in some countries. However, challenges remain regarding stability and supporting small businesses.
1. The document describes a real-time detector for unusual behavior that uses motion and shape-based analysis to detect statistically relevant unusual events in video and alert users.
2. It outlines the contributions and responsibilities of different partners - ACV focuses on motion detection and tracking, Bilkent on human detection and action recognition, UPC on foreground detection and body modeling, and SZTAKI on unusual event detection and the software platform.
3. The system will integrate computer vision techniques like foreground detection, tracking, human detection, action recognition and motion-based unusual event detection to process video streams and detect anomalous behaviors in real-time.
This document discusses how FDR and his presidency helped pave the way for the Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court decision that desegregated schools. It discusses three key aspects: 1) FDR's court packing plan weakened the court's opposition; 2) FDR appointed nine new justices to the court who were more liberal on civil rights; 3) The Roosevelt Justice Department revived Reconstruction-era civil rights statutes and aided the NAACP in civil rights cases. FDR's actions and appointments helped shift the Supreme Court to hand down more pro-civil rights decisions in the 1940s and 1950s.
The document discusses challenges and techniques for enabling cross-site communication between web components in rich web applications and mashups. It describes how the same-origin policy prevents direct cross-site communication and summarizes techniques used today like server-side proxies, Flash proxies, and JSON-P. It then introduces the "JavaScript Wormhole" technique, which uses a callback page and dynamically-generated JavaScript to pass data across sites. The document concludes by discussing proposals to evolve the platform to better support cross-site communication while maintaining security.
The document discusses different coordinate systems and geometries for the FCAL collaboration including the positions of the LumiCal and BeamCal detectors centered on the outgoing beam within 3.05cm and 3.65cm respectively. It also notes the angular coverage of LumiCal from 8 to 28cm and 26 to 92 mrad and BeamCal from 1.5 to 10cm and 4 to 28 mrad. The BeamCal segmentation is mentioned as 45 or 60 degree calorimeter segments with either 8 or 6 segments using a 360-opening angle divided by the number of segments for 20 mrad coverage.
This document discusses repositories for open educational resources (OER). It covers:
1) The JISC CETIS organization provides technical support to the UKOER program through participating in standards bodies and sharing experiences using technologies.
2) The UKOER program is a collaboration between JISC and the Higher Education Academy funded by HEFCE to support OER projects.
3) The document outlines several technical considerations for OER repositories including metadata, integration with other systems, workflows, packaging standards, and dissemination of content.
The document describes research on developing learning progressions to support K-12 students' environmental literacy. It discusses conceptual frameworks focusing on scientific practices, principles, and processes in systems. It analyzes data from student assessments to identify patterns in understanding of topics like water and carbon cycling. Key findings include increasing student awareness over time but lack of understanding of invisible system components and constraints on processes.
The document summarizes the standard genetic algorithm approach. It describes representing solutions as genotypes, evaluating phenotypes by interpreting genotypes, initializing a population randomly, and running a generational loop that selects parents preferentially based on fitness, performs crossover and mutation on parents to create offspring, replaces the parental population with offspring, and iterates until a termination condition is met. It notes that evaluations can be simple or complex, and issues like noise and computation time can arise in practice.
Librarians and Open Educational Resources: a match made in...R. John Robertson
Learn to Share to Learn,A joint conference from the South Western Regional Library Service and the JISC Regional Support Centre South West.Taunton Rugby Club March 23rd 2011
Friendly Aquaponics: the basics of the systemBryy4
Aquaponics combines aquaculture and hydroponics into a symbiotic system where fish waste fertilizes plants grown hydroponically. The system has several advantages including higher crop yields using less water and also producing fish. A commercial aquaponics system at the University of the Virgin Islands yields 200-300 lbs of vegetables and 200 lbs of fish per week from a single system. The technology is low-cost, easy to operate, and balanced without needing water changes or cleaning for years.
This document outlines important principles of instructional design, including aligning learning objectives with assessment, taking an incremental approach, prioritizing clarity, recognizing differences between online and offline learning environments, considering more than just the learning management system, seeing design as an opportunity, using reflection, and incorporating threshold concepts and disciplinary knowledge. It also notes that instructional design is a toolbox and not a "magic wand" that can solve every problem or meet every need, and that technology should be secondary to the educational content.
The document discusses the start-up of Phase III of the UKOER synthesis and evaluation project. It will be led by Allison Littlejohn, Helen Beetham, Isobel Falconer, and Lou McGill at Glasgow Caledonian University. The project aims to make a wide range of existing digital learning resources freely available and discoverable by educators and learners. It also seeks to bring about sustainable changes in culture and practices around open sharing and reuse of educational resources.
MAGHRENOV deliverable 2.1: Roadmap of an EU-MPC entrepreneurial education pro...Maghrenov
Executive Summary : this report is a practical approach to plan the development of educational programs intended to create a new generation of game changers in the Maghreb Partner Countries (MPC)
D2.4 e participation-bestpractices_v0.5George Zhukov
This document provides guidelines and best practices for engaging university stakeholders and increasing e-participation in university decision-making. It summarizes the MyUniversity project, which equipped universities with an e-participation platform. It then outlines eight ground rules for effective e-participation, including transparency, respect, trust, and inclusion. The document also presents a conceptual model for managing e-participation initiatives, including phases for programming, planning, design, implementation, and evaluation. It provides details on stages for each phase and guidelines for successful e-participation.
