ICDE Report: UNESCO Chairs in OER, International Meeting Krakow, Poland April...icdeslides
The UNESCO Open Educational Resources (OER) Chairs Meeting is being held within the framework of the Open Education Global Conference 2016 in Poland.
Participants in this global conference were able to hear from thought leaders in open education and had the opportunity to share ideas, practices and discuss issues important to the future of education worldwide. Sessions cover new developments in open education, research results, innovative technology, policy development and implementation, and practical solutions to challenges facing education around the world.
Nations and regions using less used languages - sidelined in open education?icdeslides
While production and use of Open Education Resources are coming closer to a tipping point, in particular in english speaking areas - nations and regions using less used languages seem to by bypassed by development - and potential not in the position to share the benefits from modern education and learning. However, good examples exist, as the Netherlands. Which policies might be necessary to change the situation in areas lagging? Reviewing policy advices in light of the recent development - this presentation and action lab will consider policy advices to be released now. This is a LangOER action, presented and supported by LangOER, Open Education Consortium and ICDE in partnership.
From OER to OEP: Shifting Practitioner Perspectives and Practices with Innova...Shironica Karunanayaka
Winner of an ICDE Prize for Innovation and Best Practice - 2015
“From OER to OEP: Shifting Practitioner Perspectives and Practices with Innovative Learning Experience Design” - Shironica P. Karunanayaka, Som Naidu, J.C.N. Rajendra & H.U.W. Ratnayake
The Open University of Sri Lanka
How can OER enhance the position of less used languages on a global scale?
Workshop at the OCW Consortium global conference, Ljubljana 25 April 2014
Gard Titlestad, Secretary General, International Council For Open and Distance Education, ICDE
OER - Open Educational Resources: finding, reusing, sharingLangOER
Slides of the webinar organised within the I-LINC project learning event 'First Steps for use of technology in the classroom – Towards Digital Citizenship and Inclusion'
The big gaps in education, the trends in online, open and flexible education and the drivers for open creates the background for benchmarking the Nordic countries towards the globe. Competitiveness and innovation, Human capital, Network and technology readiness are benchmarks. So what: What are key concept to approach to go digital? Online, Open and Analytics are game changers - but not without leadership for change.
Open Education Resources - a game changer!icdeslides
Open Education Resources are becoming increasingly popular and a number of significant developments have taken place the last year, showing that OER delivers what it promises. This presentation takes you through this development from introducing the term OER to November 2015 showing the latest and ground breaking development. Take part!
Towards the connected and collaborative educational landscapeicdeslides
At the International Association of Universities, IAU, International Conference 29 October 2015, a session discussed e-learning and cross-border higher education. This presentation gives and global overview of the development, trends, driving forces and gives examples of major changes pointing towards the connected and collaborative educational landscape. However, direction and action is needed so sound policies are to be decided and implemented to harvest the benefits from quality online, open and flexible higher education.
ICDE Report: UNESCO Chairs in OER, International Meeting Krakow, Poland April...icdeslides
The UNESCO Open Educational Resources (OER) Chairs Meeting is being held within the framework of the Open Education Global Conference 2016 in Poland.
Participants in this global conference were able to hear from thought leaders in open education and had the opportunity to share ideas, practices and discuss issues important to the future of education worldwide. Sessions cover new developments in open education, research results, innovative technology, policy development and implementation, and practical solutions to challenges facing education around the world.
Nations and regions using less used languages - sidelined in open education?icdeslides
While production and use of Open Education Resources are coming closer to a tipping point, in particular in english speaking areas - nations and regions using less used languages seem to by bypassed by development - and potential not in the position to share the benefits from modern education and learning. However, good examples exist, as the Netherlands. Which policies might be necessary to change the situation in areas lagging? Reviewing policy advices in light of the recent development - this presentation and action lab will consider policy advices to be released now. This is a LangOER action, presented and supported by LangOER, Open Education Consortium and ICDE in partnership.
From OER to OEP: Shifting Practitioner Perspectives and Practices with Innova...Shironica Karunanayaka
Winner of an ICDE Prize for Innovation and Best Practice - 2015
“From OER to OEP: Shifting Practitioner Perspectives and Practices with Innovative Learning Experience Design” - Shironica P. Karunanayaka, Som Naidu, J.C.N. Rajendra & H.U.W. Ratnayake
The Open University of Sri Lanka
How can OER enhance the position of less used languages on a global scale?
