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
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Oer11 developing tech patterns
1. Developing patterns in technical approaches for Open Educational Resources R. John Robertson (1) and Lorna Campbell (1), & Phil Barker (2) JISC CETIS. Presentation at OER 11, Manchester, May 11th 2011 1 Centre for Academic Practice and Learning Enhancement, University of Strathclyde, 2 Institute for Computer Based Learning, Heriot-Watt University This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Licence. Individual Images in this presentation may have different licences .
2. overview Some Context Big and Little OER Global Patterns UKOER Patterns Possible Trends
8. Other OER work in the UK and globally as well as other related technical developments4
9. Is there a sustainable and consistently successful technical approach to sharing OER? Option A Yes, use your (institutional) repository and /or VLE Option B Yes, use your (personal) blog
10. Big and Little OER In the wider OER community there are two distinct approaches to sharing open content for education. Weller characterises these as Big and Little OER (http://nogoodreason.typepad.co.uk/no_good_reason/2009/12/the-politics-of-oer.html)
11. Big and Little OER Big OER Institutional effort Often polished and high quality High reputation Technical approach likely to use centrally managed system; favours CMS/VLE/Repository Little OER Individual effort Often ‘as is’ or ‘work in progress’ Personal and word of mouth reputation Technical approach likely to use tools to hand which author can use; likely blogs, wikis, slideshare
12. Global patterns – ‘Big’ Emergence of ‘support’ communities and beginning of consideration of accreditation (e.g. OpenStudy for OpenCourseWare; parts of P2PU; OERU) Approach is web scale hosted communities creating or supporting given courses
13. Global patterns – ‘Big’ Federal US Government Initiatives around open content Focus on sharing of content to meet workforce needs Interest in usage data – Learning Registry work to aggregate and share data to support discovery services Point of interest: as yet unknown how particular discovery services deal with packaged content
14. Global patterns – ‘Big’ OpenTextBooks US and wider interest in ‘tangible’ OER Services like Flatworldknowledge (semi-commercial model) offering online adapt your own book tools But some initiatives such as opencourselibrary taking a very flexible technical approach
15. Global Patterns ‘Little’ Use of blogs, YouTube, and other platforms to share resources and make tools Professional networks OL Daily OSS Open Attribute
16. Global Patterns ‘Little’ Open Courses like: Ds106 and other MOOCs Using existing tools # and blogs Innovative outputs, process, and forms of feedback and assessment. Infrastructure not innovative
17. Middle OER? Initiatives like UKOER model of institutional support to allow individuals to release OER using institutional tools model of Institutional release of OER using 3rd party tools
20. Provisional differences in UKOER 1 &2 Talking about tech issues less (Strand A+B) More concentration of platform and standards choices Many projects less concerned with tech choices – using whatever is to hand In particular increased use of institutionally supported systems Slight shift towards wordpress, drupal, rss Lower use of externally hosted web 2.0 platforms Less content creation (in scope of call) Less focus on file format Much less use of QTI Outside of collections strand very little technical development Collection projects tending to build destination sites Development in collections stand largely around existing platforms not form scratch
21. Observations from OER hackday & bids What people worked on: Wordpress widgets 2 different Bookmarking tools Google CSE based course catalogue A windows install packager for OERbit (drupal based OER production tool) Extracting paradata (attention metadata) from mediawiki Data visualisations Patterns Mostly built in existing tools and platforms Lots of ideas that we didn’t have time to work on Mini-projects Open process 2 bids funded a focus on users online tools – bookmarking and citation
22. Provisional Trends Beginning to see more examples of online and distributed educational or edu support opportunities outside of institutions or alongside course offerings Web scale Destination more than ‘sharing’
23. Provisional Trends OER release projects rightly focusing on content rather than dissemination mechanisms Accreditation is the coming challenge – work on badges and eportfolios likely to be of growing interest
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25. Sustainability Funded projects Tech innovation not sustainable as such but : funded to prove possible lower cost alternatives... funded to embed or demonstrate infrastructure working with existing tools potentially taps into existing community Self running projects Small scale voluntary efforts to address specific tasks can be very effective Open Attribute working with existing tools can utilise existing community