The document outlines plans to develop a sustainable Chilean Telecentre Academy to provide training to telecentre operators. It discusses establishing [1] administrative and economic sustainability through an efficient management model, [2] adapting curricula based on operator needs, and [3] developing e-learning programs. The methodology involves asynchronous e-learning, self-study modules, and evaluations. The curriculum includes courses on managing telecentres, democracy, e-government, and best practices. The goals are to address inequality in operator training and reshape operator profiles to achieve social inclusion objectives.
The document describes the dissemination and implementation plan for the SDI-EDU project. The plan outlines target groups including spatial planners and architects. It details a communication strategy involving a project website, workshops, publications, and networking. Key dissemination tools are listed such as the project website, geoportal, press releases, and branding guidelines. Milestones include partner meetings and conferences to disseminate results.
General education training nuclear securityBidan Zhu
The IAEA aims to contribute to effective global nuclear security by supporting states in developing their nuclear security infrastructure and human resources. It offers education and training programs focused on building sustainable capabilities. These include a master's program in nuclear security, practical training, and establishing Nuclear Security Support Centres within states. The IAEA also coordinates networks to facilitate collaboration and sharing of best practices between academic institutions and support centres. Its priorities are strengthening relationships with academics and supporting faculty development to ensure education is linked to training needs.
What do academic libraries have to do with open educational resourcesR. John Robertson
This paper (preprint for Open Ed 2010) will discuss the possible roles of academic libraries in promoting, supporting, and sustaining institutional Open Educational Resource initiatives. It will note areas in which libraries or librarians have skills and knowledge that intersect with some of the needs of academic staff and students as they use and release OERs. It will also present the results of a brief survey of the views of some OER initiatives on the current and potential role of academic libraries.
One Standard to rule them all?: Descriptive Choices for Open EducationR. John Robertson
R. John Robertson1, Lorna Campbell1, Phil Barker2, Li Yuan3, and Sheila MacNeill1
1Centre for Academic Practice and Learning Enhancement, University of Strathclyde, 2Institute for Computer Based Learning, Heriot-Watt University 3Institute for Cybernetic Education, University of Bolton
Drawing on our experience of supporting a nationwide Open Educational Resources programme (the UKOER programme), this presentation will consider the diverse range of approaches to describing OERs that have emerged across the programme and their impact on resource sharing, workflows, and an aggregate view of the resources.
Due to the diverse nature of the projects in the programme, ranging from individual educators to discipline-based consortia and institutions, it was apparent that no one technical or descriptive solution would fit all. Consequently projects were mandated to supply only a limited amount of descriptive information (programme tag, author, title, date, url, file format, file size, rights) with some additional information suggested (language, subject classifications, keywords, tags, comments, description). Projects were free to choose how this information should be encoded (if at all), stored, and shared.
In response, the projects have taken many different approaches to the description and management of resources. These range from using traditional highly structured and detailed metadata standards to approaches using whatever descriptions are supported by particular web2.0 applications. This experimental approach to resource description offers the wider OER community an opportunity to examine and assess the implications of different strategies for resource description and management
This paper illustrates a number of examples of projects’ approaches to description, noting the workflows and effort involved. We will consider the relationship of the choice of tool (repository, web2.0 application, VLE) to the choice of standards; and the relationship between local requirements and those of the wider community.
We will consider the impact of those choices on the dissemination and discoverability of resources. For example, the implications of resource description choices for discovery services which draw on multiple sources of OERs.
This document provides an overview of a hands-on workshop for understanding and using data from the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NAMCS) and the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS). The workshop covers survey background and data uses, technical considerations, accessing the data online, using raw data files, and advanced topics. NAMCS and NHAMCS collect data on visits to office-based physicians and hospital outpatient/emergency departments, including patient characteristics, visit details, provider information, and mentions of up to six medications per visit.
The document discusses the basic parts and functions of a computer. It explains that computers have input devices like keyboards and mice, processing components like the CPU and memory, and output devices like monitors and printers. The main internal computer components are then listed as the motherboard, microprocessor, memory, hard drive, optical drive, graphics card, sound card, and network card. Units of data such as bytes, kilobytes, megabytes, and gigabytes are also defined.
The document discusses characteristics of banking credit in Latin America across several areas:
1. Credit is scarce and costly in the region, with high interest rate margins and volatility. Recurring banking crises are also common.
2. Sudden stops of capital flows and banking crises are linked, with dollarization exacerbating the effects of abrupt changes in relative prices. Weak regulation and supervision have contributed to crises.
3. Reforms improving creditor rights, increasing foreign bank ownership, and reducing the role of inefficient public banks have helped increase financial depth, competition, and access to credit in some countries. However, challenges remain regarding stability and supporting small businesses.
1. The document describes a real-time detector for unusual behavior that uses motion and shape-based analysis to detect statistically relevant unusual events in video and alert users.