Workshop at the OCW Consortium global conference, Ljubljana 25 April 2014
Gard Titlestad, Secretary General, International Council For Open and Distance Education, ICDE
OER - Open Educational Resources: finding, reusing, sharingLangOER
Slides of the webinar organised within the I-LINC project learning event 'First Steps for use of technology in the classroom – Towards Digital Citizenship and Inclusion'
The big gaps in education, the trends in online, open and flexible education and the drivers for open creates the background for benchmarking the Nordic countries towards the globe. Competitiveness and innovation, Human capital, Network and technology readiness are benchmarks. So what: What are key concept to approach to go digital? Online, Open and Analytics are game changers - but not without leadership for change.
Open Education Resources - a game changer!icdeslides
Open Education Resources are becoming increasingly popular and a number of significant developments have taken place the last year, showing that OER delivers what it promises. This presentation takes you through this development from introducing the term OER to November 2015 showing the latest and ground breaking development. Take part!
Towards the connected and collaborative educational landscapeicdeslides
At the International Association of Universities, IAU, International Conference 29 October 2015, a session discussed e-learning and cross-border higher education. This presentation gives and global overview of the development, trends, driving forces and gives examples of major changes pointing towards the connected and collaborative educational landscape. However, direction and action is needed so sound policies are to be decided and implemented to harvest the benefits from quality online, open and flexible higher education.
Open Technology - The 3rd Pillar of Open EducationClint Lalonde
Presentation to KPU March 30, 2017 for Open Education Week.
The Open Education movement has gained a great deal of traction in the 10 years since the groundbreaking 2007 Capetown Declaration on Open Education, due largely in part to the increasing acceptance and use of Open Educational Resources (OER), like open textbooks. Recently, a second wave of open educators have begun to emphasize the importance of a new emerging pedagogical model enabled by open education, referred to as open pedagogy.
In addition to OER and open pedagogy, a third pillar of the open education movement revolves around the importance of open technologies. The 2007 Capetown Declaration sates that, "open education is not limited to just open educational resources. It also draws upon open technologies that facilitate collaborative, flexible learning and the open sharing of teaching practices that empower educators to benefit from the best ideas of their colleagues."
In British Columbia, a small ad hoc group of educators known as the BC Open EdTech Collaborative has been quietly experimenting with different open technologies that have the potential to support open education practices, and with different models to be able to support users of open education technologies.
In this session, Clint Lalonde will talk about the connection between open education and open source software, the importance of open technologies to the open education movement, and will demonstrate some of the open education technologies that the BC Open EdTech Collaborative have been exploring.
Online learning innovation for higher educationicdeslides
This keynote at the International Forum for Partnerships on the Qingdao Declaration, Qingdao, China, discusses new policies for online, open and flexible learning in relation to the new Sustainable Development Goal 4: Education 2030. A simple foresight for Education 2030 post secondary education is presented. Three principles for implementing Education 2030 (megapolicies: Innovation, Openness and Collaboration ) are illustrated with actual cases.
This presentation about Open Education focuses on Open Educational Practice and Open Access. It was delivered as part of the Jisc Digital Leaders programme on 20th November 2015. The presentation was collaboratively put together by @celeste_mcl (focussed on OEP) and @hblanchett (focussed on Open Access).
Innovating Open Education: Critical Pathways and Communities of PracticeRobert Farrow
This presentation from Open Education Global 2021 provides an overview of the ENCORE+ project (https://encoreproject.eu/) and discusses the relationship between open educational resources (OER) and innovation, identifying strategies for knowledge exchange.
Open Education – Impact on Higher Education and Societyicdeslides
This is a background presentation for the participation in a panel at Open Science, 21-22 March 2017, Berlin, Germany: Open Education – Impact on Higher Education and Society.
The panel aims to explore the impact of Open Education on the various “actors” involved: teachers, learners, employers and the society.
Global monitoring of the unesco oer recommendation oe global_connect2021Ebba Ossiannilsson
OEGlobal 2021 in collaboration with University Nantes, FR, 27 September -1 October 2021. My session today 27 September 2021 on behalf of ICDE OER Advocacy Committee on Global Monitoring of the UNESCO OER Recommendation
Global Monitoring of the UNESCO OER Recommendation
Ebba Ossiannilsson, Jane-Frances Obiageli Agbu, Cengiz Hakan Aydin, Melinda de la Pena Bandalaria, Daniel Burgos, Xiangyang Zhang, Rosa Leonor Ulloa Cazarez, Mpine Makoe, Cristine Gusmão, Yi Yang, Constance Blomgren and Trish Chaplin-Cheyne
Bringing Educational Resources For Teachers in Africa - BERTAicdeslides
MOOCs4D, Quality online education, quality in education, OER and teacher education, train the teachers trainers, ICDE, International Council for Open and Distance Education
Presentation for the Open Education Week about the State of Open Education global and TU Delft on Monday 9th of March 2015 for the Open Education Week Seminar at TU Delft
Intro to and overview of Open Educaiton with an empnasis on the Why, from philosophical to economic arguments. Practicing what we preach - this is a mash-up using openly licensed presentations from other open education advocates along with original ones (and lots of pics). All licenses (except screenshots) are attached to the relvant slides. Any questions, just contact us at feedback@oeconsortium.org.
