This document summarizes the findings of an evaluation of an Open Educational Resources (OER) pilot programme. Key findings include that releasing content under open licenses is achievable for most teaching and learning content, but different institutions and communities have varying approaches. Releasing OERs can benefit institutions by enhancing their visibility and reputation, but sustainability requires embedding practices institutionally and within communities. Factors that support successful OER adoption include making the process easy, providing legal and technical support, and gaining senior management buy-in. However, more research is still needed on how OERs are reused and their impacts on teaching, learning, and institutions.
E-books for learning: a certain need, an uncertain solutionIfBookThen
Paola Dubini and Jane Klobas present the results of a survey by Università Bocconi and Bookrepublic: E-books for learning: a certain need, an uncertain solution.
E-books for learning: a certain need, an uncertain solutionIfBookThen
Paola Dubini and Jane Klobas present the results of a survey by Università Bocconi and Bookrepublic: E-books for learning: a certain need, an uncertain solution.
Even if the question of eLearning quality has been intensely discussed in the recent years, with several approaches and models arising, the implementation of concepts into practices remains contested (Elhers & Hilera, 2012 ) . Higher Education Institutions (HEI) are facing an important change:from the single institutional efforts to give answer to a very changing society and labour market to the transnational debates and pressure for HEI modernization, like the case of Bologna Process.In this context, eLearning is given different importance with regard to organizational innovation and the general HEI culture of quality (Ehlers & Schneckenberg, 2010). While it has been envisaged as the panacea to promote improvements in such different dimensions as cost-benefit ratio, access and inclusiveness, or the introduction of learner centered pedagogical approaches, very often the values and motivations entrenched in these dimensions clash and enter in more or less evident contradictions. As a result, the implementation of quality eLearning in HEI could be slowed down or blocked (Conole, Smith, & White, A critique of the impact of policy and funding, 2007).
In this article the authors introduce the results of an initial exploratory phase undertaken as part of a participatory action research funded by the Italian Ministry of Education PRIN (Research Project of National Interest, “Progetto di Ricerca d’Interesse Nazionale”) namely, “Evaluation for the improvement of educational contexts. A research involving University and local communities in the participatory development of innovative assessment models”.
On the basis of a qualitative epistemological approach (Creswell, 2007) (Denzin & Lincoln, 2011), several stakeholders from one University were interviewed, attempting to capture the several discourses on quality in HE and the embedded idea of quality eLearning . The results obtained were later conceptualized attempting to define quality as a complex object that requires mediation for the negotiation of the several perspectives.
Age-old question...many answers. Can the question itself be improved? Is there more to 'good course' than design? Can we pull it all together somehow?
Background slides to the 2011 Australian MoodleMoot presentation
This presentation explains the use of e-portfolios as a learning and assessment tool. Further it provides the opportunities for career progression and change based on evidence of achievements through lifelong learning.
Helen Beetham, Understanding the role of oe rs in open educationnal practicesLORO
Slides of the Plenary presentation by Helen Beetham for the event : "Does it make a difference? The impact of repositories and OERs on teaching and learning", March 2011
Presentation from Dr Stylianos Hatzipanagos (Senior Lecturer in Technology Enhanced Learning, King’s College London) on the use of OERs in distance education.
Conducted at the CDE's Research and Innovation in Distance Education and eLearning conference on 19 October 2012.
Using virtual locations and novel ways of networking students and addressing assignment, this instructor seeks to make course learning more sustainable.
QA in e-Learning and Open Educational Resources (OER)Jon Rosewell
Introductory slides for a workshop on updating the e-learning quality assurance benchmarks of the E-xcellence NEXT project http://www.eadtu.nl/e-xcellencelabel
Even if the question of eLearning quality has been intensely discussed in the recent years, with several approaches and models arising, the implementation of concepts into practices remains contested (Elhers & Hilera, 2012 ) . Higher Education Institutions (HEI) are facing an important change:from the single institutional efforts to give answer to a very changing society and labour market to the transnational debates and pressure for HEI modernization, like the case of Bologna Process.In this context, eLearning is given different importance with regard to organizational innovation and the general HEI culture of quality (Ehlers & Schneckenberg, 2010). While it has been envisaged as the panacea to promote improvements in such different dimensions as cost-benefit ratio, access and inclusiveness, or the introduction of learner centered pedagogical approaches, very often the values and motivations entrenched in these dimensions clash and enter in more or less evident contradictions. As a result, the implementation of quality eLearning in HEI could be slowed down or blocked (Conole, Smith, & White, A critique of the impact of policy and funding, 2007).