2. It outlines the contributions and responsibilities of different partners - ACV focuses on motion detection and tracking, Bilkent on human detection and action recognition, UPC on foreground detection and body modeling, and SZTAKI on unusual event detection and the software platform.
3. The system will integrate computer vision techniques like foreground detection, tracking, human detection, action recognition and motion-based unusual event detection to process video streams and detect anomalous behaviors in real-time.
This document discusses how FDR and his presidency helped pave the way for the Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court decision that desegregated schools. It discusses three key aspects: 1) FDR's court packing plan weakened the court's opposition; 2) FDR appointed nine new justices to the court who were more liberal on civil rights; 3) The Roosevelt Justice Department revived Reconstruction-era civil rights statutes and aided the NAACP in civil rights cases. FDR's actions and appointments helped shift the Supreme Court to hand down more pro-civil rights decisions in the 1940s and 1950s.
The document discusses challenges and techniques for enabling cross-site communication between web components in rich web applications and mashups. It describes how the same-origin policy prevents direct cross-site communication and summarizes techniques used today like server-side proxies, Flash proxies, and JSON-P. It then introduces the "JavaScript Wormhole" technique, which uses a callback page and dynamically-generated JavaScript to pass data across sites. The document concludes by discussing proposals to evolve the platform to better support cross-site communication while maintaining security.
The document discusses different coordinate systems and geometries for the FCAL collaboration including the positions of the LumiCal and BeamCal detectors centered on the outgoing beam within 3.05cm and 3.65cm respectively. It also notes the angular coverage of LumiCal from 8 to 28cm and 26 to 92 mrad and BeamCal from 1.5 to 10cm and 4 to 28 mrad. The BeamCal segmentation is mentioned as 45 or 60 degree calorimeter segments with either 8 or 6 segments using a 360-opening angle divided by the number of segments for 20 mrad coverage.
This document discusses repositories for open educational resources (OER). It covers:
1) The JISC CETIS organization provides technical support to the UKOER program through participating in standards bodies and sharing experiences using technologies.
2) The UKOER program is a collaboration between JISC and the Higher Education Academy funded by HEFCE to support OER projects.
3) The document outlines several technical considerations for OER repositories including metadata, integration with other systems, workflows, packaging standards, and dissemination of content.
The document describes research on developing learning progressions to support K-12 students' environmental literacy. It discusses conceptual frameworks focusing on scientific practices, principles, and processes in systems. It analyzes data from student assessments to identify patterns in understanding of topics like water and carbon cycling. Key findings include increasing student awareness over time but lack of understanding of invisible system components and constraints on processes.
The document summarizes the standard genetic algorithm approach. It describes representing solutions as genotypes, evaluating phenotypes by interpreting genotypes, initializing a population randomly, and running a generational loop that selects parents preferentially based on fitness, performs crossover and mutation on parents to create offspring, replaces the parental population with offspring, and iterates until a termination condition is met. It notes that evaluations can be simple or complex, and issues like noise and computation time can arise in practice.
Librarians and Open Educational Resources: a match made in...R. John Robertson
Learn to Share to Learn,A joint conference from the South Western Regional Library Service and the JISC Regional Support Centre South West.Taunton Rugby Club March 23rd 2011
Friendly Aquaponics: the basics of the systemBryy4
Aquaponics combines aquaculture and hydroponics into a symbiotic system where fish waste fertilizes plants grown hydroponically. The system has several advantages including higher crop yields using less water and also producing fish. A commercial aquaponics system at the University of the Virgin Islands yields 200-300 lbs of vegetables and 200 lbs of fish per week from a single system. The technology is low-cost, easy to operate, and balanced without needing water changes or cleaning for years.
This document outlines important principles of instructional design, including aligning learning objectives with assessment, taking an incremental approach, prioritizing clarity, recognizing differences between online and offline learning environments, considering more than just the learning management system, seeing design as an opportunity, using reflection, and incorporating threshold concepts and disciplinary knowledge. It also notes that instructional design is a toolbox and not a "magic wand" that can solve every problem or meet every need, and that technology should be secondary to the educational content.
The document discusses various frameworks and methods for measuring and analyzing poverty. It describes conceptual frameworks that link poverty and nutrition, identifying immediate, underlying, and basic causes of poverty and malnutrition. It also outlines different methods for setting poverty lines, such as cost-of-basic-needs and food energy methods. Finally, it discusses various measures for quantifying poverty incidence, depth, and severity, such as the headcount index, poverty gap index, and squared poverty gap index.
The document discusses research on chickens and their behavior. It notes that chickens exhibit complex social behaviors and communicate with each other in various ways, including through vocalizations. The author presents previous research on chicken communication and social structures. References are provided for further reading on chickens and their social and language abilities.
1. The document summarizes findings from a UK program that funded 29 pilot projects exploring open educational resources (OERs).
2. The projects used diverse technologies to manage and share OERs, including eLearning platforms, repositories, and web 2.0 applications.
3. While many standards and formats were used, the choices often reflected the standards embedded in the systems selected by each project.
