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Charles Duncan C.Duncan@intrallect.com. Learning Object Repositories to Support Collaborating Communities. In the past. 15 years ago Collaboration is important because... It saves time It propagates good practice It builds new communities But it was slow and difficult. Now.
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Charles Duncan C.Duncan@intrallect.com Learning Object Repositories to Support Collaborating Communities
In the past... • 15 years ago • Collaboration is important because... • It saves time • It propagates good practice • It builds new communities • But it was slow and difficult
Now... • Collaboration is even more important... • Stimulating new ideas • Integration with new technologies • Huge range of digital formats • Much easier with learning object repositories
What is a learning object repository • A system supporting a community working together to share and reuse resources for learning • Community? – local, institutional, national, international, subject-oriented • Share? – reciprocal, cost-free, cost-recover, mixed economy, commercial • Reuse? – play, print, modify, annotate, excerpt, aggregate, sell, give • Resources? – assets, lessons, activities, designs • Learning? – surely we all agree
What is a learning object • Assets • Documents, images, videos, Flash, audio • Aggregations • Web pages • Aggregations of aggregations: modules • Questions/assessments • Templates (learning design ideas) • …
Do you recognise this? reinventingthe wheel can’t findanything incompatibility can thisbe used?
Repository benefits • Support sharing communities • Support any digital format • Use any tool for creating learning objects • Support any delivery methods • eLearning and Distance Learning • Traditional learning using digital resources • Integrate with other tools • Reduce training effort
Implementation • So let's have a repository! • What do we need to plan? • If we set up the software will everyone share? • Maybe! • What are the human factors? • How can people be encouraged? • Community Dimensions • www.academy.gcal.ac.uk/cd-lor/
Repository dimensions Single-subject Single-institution Multiple-institution Multiple-subject
Purpose – e.g. for sharing audio-files, or for preservation of institutional educational resources Subject area – e.g. social work, medicine Scope - departmental, institutional, national, or international Educational sector - school, higher education, further education, lifelong learning Contributors - teachers, students, publishers, support staff, funded projects Business model - business, trading and management framework underpinning repository National policy – support for policy initiatives Dimensions - repositories
Purpose - shared goal/interest of the community Dialogue - modes of communication, e.g. online, face-to-face, or mixed Roles and responsibilities Coherence - whether the community is close-knit or loosely confederated/transient Context - the broader ecology within which the community exists, e.g. professional bodies, government bodies Rules – e.g. ground rules of conduct, rewards and incentives mechanisms, control of access and use of resources Pedagogy of the community - for example, problem-based learning, collaborative learning Dimensions - communities
CD-LOR Methodology • Workshops and interviews • 8 project partners • 18 collaborative partners • All experienced in repositories
Key questions – CD-LOR Guidelines • Question 1. Why are you setting up a learning object repository? • Question 2. How many communities do you serve? • Question 3. What is the purpose of the community that the repository will serve? • Question 4. Who are the key actors in the community and who, of these, will contribute to the repository? • Question 5. What is the pedagogic approach of the community? • Question 6. How coherent is the community? • Question 7. What are the modes of participation and communication within the community? • Question 8. What is the ecology of the community? • Question 9. What is the business model of the repository? • Question 10. How do you envision the evolution of your LOR? • http://www.academy.gcal.ac.uk/cd-lor/documents/CD-LOR_Structured_Guidelines_v1p0_000.pdf
Some models - 1 • Jorum (www.jorum.ac.uk) • Very large scale (400 institutions) • Exit path for many funded projects • Huge awareness raising activity – very successful • Initial licence model too restrictive • Now adopting more open licence model • Reached 18 month target in 7 months
Some models - 2 • IRISS (www.iriss.ac.uk) • Single-subject: social work • Universities, colleges and professionals • Central content production – very high development standards • Community derived classification • Strong government policy support • Open access component
Some models - 3 • NDLR (www.ndlr.ie) • 13 communities of practice • Across all universities and colleges in Ireland • Clear rights/licence in place • Communities identify and create resources
VLE Wikis, Blogs Partner VLEs Management Open access portal Web sites Reporting requirements “Collection” Portal Typical Repository Configuration eLearning Research outputs/reports ePrints Images Private
Web Service Conclusions • Digital Repositories can • integrate with your existing tools • offer reliable single source access • are easy to search (metadata/classification) • encourage mashups, etc. • Open standards • support new uses with existing tools • put power in the hands of the user • are the basis for open access
Some Answers • Technological • Mostly solved • Interfaces to other technology vital • Community • Develop communities of practice • Subject-based • Across institutions • Identify need – support development
More Answers • Don't make the staff adapt to the technology • Make the technology adapt to the staff • Help people do their jobs better and they will collaborate with each other
Thank you • C.Duncan@intrallect.com