In this article the authors introduce the results of an initial exploratory phase undertaken as part of a participatory action research funded by the Italian Ministry of Education PRIN (Research Project of National Interest, “Progetto di Ricerca d’Interesse Nazionale”) namely, “Evaluation for the improvement of educational contexts. A research involving University and local communities in the participatory development of innovative assessment models”.
On the basis of a qualitative epistemological approach (Creswell, 2007) (Denzin & Lincoln, 2011), several stakeholders from one University were interviewed, attempting to capture the several discourses on quality in HE and the embedded idea of quality eLearning . The results obtained were later conceptualized attempting to define quality as a complex object that requires mediation for the negotiation of the several perspectives.
Age-old question...many answers. Can the question itself be improved? Is there more to 'good course' than design? Can we pull it all together somehow?
Background slides to the 2011 Australian MoodleMoot presentation
This presentation explains the use of e-portfolios as a learning and assessment tool. Further it provides the opportunities for career progression and change based on evidence of achievements through lifelong learning.
Helen Beetham, Understanding the role of oe rs in open educationnal practicesLORO
Slides of the Plenary presentation by Helen Beetham for the event : "Does it make a difference? The impact of repositories and OERs on teaching and learning", March 2011
Presentation from Dr Stylianos Hatzipanagos (Senior Lecturer in Technology Enhanced Learning, King’s College London) on the use of OERs in distance education.
Conducted at the CDE's Research and Innovation in Distance Education and eLearning conference on 19 October 2012.
Using virtual locations and novel ways of networking students and addressing assignment, this instructor seeks to make course learning more sustainable.
QA in e-Learning and Open Educational Resources (OER)Jon Rosewell
Introductory slides for a workshop on updating the e-learning quality assurance benchmarks of the E-xcellence NEXT project http://www.eadtu.nl/e-xcellencelabel
1. OER Pilot
Programme:
synthesis and
OER showcase event: July 2010
OER synthesis and evaluation
evaluation
Helen Beetham, Lou McGill
Isobel Falconer, Allison Littlejohn
Caledonian Academy
Glasgow Caledonian University, UK
www.academy.gcal.ac.uk
2. Strand Specific Evaluation Extending reputation
Vision
Individual strand: Isobel Falconer
OER showcase event: July 2010
individual practices, attitudes, behaviours, personal and
OER synthesis and evaluation
collective benefit
Subject strand: Helen Beetham
practices and cultures in subjects, link between open content
and open curricula, collective practices of content creation
Institutional strand: Lou McGill
institutional strategies/practices, business cases, content
management, rewards and responsibilities
3. High level findings
Vision Extending reputation
CC licensing and release to an open repository is
achievable for the majority of L&T content
OER showcase event: July 2010
Different benefit cases → different technical and
OER synthesis and evaluation
organisational solutions (institutions/communities)
Institutions becoming strategic about managing content:
in some cases around an open content agenda
Communities vary widely in approach to sharing
Risk-averse culture around IPR, integrity of content, and
reputation
Individual rewards are mainly intrinsic; institutional
rewards are mainly in the long-term
Sustainability = embedding institutionally AND
communally
4. Extending reputation
Benefits cases and associated approaches
Vision
Individual showcasing
reputation enhancement, personal/prof rewards, individual values
OER showcase event: July 2010
(openness, public interest, quality), learner focus
OER synthesis and evaluation
Institutional showcasing
attracting students, learner choice, (international) reputation,
potential learners and partners as end-users, influencing
Share and share alike
tightly-knit subject/topic communities, learners and other teachers
as end-users, sharing practice, scholarship, collaboration
Capacity building
staff skills, institutional strategies (e.g. LTA, content management),
change awareness, sustainable development
5. Benefits
Vision Extending reputation
Some evidence (we need more) that OER release can:
have institutional marketing potential (OLNET)
OER showcase event: July 2010
OER synthesis and evaluation