This document provides an overview of standards and eLearning from the perspective of CETIS (Centre for Educational Technology and Interoperability Standards). It discusses CETIS' role in establishing interoperability specifications and standards to meet the needs of the higher education community. Emerging trends that CETIS is working on include open content, course information standards, widgets, and extending learning environments. The document emphasizes that standards need to be driven by community needs and engagement to support flexibility and interoperability as technologies change over time.
Impact and Opportunity of OER - A DOL TAACCCT Case StudyPaul_Stacey
The document discusses opportunities for open educational resources (OER) through the Trade Adjustment Assistance Community College and Career Training (TAACCCT) grants from the Department of Labor. It notes that TAACCCT grants totaling $2 billion over 4 years aim to prepare workers for high-skill jobs and require all materials be openly licensed. This represents the largest OER initiative. Services are described to help grantees meet requirements around licensing, accessibility, online learning, and using data for continuous improvement. Examples of consortium projects and an OER course development process are also provided.
This document summarizes presentations from a JISC workshop on their AIM and VRE programs. The AIM program focused on process, policy and technology to improve user experience and enable integrated systems. The VRE program aims to define frameworks and standards to encourage applications and services that facilitate researcher collaboration. Next steps discussed include benefit realization, new technologies like cloud and mobile, and improving national and international collaboration through identity management and federated authentication.
The document outlines the plans and activities of the JISC Create Community Resources project. It will add value by facilitating community interactions and sharing between projects, the programme, and the wider educational community. It will do this through a programme of activities supported by appropriate technologies. The project aims to foster sustainable development, continuous transformation in institutions, and growth of social capital by bridging connections within and between organizations. The Create team will organize events to determine needs, harvest synthesis themes, facilitate community formation and dissemination of knowledge. They will support projects through clusters, seminars, workshops and online conferences and spaces.
Developing patterns in technical approaches for Open Educational Resources. R. John Robertson and Lorna Campbell, & Phil Barker
JISC CETIS. Presentation at OER 11, Manchester, May 11th 2011
Digital Skills for FAIR and Open Science dri_ireland
As part of a webinar series on Open Research in Ireland, the National Open Research Forum (NORF) presented a webinar focused on skills, incentives & rewards for Open Research on 13 April 2021. This presentation is on the topic of Digital Skills for FAIR and Open Science and was delivered by Iryna Kuchma (Electronic Information for Libraries [EIFL], European Open Science Cloud [EOSC] Working Group on Skills and Training).
This document summarizes the key lessons learned from the UKOER program, which aimed to encourage the creation and use of open educational resources (OER) in UK higher education. The three main lessons are: 1) OER were embraced by a wide range of stakeholders but partnerships may impact openness; 2) Not all OER are truly open and accessible; and 3) Sustaining a culture of openness faces challenges without ongoing support. The document also reflects on tensions between community approaches and openness, and how to maintain momentum around OER into the future.
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Approaches to supporting Open Educational Resource projects
1. This work is licenced under a Creative Commons Licence.
Approaches to supporting Open Educational Resource
projects
R. John Robertson1, Sheila MacNeill1, Phil Barker2, Lorna Campbell1 and Li Yuan3
1
Centre for Academic Practice and Learning Enhancement, University of Strathclyde, 2Institute for
Computer Based Learning, Heriot-Watt University, 3Institute for Cybernetic Education, University of
Bolton
robert.robertson@strath.ac.uk, s.macneill@strath.ac.uk, lmc@strath.ac.uk,
L.Yuan@bolton.ac.uk, philb@icbl.hw.ac.uk
2. Abstract 1 Programme Scope
This paper examines CETIS experience of
The Open Educational Resources Programme is a
supporting a nationwide programme to release
collaboration between the JISC and the Higher
Open Educational Resources (the JISC Higher
Education Academy in the UK. The Higher
Education Academy UKOER Pilot Programme1).
Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE)
We consider how our model of support could
has provided an initial £5.7 million of funding for
inform others and be adapted to encourage
29 pilot projects, plus associated support activities,
sustainable technical support networks for Open
(April 2009 to March 2010) which will explore how
Course Ware initiatives. As a national initiative
to expand the open availability and use of free, high
involving universities throughout the UK, the
quality online educational resources. The
UKOER programme involved a diverse range of
programme will support universities and colleges in
OER providers, including individual educators,
exploring processes and policies, intellectual
discipline-based consortia and institutions. Given
property rights, cultural issues, technical
this diversity it was recognised from the outset that
requirements and data management issues
no single technical solution would fit all projects,
associated with the release of existing resources as
and therefore no specific tools, descriptive
OERs.
standards, exchange or dissemination mechanisms
were mandated (apart from a requirement that the
The UK OER programme consists of 29 pilot
resources produced be represented in a national
projects divided into three categories: individual
repository of learning materials2). In supporting this
(i.e. personal) projects (8); institutional projects (7)
programme we have had to address diverse
and multi-institutional subject-based consortium
approaches and communities and it is likely that
projects (14). Along side the 29 pilot projects,
any similar pan-institutional initiative for
support for the programme is being provided by a
supporting the release of OERs would face similar
number of existing JISC services and the Open
challenges.
University (UK) Score project3.