Presentation shared during open education week 2016 to educational developers at Vancouver Island University. We cover openness in education, Creative Commons licenses, ways of engaging with open educational resources (OER) and the emergent open pedagogical practices associated with using open resources.
Pathways to Learning: International Collaboration Under Covid-19Robert Farrow
The Recommendation on Open Educational Resources (OER) (UNESCO) emphasizes in its key aims the importance of (i) “developing the capacity of all key education stakeholders to create, access, re-use, re-purpose, adapt, and redistribute OER, as well as to use and apply open licenses in a manner consistent with national copyright legislation and international obligations” and (ii) “fostering and facilitating international cooperation [by] supporting international cooperation between stakeholders”.
Both these aspects were present in a recent open education research collaboration between The African Council for Distance Education and The Open University (UK). Pathways to Learning: new approaches in higher education (OpenLearn) hosted two free professional development programmes for university lecturers, instructional designers, technical and professional staff, managers, and heads of department who share responsibility for providing quality distance and online learning.
The evaluation of the Pathways to Learning project provides a great touchstone for reflecting on the kinds of agile, open collaboration that can build international capacity for OER projects and the communities that sustain them.
My presentation at the XII edition Societies before the
Digital Challenges 2019 European Lecture Series. The Institute of Education ay University del Norte, Catedra Europa, Barranquilla, Colombia 21-22 March 2019
Open Technology - The 3rd Pillar of Open EducationClint Lalonde
Presentation to KPU March 30, 2017 for Open Education Week.
The Open Education movement has gained a great deal of traction in the 10 years since the groundbreaking 2007 Capetown Declaration on Open Education, due largely in part to the increasing acceptance and use of Open Educational Resources (OER), like open textbooks. Recently, a second wave of open educators have begun to emphasize the importance of a new emerging pedagogical model enabled by open education, referred to as open pedagogy.
In addition to OER and open pedagogy, a third pillar of the open education movement revolves around the importance of open technologies. The 2007 Capetown Declaration sates that, "open education is not limited to just open educational resources. It also draws upon open technologies that facilitate collaborative, flexible learning and the open sharing of teaching practices that empower educators to benefit from the best ideas of their colleagues."
In British Columbia, a small ad hoc group of educators known as the BC Open EdTech Collaborative has been quietly experimenting with different open technologies that have the potential to support open education practices, and with different models to be able to support users of open education technologies.
In this session, Clint Lalonde will talk about the connection between open education and open source software, the importance of open technologies to the open education movement, and will demonstrate some of the open education technologies that the BC Open EdTech Collaborative have been exploring.
Online learning innovation for higher educationicdeslides
This keynote at the International Forum for Partnerships on the Qingdao Declaration, Qingdao, China, discusses new policies for online, open and flexible learning in relation to the new Sustainable Development Goal 4: Education 2030. A simple foresight for Education 2030 post secondary education is presented. Three principles for implementing Education 2030 (megapolicies: Innovation, Openness and Collaboration ) are illustrated with actual cases.
This presentation about Open Education focuses on Open Educational Practice and Open Access. It was delivered as part of the Jisc Digital Leaders programme on 20th November 2015. The presentation was collaboratively put together by @celeste_mcl (focussed on OEP) and @hblanchett (focussed on Open Access).
Innovating Open Education: Critical Pathways and Communities of PracticeRobert Farrow
This presentation from Open Education Global 2021 provides an overview of the ENCORE+ project (https://encoreproject.eu/) and discusses the relationship between open educational resources (OER) and innovation, identifying strategies for knowledge exchange.
Open Education – Impact on Higher Education and Societyicdeslides
This is a background presentation for the participation in a panel at Open Science, 21-22 March 2017, Berlin, Germany: Open Education – Impact on Higher Education and Society.
