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Developing patterns in technical approaches for Open Educational Resources

Developing patterns in technical approaches for Open Educational Resources. R. John Robertson (1) and Lorna Campbell (1), & Phil Barker (2) Presentation at OER 11, Manchester, May 11th 2011

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Developing patterns in technical approaches for Open Educational Resources

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  1. Developing patterns in technical approaches for Open Educational Resources R. John Robertson (1) and Lorna Campbell (1), & Phil Barker (2) 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

  3. Context: JISC CETIS • JISC CETIS is a JISC Innovation Support Centre. We provide advice to the UK Higher and Post-16 Education sectors on the development and use of educational technology and standards through: • participating in standards bodies • providing community forums for sharing experience about educational technologies and interoperability standards • providing strategic advice to JISC and supporting JISC development programmes 3

  4. Context: UK OER and more • UKOER programme: Phase 2 of the HEFCE-funded Open Educational Resources (OER) programme runs between August 2010 and August 2011 (£5 million funding) • Other OER work in the UK and globally as well as other related technical developments 4

  5. 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

  6. 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)

  7. 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

  8. 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

  9. 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

  10. 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

  11. Global Patterns ‘Little’ • Use of blogs, YouTube, and other platforms to share resources and make tools • Professional networks • OL Daily • OSS • Open Attribute

  12. 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

  13. 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

  14. Phase 1 technical overview

  15. Phase 2 technical overview

  16. 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

  17. 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

  18. 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’

  19. 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

  20. Strategic Balance • If you want to release content stick with safe technical choices • Plenty of existing tools; whether taking a big or little OER approach, use what you already have or have access too • If you want to innovate (increasingly outside of most institutional work) • Think web scale • Xpert... • Build on existing platforms where possible • WordPress • Wikis • Office tools

  21. 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

  22. Questions • phil.barker@hw.ac.uk • robert.robertson@strath.ac.uk • lmc@strath.ac.uk • http://jisc.cetis.ac.uk/topic/oer 22

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