Our approach to programme support has sought
This paper will describe the model for technical
to move from the detail of specific support issues
support provided by JISC CETIS, discuss the key
towards underlying support principles; thereby
issues raised and outline potential models for
anticipating other issues and promoting good
supporting future work in this area.
practice.
JISC CETIS is one of three JISC Innovation
Our method has been: to provoke conversation
Support Centres (ISC). CETIS’ core remit is to
through technical presentations and discussion
provide advice to the UK Higher and Post-16
opportunities at meetings or through blog posts; to
Education sectors on the development and use of
investigate the technical choices made by individual
educational technology and standards. It does this
projects through technical review conversations and
through a number of channels including
record summary details of these conversations
participating in standards bodies, providing
publicly online through an interface supporting
community forums for sharing experiences in using
searching and browsing; and to respond to issues
particular technologies and standards and through
arising from these calls or from project blogs.
providing specific support for JISC funded
development programmes such as the UKOER
In considering how this approach could be used
programme.
more widely we will look at the challenges of
working openly, the organisational overhead of this
The model of support provided by CETIS for the
approach, its adaptability, and the role we think it
UKOER programme is based on support models
has played in supporting the management and
provided to other JISC development programmes.
dissemination of OERs for this programme.
The approach is based around providing a high
level overview of the technical approaches,
Keywords technologies and standards in use across funded
UKOER, Project support, OER Communities
programmes. Synthesis, reflection and
recommendations for future areas of development
Introduction can then be produced for a variety of stakeholders.
3
http://www.jisc.ac.uk/whatwedo/programmes/e
1
http://www.jisc.ac.uk/oer learning/oer/support.aspx
2
http://jorum.ac.uk/
3. also involved in the project selection process.
During the programme lifecycle, the main role
2 Programme opportunities / support for CETIS was to provide technical support and
guidance to the programme, particularly in the area
challenges of resource description and general discoverability
Unlike many development programmes, where use of resources. CETIS attempted to itemise the
of specific technologies and educational standards individual support functions with the following
is central, the UKOER programme took a very open verbs: steer (the programme development), gather
approach to the use of technology and standards. (information from projects), enable (projects to
There were no mandated descriptive standards or achieve their goals), inform (projects), review and
exchange mechanisms and projects were free to collate (information about the projects' technical
choose the delivery platforms, tools or technologies choices), connect (projects to each other and other
that best suited them. initiatives), represent (the programme to other
initiatives), disseminate (information about the
Technical guidance for the programme was programme), and synthesise and critique (the
provided by CETIS, particularly in relation to findings from the projects). The following section
resource description. (Campbell 2009). A basic set will describe in detail how this was carried out.
of descriptive requirements was mandated, and the
use of syndication for delivery of content was 4 Chosen Approaches
strongly encouraged. Projects also had to agree to
4.1.1 Overview
deposit all OERs created through the programme
into JorumOpen, the UK national repository of The support provided by CETIS for the UKOER
teaching and learning materials. programme involved engagement with the
programme as a whole and with projects
It was felt that this approach would give projects individually. Issues that emerged in conversations
the greatest flexibility to create and disseminate with individual projects were developed into advice
OERs. It also provided an opportunity to assess the for the whole programme. Emerging common
effectiveness of a wide variety of approaches concerns were shared through various
without artificial, potentially unsustainable disseminations channels including wider
restraints. programme support team discussions. Notes from
conversations with projects were published online
The programme also provided a catalyst for the and made cross-searchable. These notes
launch of the new JorumOpen service. Previously subsequently formed the basis for our technical
use of the Jorum repository had required synthesis of the programme. This section provides
subscription and license agreements. some more details of the infrastructure CETIS
utilized and the support functions to which it
A programme support plan was created relates.
involving a number of existing JISC services and
the OU (UK) Score project. This facilitated support 4.2 Programme development
for legal, technical and community issues. The
Tools used: teleconferencing, email, CETIS blogs,
support functions were coordinated by JISC
presentations
programme managers. Many of the key people
Support functions: Steer, Inform
involved in the support project had previously
established working relationships. This was
During the scoping of the programme CETIS
particularly useful for ensuring that there were clear
provided advice to JISC on the possible approaches
lines of communication between support partners,
to managing and releasing OERs that the
JISC programme managers and projects.
programme could take. This led to a number of blog
posts providing the wider community with more
information about the technical and resource
3 Support Functions description requirements of the programme. For
CETIS provided a number of support functions to example, Campbell (Technical, 2009).
the programme. In terms of its wider Innovation
Support Centre role, CETIS was involved in the This scoping work was followed by a
scoping of the programme and providing a rationale presentation at the programme briefing day and
for the overall technical approach. CETIS staff were further blog posts as projects began to consider the
4. approaches they could take. For example, Campbell
(Metadata, 2009).
4.2.1 Communicating with Projects
Tools used: Twitter, email, project blogs,
newsreaders, Yahoo Pipes, meetings, online
conferencing tools.