The panel aims to explore the impact of Open Education on the various “actors” involved: teachers, learners, employers and the society.
Global monitoring of the unesco oer recommendation oe global_connect2021Ebba Ossiannilsson
OEGlobal 2021 in collaboration with University Nantes, FR, 27 September -1 October 2021. My session today 27 September 2021 on behalf of ICDE OER Advocacy Committee on Global Monitoring of the UNESCO OER Recommendation
Global Monitoring of the UNESCO OER Recommendation
Ebba Ossiannilsson, Jane-Frances Obiageli Agbu, Cengiz Hakan Aydin, Melinda de la Pena Bandalaria, Daniel Burgos, Xiangyang Zhang, Rosa Leonor Ulloa Cazarez, Mpine Makoe, Cristine Gusmão, Yi Yang, Constance Blomgren and Trish Chaplin-Cheyne
Bringing Educational Resources For Teachers in Africa - BERTAicdeslides
MOOCs4D, Quality online education, quality in education, OER and teacher education, train the teachers trainers, ICDE, International Council for Open and Distance Education
Presentation for the Open Education Week about the State of Open Education global and TU Delft on Monday 9th of March 2015 for the Open Education Week Seminar at TU Delft
Intro to and overview of Open Educaiton with an empnasis on the Why, from philosophical to economic arguments. Practicing what we preach - this is a mash-up using openly licensed presentations from other open education advocates along with original ones (and lots of pics). All licenses (except screenshots) are attached to the relvant slides. Any questions, just contact us at feedback@oeconsortium.org.
Presentation shared during open education week 2016 to educational developers at Vancouver Island University. We cover openness in education, Creative Commons licenses, ways of engaging with open educational resources (OER) and the emergent open pedagogical practices associated with using open resources.
Pathways to Learning: International Collaboration Under Covid-19Robert Farrow
The Recommendation on Open Educational Resources (OER) (UNESCO) emphasizes in its key aims the importance of (i) “developing the capacity of all key education stakeholders to create, access, re-use, re-purpose, adapt, and redistribute OER, as well as to use and apply open licenses in a manner consistent with national copyright legislation and international obligations” and (ii) “fostering and facilitating international cooperation [by] supporting international cooperation between stakeholders”.
Both these aspects were present in a recent open education research collaboration between The African Council for Distance Education and The Open University (UK). Pathways to Learning: new approaches in higher education (OpenLearn) hosted two free professional development programmes for university lecturers, instructional designers, technical and professional staff, managers, and heads of department who share responsibility for providing quality distance and online learning.
The evaluation of the Pathways to Learning project provides a great touchstone for reflecting on the kinds of agile, open collaboration that can build international capacity for OER projects and the communities that sustain them.
My presentation at the XII edition Societies before the
Digital Challenges 2019 European Lecture Series. The Institute of Education ay University del Norte, Catedra Europa, Barranquilla, Colombia 21-22 March 2019
Open learning in higher education an institutional approachBrian Murphy
The vaue of open learning can be a conflict within higher education instituions. This presentation is the result of an instituional review and research on the open education movement in higher education, given greater impetus by the advent of the MOOC. The journey of exploring MOOCs resulted, ironically, in an enhanced apreciation of OERs and revised strategic thinking of their impact for teaching and research, especially when viewed as a vehicle of co-creation between staff and students. Once value is attached, the principle becimes embedded and accepted rarher than an additional burden of academic endeavour; and the door is opened to the business case for systems, investment and development as well as academic development, support, reward and recognition.
Presentation at the EDEN 2014 conference. Open learning with an open culture of sharing
-success factors. The theme of the confernce was From Education to Employment and Meaningful Worl with ICT
Examples of successful Open Education strategies in Higher EducationFabio Nascimbeni
The presentation introduces some successful strategies of universities that have opened up their offer, together with some reflections on how this could be done in the Mediterranean region.
Open Education & Open Educational Services (long)Andreas Meiszner
An introduction to Open Education & Open Educational Services, including information on the openSE & openEd 2.0 projects.
Long version for United Nations University meeting (Macau, 1 - 3 September 2010)
Presentation at the eMOOC 14 European Stakeholder Summit on MOOCs 2014. The Policy track on accreditation policy, certification and quality assurance. Lausanne 10-12 February, 2014
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BNU Navigating the Future- Bridging Smart Education around the World_Ossianni...Ebba Ossiannilsson
Today I contributed to the panel together with distinguished colleagues in the European workshop on Navigating the Future: Bridging Smart Education around the World. The host is UNESCO IITE and Beijing Normal University, China.
