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ontario
David Porter, Ed.D.
CEO, eCampusOntario
davidp@ecampusontario.ca
Twitter: @dendroglyph
Unless otherwise noted, this work is licensed under a Creative
Commons Attribution Share Alike License. Feel free to use,
modify, reuse or redistribute any or all of this presentation.
3. 3
I would like to acknowledge that the land on which today’s
meeting is taking place is Robinson-Huron Treaty territory and that
it is the traditional territory of the Anishnaabeg People and,
specifically, the Nipissing First Nation.
We are guests in this place, and it is our shared obligation to
respect, honour and sustain this land.
Acknowledgement
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An immersive, experiential learning opportunity where the participants are
challenged to teach and learn with different modes and formats, to create and
collaborate using digital technology tools, and to discern what approaches may
be used to design significant technology-enabled learning experiences.
@ontarioextend extend.ecampusontario.ca #oextend
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Ontario Extend is a capacity-building
initiative that is grounded in the belief that
the impact on learning should be the primary
motivator for creating technology-enabled
and online learning experiences.
ing
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Rethinking AS a Theme
to guide our program designs
Rethinking learning resources
Rethinking the learning experience
Rethinking recognition of learning
Designs
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Grant freedoms instead of imposing restrictions
Sharing is fundamental to teaching
Collaboration is a good thing
Assumptions about Openness
22. Open Education encompasses resources, tools
and practices that are free of legal, financial
and technical barriers and can be fully used,
shared and adapted in the digital
environment.
Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition- sparcopen.org
23. Images from Oxfam.org CC BY and
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Daniel_Mietchen/Talks/World_Open_Educational_Resources_Congress_2012/Ho
w_Open_Access_and_Open_Science_can_mutually_fertilize_with_Open_Educational_Resources CC BY-SA
Why is this work happening?
To increase access to higher education by reducing student costs
To improve student learning by removing barriers to resources
To give faculty more control over their instructional resources
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ontario
The Big Idea of Open
Giving instructional resources expanded power to
enable learning and teaching, beyond being just
free or low cost
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ontario
Big Benefit: Full Legal Control
• to customize
• to localize
• to personalize
• to update
• to translate
• to remix
Some Rights Reserved
Creative Commons logo by Creative Commons used under under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License
43. 43
5.5 million views per month.
ChemWiki most visited chemistry website
in the world.
Delmar Larsen offers extra credit to students who submit entries
to an online Chemistry textbook. He assigns a rating system to
new articles based on the author's expertise and experience, with
articles moving up as they are edited and vetted.
Sources: ChemWiki takes on costly textbooks UC Davis News,
October 2013 UCD Hyperlink Newsletter October 2014
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Robin DeRosa
Plymouth State University – New Hampshire
The Open Anthology
of Early American Literature
“I launched the open textbook project over a summer,
and because I teach at a public university where I had
no easy access to graduate assistants or funding, I hired
a bunch of undergrad students and recent alums, and
paid them out of my own pocket to assist me. Turns
out, most of them were willing to work for free (I
didn’t let them, though what I paid was low because it
was all I could spare), and turns out the whole
endeavor of building the work turned out to be
transformative to my own pedagogy and to the course
that followed.”
47. Open Pop ups
A shareable library of “pop up”
projects, openly licensed and curated
locally or across school districts.
• Encouraging networking
• Encouraging risk taking
• Encouraging a culture of sharing
@verenanz
Verena Roberts
Rocky View SD, AB
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From the arrival of its first human inhabitants tens of thousands
of years ago to its increasingly globalized modern population,
the Canadian state has undergone numerous transformations.
This course will examine the history of Canada from its earliest
times to the present focusing of key transformations in the
country’s environmental, social, political, economic and
cultural history.
Belshaw, John Douglas. Canadian History: Pre-Confederation
Belshaw, John Douglas. Canadian History: Post-Confederation
Bumsted, J.M., Len Kuffert, and Michel Ducharme. Interpreting
Canada’s Past: A Pre-Confederation Reader. Fourth Edition
Bumsted, J.M., Len Kuffert, and Michel Ducharme. Interpreting
Canada’s Past: A Post-Confederation Reader. Fourth Edition
Nelles, H.V. A Little History of Canada. Second Edition
Organization of
the Course
Course Description
Course Schedule
Assignments
and Evaluation
Readings
(Required Textbooks)
5% Written Assignment 1
10% Written Assignment 2
10% Written Assignment 3
15% Written Assignment 4
5% Weekly Quizzes
15% Midterm Exam
20% Final Exam
20% Tutorial Participation
Department of History • Instructor: Sean Kheraj
Kheraj Office: Vari Hall 2124
Office Hours: Wednesdays 9:30am-11:30am
Email: kherajs@yorku.ca
@seankheraj #yorkhist2500 @YorkHist
5%
5%
10%
10%
20%
20%
15%
15%
LECTURES TUTORIALS READINGS ASSIGNMENTS
01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08
09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
HIST 2500:
Canadian History
WEEK 1 WEEK 2 WEEK 3 WEEK 4 WEEK 5 WEEK 6 WEEK 7 WEEK 8
WEEK 9 WEEK 10
Why
Canadian
History?
Indigenous
America and
Global Human
Migrations
French
Colonial
Society
Furs and
the French
Empire
Remaking
the Atlantic
Colonies
The Fall
of New
France
The
Revolution
of British
America
Fur Trade
Frontier
Colonial
Life and
Empire
Politics,
Conflict, and
Rebellion
WEEK 11 WEEK 12 WEEK 13 WEEK 14 WEEK 15 WEEK 16
WEEK 17 WEEK 18 WEEK 19 WEEK 20 WEEK 21 WEEK 22 WEEK 23 WEEK 24
Confederation
and the Idea
of Canada
Consolidating
the Canadian
Empire
Labour
and
Capital
Reform
Movements
War
Society
The Farmer-
Labour
Revolts
Depression
and Dissent
Total
War
Post-War
Society
Next to an
Elephant
Limited
Identities
Aboriginal
People in the
Twentieth
Century
Neo-Liberalism
and the History
of Stephen
Harper
Twenty-First
Century
Canada
Visual Course Syllabus by Ken Hui and Sean Kheraj is licensed using a CC-BY-SA 4.0 International License
Textbook SprintS +
Ancillary teaching resources
Open Textbook Seminar Handbook
Visual Course Syllabus
+ +
58. Photo by William Bout on Unsplash
● Open Textbook Library
● Open Education Rangers
● Open Education Fellows
● Ontario Extend
● The Patchbook
● The Catch
Community Connectors
67. Rethinking learning experiences
• Addressing the engagement
factors in online learning
• Upping our designs for
learning to add authentic,
relevant, real-world projects
• Bringing students into the
learning design process
• Investing in OPEN
innovation
80. Rethinking Recognition of learning
Empowering the “t-shaped
student”
• Co-curricular records
• Internships and practicums
• Community volunteer programs
• Self-directed practical
experiences
Enabling and authenticating
“can-do” skills and competencies
83. How do we more
broadly address the
experiential learning
desires of students?
Driving growth and innovation through technology-enabled learning
How do we provide
students with relevant
real-world projects as
practical experiences?
How to we allow employers
to audition student talent
while the students are still
in school?
How can we provide managed environments for
supporting experiential learning?
86. Openness in education is not a new idea — but it needs
renewed expression in a digital era and broader
application in higher education
Openness is not just a historical development — it is a
social, cultural and economic phenomenon
Fundamentally, education is a human right — let’s make
educational resources openly accessible in all formats
Take away messages