Support functions: Gather, Inform, Enable
As part of building the wider programme support Figure 1: RSS feeds from project blogs in Netvibes
communication infrastructure there was a general
requirement to build and support a number of Using Yahoo Pipes, CETIS created a number of
communication channels. custom feeds to filter the combined feeds from the
project blogs for particular keywords (such as
This involved participation in a number of metadata). Although initially effective, as the
programme-level activities such as programme projects progressed, their use diminished as the
meetings, monthly online conferences, and the use wider value of being aware of all of the posts from
of email lists. JISC set up email lists for each strand the projects increased. However, we believe the
of projects (individual, institutional, and subject- ability to easily build custom feeds is useful.
based consortium) which were restricted to projects
and support services. Later in the programme a 4.2.2 Technical Review Calls
master list was also set up for all projects and Tools used: Teleconferencing, Skype, Email,
services. This list however, has mainly been used PROD (online database)
for announcements or news – discussions have Support functions: Review, Enable, Inform,
remained on the strand lists. Collate, Connect
The programme also encouraged the use of A key part of CETIS’ direct support for the
Twitter (through specifying a tag #ukoer) and programme was the technical conversations with
project blogs. Although Twitter users may only projects. Based on the brief description of standards
represent a portion of the programme it has and technologies in project plans, these calls
provided an effective backchannel of information allowed more detailed information about the
around events and has been a useful way to quickly choices being made by the projects to be recorded.
publicize relevant news. Project blogs were adopted
by some projects and a good proportion of those Calls with each of the 29 projects were arranged
adopters developed quite open working practices, by email. Prior to the call, information from the
blogging about issues they were discussing and project plan was entered into PROD5 – CETIS’
having project discussions online through blogs and online database for recording technical information
comments. about projects.
The use of blogs by projects also meant that
support services or other projects could use feed
readers to monitor the project blogs without visiting
all of them. The JISC programme manager for the
institutional strand projects (who were largely early
adopters of the use of blogs) created a public
Netvibes page with the feeds from project blogs.
This created a web-based view of the latest news
from projects that was available through any web
browser 4.
Figure 2: the PROD Interface
Calls typically consisted of two CETIS staff
(in different locations) and two or more project staff
4
http://www.netvibes.com/hwilliamson#oer
5
http://PROD.cetis.ac.uk
5. (often also geographically dispersed). The calls making connections to help projects work through
were generally held using a teleconference service. detailed technical support issues.
Skype was used occasionally but for multiple
participants – sometimes on home, rather than 4.2.4 Ongoing Advice
institutional, broadband – the audio quality of
Tools used: online conferencing, CETIS blogs,
Skype hindered the call. One feature of Skype
CETIS conference.
which did prove useful, was the ability to share
Support functions: Inform, Enable, Connect,
links in the chat window. When using the
Gather.
teleconference service links were often shared by
email, which sometimes resulted in delays. During
Throughout the programme several mechanisms
the calls the CETIS support officer updated the
were used to gather feedback from projects, provide
project entry in PROD as the conversation
ongoing advice about best practice, and highlight
progressed. Many of the conversations produced
areas of work and support under development.
useful qualitative information and this ensured
CETIS ran two of the scheduled monthly online
precise capture of the relevant points. Projects were
meetings, hosted using the Elluminate online
also able to view and comment on the recorded
conferencing tool. The first of these sessions
statements.
focused on metadata and resource description and
the second on resource tracking. These meetings
PROD entries comprise: descriptive information
consisted of a presentation, gathering feedback on
about each project (programme, partners, websites,
issues raised through synchronous polls, and text
feeds, and related projects); information about the
and voice conferencing. The slides from the
technical approaches used (standards,
presentations used in the online conferences are
specifications, web2.0 applications, tools, transport
available (Barker, 2009 and 2010).
protocols, audio and video formats); and free text
comments used to record further details about the
In addition to these meetings, and building on
use of the aforementioned standards and
particular support issues of relevance to the wider
technologies and to record other information about
programme, and indeed the wider community,
the projects such as the granularity of OERs they
CETIS continued to provide advice by blogging
are releasing and how they intend to deposit or
about these emerging issues. This builds on an
represent their OERs in JorumOpen.
established CETIS practice of blogging on topical
technical issues.
The calls also provided an opportunity for
CETIS staff to encourage technical connections
between projects where appropriate and to point out
other relevant work. For example, making sure that
those producing RSS feeds knew about some of the
aggregator services for which could consume and
disseminate their feeds.
4.2.3 Following up specific issues
Tools used: email, teleconferencing, CETIS blogs
Support functions: Enable, Review
If particular issues emerged in the course of a Figure 3: Phil’s JISC CETIS blog
technical review call that could not be quickly
resolved during the call or if projects blogged about A further point of engagement with the programme
troublesome technical issues, the support team was was through a workshop session run at the CETIS
able to follow these threads up by email or phone 2009 conference. This session gathered key issues
call and provide specific advice or suggestions if from projects and subsequently led to blog posts
required. Such issues were also occasionally from CETIS and the projects involved. A
relayed by programme managers or emerged from backchannel for the workshop session was provided
the interim progress reports projects provided to by using Twitter, the questions emerging were
JISC. recorded and blogged unedited immediately
(Robertson, Conference, 2009) with a synthesis
Typical issues included commenting on posted subsequently (Campbell, Roundtable, 2009).
application profiles, advising about granularity, and
6. 4.2.5 Representing and Promoting value in reflecting on what support has actually
been provided in relation specific functions and
Tools used: PROD
what could or could not be done without a similar
Support functions: Represent, Disseminate
model of dedicated programme support.