enhance visibility to stakeholders: employers, potential
learners, franchise/partner colleges
catalyse change in institutional strategy and practice
support new partnerships around content development
support sharing/discussion of teaching practice
be part of development strategy for centres of
excellence (scholarship/teaching)
be attractive to established scholars (legacy) and to
new ones (building reputation)
enhance access to opportunity for e.g. work-based,
international, lifelong learners
support new modes of learning e.g. P2P, self-directed
6. Extending reputation
What works (across all strands)
Vision
Close loop with re-use i.e. development/repurposing/reuse
cycle NOT one-off development or retrofitting
OER showcase event: July 2010
OER synthesis and evaluation
Stage release to manage risk, give more control
Maximise value of assets: development, discovery, re-
usability (granularity, guidance), enrichment
Focus on intrinsically valuable resources
(high relevance/high specialism/high development costs)
Deposit once (institutional/subject repository), syndicate
(open repositories = JorumOpen, Merlot; third-party sites =
iTunesU, YouTube, flickr, scribd, slideshare)
Describe at an appropriate level of detail – metadata
tagging, pedagogy 'wrapping', user comments
Raise awareness, share ownership (blogs, feeds, events)
Build in tracking and monitoring
7. Different strokes
Vision Extending reputation
Different motivations to release → different definitions of
'open' and different priorities for open content, e.g.:
OER showcase event: July 2010
OER synthesis and evaluation
Re-usability vs integrity (granularity issues)
Generic, e.g. skills-based vs specialised (high value,
low use, linked to research?)
Professionally produced vs 'shared back of envelope'
Context-free vs various means of representing
educational context, level, values, purpose
Personal, institutional, community branding vs no
branding/third party branding
Different hosting solutions (web 2.0/repository)
Linked-to vs embedded content elements (updating?)
8. Sustainability issues
Vision Extending reputation
Institutional
Rationalise admin and support
OER showcase event: July 2010
Communicate clear policies esp IPR/licensing
OER synthesis and evaluation
Embed into everyday practice e.g. CPD, content development
Demonstrate benefits and raise expectations
Integrated content management
Communal
Technologies of participation: profiles, linking, reviewing, commenting,
following, sharing
Build on existing practices; address cultural (mis)conceptions
Individual
Intrinsic rewards, especially linking to learners as end-users
Early career/late career reputational benefits
Develop champions
9. Supporting transformational change reputation
Vision Extending
Many individuals are keen to see their content openly
available but lack knowledge, skills, time, support
OER showcase event: July 2010
OER synthesis and evaluation
Individuals need reassurance and guidance on legalities:
who owns their content, and how to ensure legal release
Individuals are often concerned about 'mis-'use: a staged
released to trusted others can reassure
Key success factors cited by projects:
•accessible, easy-to-use repository
•local expertise in technical, legal and educational issues
•time and opportunity to experiment (funding!)
•flexible quality processes
•senior management support
10. Extending reputation
We still need to find out much more about reuse...
Vision
Who, when, what, why?
With what benefits?
OER showcase event: July 2010
OER synthesis and evaluation
Needing what support/skills?
From what host sites? Using what search and web 2.0
tools?
Based in what kind of communities or institutions, if any?
With what impact on learning strategies and approaches?
With what impact on staff practices and roles?
With what impact on institutional marketing and outreach?
11. We still need to develop... Extending reputation
Vision
Single deposit across multiple sites (better syndication
of metadata)
OER showcase event: July 2010
OER synthesis and evaluation
Means of x-searching/aggregating resources from
different sites and with heterogenous descriptions
Better exchange of information between web 2.0
applications and repositories
More useable tools/interfaces to support needs of
developers, contributors, managers and users of OERs
Skills for OER use/release e.g. incorporated into HEA
accredited training, capacity building among specialists
OER quality strategies
Case for open scholarship across the board, linking
research, teaching, professional practice
Institutional and community exemplars