SPHERE TAM Samarkand, Uzbekistan on the theme Digitalization of higher education and increasing competitiveness of universities Institute of Economics and Services 23-24 April 2024
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SPHERE TAM Samarkand, Uzbekistan on the theme Digitalization of higher education and increasing competitiveness of universities Institute of Economics and Services 23-24 April 2024
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SPHERE TAM Samarkand, Uzbekistan on the theme Digitalization of higher education and increasing competitiveness of universities Institute of Economics and Services 23-24 April 2024
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http://sandymillin.wordpress.com/iateflwebinar2024
Published classroom materials form the basis of syllabuses, drive teacher professional development, and have a potentially huge influence on learners, teachers and education systems. All teachers also create their own materials, whether a few sentences on a blackboard, a highly-structured fully-realised online course, or anything in between. Despite this, the knowledge and skills needed to create effective language learning materials are rarely part of teacher training, and are mostly learnt by trial and error.
Knowledge and skills frameworks, generally called competency frameworks, for ELT teachers, trainers and managers have existed for a few years now. However, until I created one for my MA dissertation, there wasn’t one drawing together what we need to know and do to be able to effectively produce language learning materials.
This webinar will introduce you to my framework, highlighting the key competencies I identified from my research. It will also show how anybody involved in language teaching (any language, not just English!), teacher training, managing schools or developing language learning materials can benefit from using the framework.
A Strategic Approach: GenAI in EducationPeter Windle
Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies such as Generative AI, Image Generators and Large Language Models have had a dramatic impact on teaching, learning and assessment over the past 18 months. The most immediate threat AI posed was to Academic Integrity with Higher Education Institutes (HEIs) focusing their efforts on combating the use of GenAI in assessment. Guidelines were developed for staff and students, policies put in place too. Innovative educators have forged paths in the use of Generative AI for teaching, learning and assessments leading to pockets of transformation springing up across HEIs, often with little or no top-down guidance, support or direction.
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The US House of Representatives is deeply concerned by ongoing and pervasive acts of antisemitic
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Read| The latest issue of The Challenger is here! We are thrilled to announce that our school paper has qualified for the NATIONAL SCHOOLS PRESS CONFERENCE (NSPC) 2024. Thank you for your unwavering support and trust. Dive into the stories that made us stand out!
Embracing GenAI - A Strategic ImperativePeter Windle
Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies such as Generative AI, Image Generators and Large Language Models have had a dramatic impact on teaching, learning and assessment over the past 18 months. The most immediate threat AI posed was to Academic Integrity with Higher Education Institutes (HEIs) focusing their efforts on combating the use of GenAI in assessment. Guidelines were developed for staff and students, policies put in place too. Innovative educators have forged paths in the use of Generative AI for teaching, learning and assessments leading to pockets of transformation springing up across HEIs, often with little or no top-down guidance, support or direction.
This Gasta posits a strategic approach to integrating AI into HEIs to prepare staff, students and the curriculum for an evolving world and workplace. We will highlight the advantages of working with these technologies beyond the realm of teaching, learning and assessment by considering prompt engineering skills, industry impact, curriculum changes, and the need for staff upskilling. In contrast, not engaging strategically with Generative AI poses risks, including falling behind peers, missed opportunities and failing to ensure our graduates remain employable. The rapid evolution of AI technologies necessitates a proactive and strategic approach if we are to remain relevant.
1. 22nd November, 2015
Dr. Ebba Ossiannilsson, EDEN FELLOW, OPEN EDUCATION EUROPA FELLOW
V President, SADE, ICDE ON_BOLDIC
EC/ET WG Digital and online learning
IPTS OpenEdu framework (quality)
EADTU Quality Reviewer: Excellence/OpenupEd
SIS/ISO Quality committeé
How open is open?
2.
3.
4. Guidelines for online
education & showcases
Evaluation
SEQUENT
Supporting Quality in e-learning European
Networks Agreement no 2013-3966/001-
001 http://www.sequent-network.eu/
Ebba Ossiannilsson, PhD Lund
University, Sweden. Evaluator The
SEQUENT Project, May 2015
5. + 40 Quality Models on
OER; MOOCs, E-learning,
Online learning
Norm Based/Process based
Quality Matrix
Set of Characteristica
Nature of quality interventions
Perspectives stakeholders
Maturity level
Recommendations
10. Open education is defined by the
Open Education Consortium (OEC
2015) as:
…resources, tools and practices that
employ a framework of open sharing
to improve educational access and
effectiveness worldwide.