By analysing technical review conversations and
5.1 Steer
ongoing engagement with projects CETIS has been
able to gather a comprehensive overview of the The support provided was integrated with the initial
technical choices made across the programme. This scoping of the programme and the technical
has enabled CETIS to present an overview of the approach taken. At this stage it appears that the
technical approaches to other interested planned approach has worked for the projects and
communities (Robertson, MIT, 2009) and to has provided the ouputs the programme sponsors
represent technical issues emerging across the required.
programme to funders such as JISC and to other
support services such as JorumOpen. Some support could have been provided without
a dedicated project as expertise could be called in as
4.3 Synthesis required but this would have additional cost
implications. The support project adds an element
Tools used: PROD, CETIS blogs, presentations,
of continuity in that the expertise that shaped the
CETIS wiki.
call continues to be involved in the programme and
Support functions: Disseminate, Synthesis,
is able to clarify, reiterate and explain.
Critique.
5.2 Gather
As the programme draws to an end CETIS are
drawing together information stored in PROD and The support provided was to gather information
the blogs about the use of particular standards and from the individual activities that fed directly into
technologies in the programme. This information other functions, namely: Inform, Enable, Review,
and other relevant references (e.g. relevant blog Connect
posts) are being gathered on the CETIS wiki as the
first stage of the technical synthesis of the The widespread use of Twitter and blogs
programme. A series of more reflective blog posts throughout the programme has created an
will be produced, in addition official documentation interactive environment for spontaneous discussion
including a final project report that will include and dissemination. This has two drawbacks
recommendations for similar programmes in the however. Firstly much of the conversation on
future. The vast majority of this information, will Twitter is, to a degree, transitory – in a way that
be freely available to the wider community. email is not. Secondly, projects and individuals not
actively engaging with Twitter of email may be left
5 Early reflections on process out of the loop and feel somewhat disengaged from
the wider programme.
As outlined earlier the UKOER programme allowed
projects a great deal of flexibility in choosing their This function may have been possible without
technical infrastructure and approaches to resource the support project, if communication channels
description. As is described more fully in Robertson between the projects were used so that projects
et al., (2010) there has been a great deal of diversity could become aware of each other’s work.
in the strategies adopted by projects. This enables However, technical conversations are more likely to
the technical synthesis of the programme to explore be shared publicly if the informant thinks there is
the affordances of these different approaches and someone “listening” with an active interest. The
inform any future work in this domain. At this stage support project adds active and informed
it appears all the projects have developed technical engagement with channels of communication.
approaches that allow them to manage and
distribute their materials successfully. 5.3 Enable
Assessing the effectiveness of the support The support provided was:
provided and evaluating how the model might be • all technical questions raised in project
used elsewhere is of course a different question. interim reports followed up;
CETIS have received positive feedback throughout • two online and one face to face conference
the programme however, in the context of this paper sessions facilitated;
and presentation, we believe that there is more • all relevant conference sessions and
7. briefing days amplified (through twitter technical review calls. Some calls took place at the
coverage and blog commentary); beginning of the programme and some towards the
• blog posts connected to the programme. end.
This may have been possible without a support This would have been difficult without central
project if expert consultants were called in for co-ordination and a system such as PROD. A
specific events, though there would be associated technical peer review process could be used, but
cost implications. Projects could, and do, amplify again there would need to be clear ways to co-
events and write and blog about their work and ordinate outputs. The support project adds,
wider issues. However a dedicated support model dedicated tools (e.g. PROD) and provides the
allows for more objective commentary. dedicated time necessary to complete the task.
Although CETIS has considerable expertise in 5.6 Connect
the domain of metadata for learning materials, for The support provided was to connect projects using
some of the innovative approaches adopted by similar technological choices. The main challenge
projects in areas around Search Engine was the time lag between technical review calls.
Optimization and the APIs for particular Web2.0 Some connections could only me made later in the
applications we have been learning along with the programme.
projects. As the projects have progressed, we have
been able to help them disseminate and share their To some extent this may have happened without
experiences and new-found expertise. In this way a support project, as projects met serendipitously,
the support project adds continuity of advice, however this would need very active community
accumulation of expertise, as well as a consistent engagement from the projects. A support project
bigger picture view, and dedicated time to blog and adds a central overview and awareness of what is
disseminate. going on across the programme with dedicated staff
looking for and making connections.
5.4 Inform
The support provided was to inform projects about 5.7 Represent
relevant services, applications and technical The support provided was to liaise with service
developments. The challenge is knowing what is providers in the OER field, both within the UK and
relevant and worth disseminating. further a field, and to inform them about the
activities and concerns of the projects within the
This would only have been possible without a UKOER programme.
support project if there was particularly active
community engagement from the projects within Without a support project it is unlikely that any
the programme, with suitable channels to facilitate individual project would have had a similar
this engagement, and if the projects developed an influence. The support project adds an objective
awareness of what was happening outside the programme level overview and a recognised point
programme. Even then it is likely there would be an of contact with a program wide remit.
increase in the signal-to-noise ratio. The support
project adds dedicated resource and staff who are
5.8 Disseminate
aware of “the bigger picture” and have a
programme-wide technical overview. The support provided took the form of presentations
given at a number of high profile national and
5.5 Review and Collate international, scholarly publications, and blog posts
connected to the programme.
