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The Journey to Open Education

The Journey to Open Education. Ownership and control V Access for all. Library of Celsus , Ephesus. A struggle against restrictive practices. curriculum design closed collections selective entrance expensive technologies & equipment accreditation led learning exclusive language

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The Journey to Open Education

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  1. The Journey to Open Education Ownership and control V Access for all Library of Celsus, Ephesus

  2. A struggle against restrictive practices curriculum design closed collections selective entrance expensive technologies & equipment accreditation led learning exclusive language poverty and exclusion culture of experts

  3. How far have we actually come? Challenging and changing: cultures of academic practice traditions within educational institutions legal restrictions around ownership and control of content existing communities of practice learner expectations government strategies and policies

  4. Being open – removing barriers UK Open University (1970) MIT Courseware (2001) Jisc Exchange for Learning Programme (2002-2006) Jorum National Learning Repository (2002) Creative Commons (2002) OU OpenLearn (2006) U-NOW Nottingham University (2007) Creative Commons (2002) Jisc RePRODUCEProgramme (2008) First MOOC (2008) UKOER Programme (2009-2012) http://blogs.cetis.ac.uk/othervoices/2012/02/13/open-educational-resources-timeline/ There has been a tendency to focus on learning resources and not on enabling people to learn effectively in an open, networked social world

  5. Open educational practices Students as co-producers Open pedagogies & assessment Open networked learning Breaking boundaries Changing roles & relationships Collaboration New stakeholders Letting go of control Challenging ownership OER and Open Courses cost a lot of money and as such they often support the traditional practice and culture of the investor/s or producers Not all open courses embrace these principles…

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