11. Quality in open education
Efficacy
Impact
Availability
Accurancy
Excellence
13. Open education encompasses resources, tools and practices that employ a framework of open
sharing to improve educational access and effectiveness worldwide.
Open Education combines the traditions of knowledge sharing and creation with 21st century
technology to create a vast pool of openly shared educational resources, while harnessing
today’s collaborative spirit to develop educational approaches that are more responsive to
learner’s needs.
The idea of free and open sharing in education is not new. In fact, sharing is probably the most
basic characteristic of education: education is sharing knowledge, insights and information with
others, upon which new knowledge, skills, ideas and understanding can be built. Open
Education seeks to scale up educational opportunities by taking advantage of the power of the
internet, allowing rapid and essentially free dissemination, and enabling people around the
world to access knowledge, connect and collaborate. Open is key; open allows not just access,
but the freedom to modify and use materials, information and networks so education can be
personalized to individual users or woven together in new ways for diverse audiences, large and
small.
What is open education?
14. Open education
Open education is a philosophy about the way people should
produce, share, and build on knowledge.
Proponents of open education believe everyone in the world
should have access to high-quality educational experiences
and resources, and they work to eliminate barriers to this goal.
Such barriers might include high monetary costs, outdated or
obsolete materials, and legal mechanisms that prevent
collaboration among scholars and educators.
15. Why is open education important?
People want to learn. By providing free and open access to education and
knowledge, we help create a world where people can fulfill this desire.
Students can get additional information, viewpoints and materials to help
them succeed. Workers can learn things that will help them on the job. Faculty
can draw on resources from all around the world. Researchers can share data
and develop new networks. Teachers can find new ways to help students learn.
People can connect with others they wouldn’t otherwise meet to share ideas
and information. Materials can be translated, mixed together, broken apart and
openly shared again, increasing access and inviting fresh approaches. Anyone
can access educational materials, scholarly articles, and supportive learning
communities anytime they want to. Education is available, accessible,
modifiable and free.
16. Open Education Consortium
“…sharing is probably the most basic characteristic of
education: education is sharing knowledge, insights and
information with others, upon which new knowledge, skills,
ideas and understanding can be built."
19. EC Recommendationer för
högre utbildning Opening up
Education
review their organisational strategies
exploit the potential of Massive Open Online Courses
(MOOCs)
stimulate innovative learning practices such as blended
learning
equip teachers with high digital competences
equip learners with digital skills
think about how to validate and recognise learner’s
achievements in online education
make high quality Open Education Resources (OER) visible
and accessible
27. Open Education (OpenEdu) 2
The study will take two years and its main objectives are to:
explore existing mechanisms for the recognition of learning through open education
initiatives (see OpenCred)
propose a framework for opening up practices at postsecondary education institutions
covering a variety of dimensions: content, technology, pedagogy, leadership,
accreditation, business models, etc.
seek understanding of the supply and demand of MOOCs offered in European universities
and the implications for open education in Europe (see MOOCKnowledge).
28.
29. • Sharing
• Peering
• Social network
• Openness
• Acting gobally
• Anytime, anywhere, anyone
• Mobile is default
• BYOD
• Badges
”The audience
is taking the
stage”
"In the past you were what you owned. Now you are what you
share." (Charles Leadbeater)
30. CC BY by Stephanie Lowman
Mobility and
Ubiquitous
39. Caring is sharing, sharing is caring
My Footprints
Ossiannilsson_OER and quality in online learning_Boldic2015
Editor's Notes
The third theme is about quality
A move from the paradigm my students, my course, my content..
towards
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_-rcFBgUNtQ0/SFO-eE5igTI/AAAAAAAAEIk/4cyVccxKt_U/s400/GMU+service-learning+orientation+037.jpg
http://umami.typepad.com/umami/images/2007/07/18/p7050954.jpg
http://s3.frank.itlab.us/photo-essays/small/aug_05_4646_teacher.jpg
Quality can enhance when use the very best of what is out there and available and often for free and peer reviewed
In research we are used to talk about peer review, but not that often in education
Towards any university, any content, any student
Probably the role of the University will shift to an assessing and credentialling institution or just for elite students and for research
http://img.scoop.it/_kg6c2d18VvkH-C1_rudTzl72eJkfbmt4t8yenImKBVaiQDB_Rd1H6kmuBWtceBJ
As my strong believe caring is sharing
So my footprints and contact details
My slides are available at slidshare where you can find my other presentations as well