The support provided was:
• Technical review conversations held with It is unlikely that any similar level of
all the projects. programme-wide technical synthesis and
• Further email exchanges and calls about dissemination would have occurred without a
particular issues. support project. Again, the support project provided
• Blog posts connected to the programme. an objective programme level overview and a
recognised point of contact with a program wide
The challenges faced were the administrative remit.
overhead of coordinating the technical calls with
projects and the chronological spread of the
8. 5.9 Synthesise and critique programme has provided a number of fora for this
including closed email lists. Although projects can
The support provided was through web based
use blogs for public discussion it is surprising that
resources, guidance and PROD entries. (Note: a
no public list for the discussion of issues around
separate general synthesis and evaluation project
Open Education has been created by the
has been funded to accompany the UKOER
programme.
programme.)
6.3 Open Questions
Without a support project the only realistic way
to achieve a programme level technical synthesis In many respects, the experimental nature of the
would be to commission consultants to undertake UKOER pilot programme has meant that everyone
one. Having a support project adds continuity involved has been on a journey of discovery and in
throughout the programme lifecycle and specialist many cases almost as many questions have been
technical support for the general synthesis and raised as answered. However, some of the key
evaluation project. questions particularly related to our support role
and the technical aspects of creating and sharing
6 General issues, conclusions and open OERs are summarised below.
• Has the programme enabled a change of culture
questions and practice to allow the facilitated release of
OERs by UK HE institutions without seed
6.1 Cost funding?
• Is more centrally provided funding needed?
Despite utilizing existing services and projects,
• If so, what are the key areas for development?
providing a support project such as the one in place
for UKOER does have financial implications. • How can we ensure that the lessons and
Although the costs involved in running support experiences of this programme are effectively
services are mostly staff related (as the shared with the wider OER community?
infrastructure used was either free or already in • Is it possible to maintain and grow the sense of
place) the service is provided at a cost equivalent to community fostered through the programme
that of another project releasing OERs. beyond the funding period without some kind of
dedicated co-ordination?
However CETIS, and the programme funders,
believe that the value added by a dedicated support Once the programme has concluded further
project provides a number of valuable outputs and synthesis will hopefully start to address some of
outcomes for the programme to balance forgoing these questions and provide recommendations for
one extra development project. It could also be moving forwards.
argued that providing central support is more cost
effective than individual projects seeking (and often
paying) for similar advice and guidance.
References
6.2 Challenge of openness Barker, P. and Robertson, R.J. (2009). Metadata and
Content Aggregation for UKOER.
The UKOER projects, support projects, and Accessed 3rd April 2010. Available from:
participating institutions have wrestled with the http://www.slideshare.net/philb/metada
process of applying their understanding of what it ta-and-content-aggregation-for-ukoer
means when to make content available under an Barker, P., Robertson, R.J. and Campbell, L. (2010).
open licence. Alongside this struggle with open Resource Tracking for UKOER Accessed
licensing, some projects have engaged with the 3rd April 2010. Available from:
challenges around working openly. Some projects http://www.slideshare.net/philb/resourc
have embraced the use of blogs as a mechanism to e-tracking-for-ukoer
publicly think through some of their project issues; Campbell, L. (2009). Metadata Guidelines for the
others, however, have engaged with blogs more as a OER Programme. Lorna’s JISC CETIS
way to disseminate news. Both uses are valuable, blog. Accessed 3rd April 2010. Available
but from the point of view of providing support the from:
former is invaluable. http://blogs.cetis.ac.uk/lmc/2009/03/30/metad
ata-guidelines-for-the-oer-programme/
It is undeniable that programmes and projects Campbell, L. (2009) OER Programme Technical
need private space to discuss issues and the Requirements. Lorna’s JISC CETIS blog.
9. Accessed 3rd April 2010. Available from:
http://blogs.cetis.ac.uk/lmc/2009/02/03/oer-
programme-technical-requirements/
Campbell, L. (2009) Orders from the Roundtable
Lorna’s JISC CETIS blog. Accessed 3rd
April 2010. Available from:
http://blogs.cetis.ac.uk/lmc/2009/11/13/orders
-from-the-roundtable/
Robertson, R.J, (2009) JISC and MIT: comparing
notes on ed tech. John’s JISC CETIS blog.
Accessed 3rd April 2010. Available from:
http://blogs.cetis.ac.uk/johnr/2009/12/11/jis
c-and-mit-comparing-notes-on-ed-tech/
Robertson, R.J. (2009). Technical challenges for
managing Open Educational Resources.
John’s JISC CETIS blog. Accessed 3rd April
2010. Available from:
http://blogs.cetis.ac.uk/johnr/2009/11/13
/technical-challenges-for-managing-
open-educational-resources/
Robertson R.J., Campbell,L., Barker, P.,
Yuan,L. and MacNeill, S. (2010) One
Standard to rule them all?: Descriptive
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