1
Open Education Handbook
Published : 2014-10-24
License : CC BY
2
THE OPEN EDUCATION HANDBOOK
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
ABOUT THIS BOOK
WHO IS THIS BOOK FOR?
HOW THIS BOOK WAS WRITTEN
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
LICENCE
3
1. About This Book
"Open Education" is a topic which has become increasingly popular in a variety of contexts. This
handbook has been written to provide a useful point of reference for readers with a range of different
roles and interests who are interested in learning more about the concept of Open Education and to
help them deal with a variety of practical situations.
As a "living" online document, we hope that it will continue to evolve, reflecting cutting edge research
and innovation in this area and helping educational communities to come to an improved
understanding of the value of open.
When the process of writing this book first started, the original intention was only to cover open data
use in education. As the project progressed it was felt that a broader scope would enable readers to
have a better understanding of the synergy and overlap between different aspects or facets of open
education (such as open resources, open data, open practices and open culture).
We have been guided by the idea that the handbook will continue to grow and evolve through
involvment with the learning communities it is intended to support. The latest version of this
handbook includes:
An overview of different elements of the open education ecosystem
Information about useful tools and software
Useful references
A glossary of terms commonly used in open education
Case studies and real-life examples
Answers to frequently asked questions
Discussion of key issues in open education
During the course of writing the handbook many organisations and individuals related to The Open
Education Working Group have contributed. These are listed in the acknowledgements section.
This handbook is a deliverable of the LinkedUp Project (WP4: Dissemination and Communitybuilding) with the work being led by Open Knowledge.
4
2. Who Is This Book For?
Open Education is of interest to many and different sections of this handbook are likely appeal to
different stakeholders, whether they are expert or beginner in this field. This handbook is aimed at a
wide variety of users from all sectors of education as well as informal learning.
We understand the main audiences as including:
Formal students
Independent learners
Lecturers/Tutors
Teachers
Researchers
e-Learning specialists
Producers of open educational resources (OER)
Primary and secondary school professionals
Educational technologists
Software developers
People interested in using open data
Policymakers
Secondary audience(s) include:
Administrators
Support staff
Education managers
Publishers
Parents/Guardians of learners
Funders
'Creatives' interested in open licensing
5
3. How This Book Was Written
The Open Education Handbook is a community project of the Open Education Working Group, initiated
by the LinkedUp Project and contributed to other organisations (e.g., Creative Commons and Mozilla)
and individuals.
The writing of this handbook was co-ordinated by the Open Knowledge, a worldwide network of
people passionate about openness, using advocacy, technology and training to unlock information
and enable people to work with it to create and share knowledge. Open Knowledge believes
knowledge can empower everyone, enabling people to work together to tackle local and global
challenges, understand our world, expose inefficiency and challenge inequality and hold governments
and companies accountable.
The content of the Handbook has been crowdsourced and was drafted over a series of online and
offline events. The initial outline was created by 17 open education experts at a booksprint in London
in September 2013, with refinement continuing online after the booksprint. A second booksprint took
place in Berlin in November 2013, and further ideas were contributed to the book as a result of OPPI:
Helsinki Learning Festival in April 2014. The latest draft was further reviewed at OKFestival in Berlin
July 2014. Sections have also been formulated through collaborative efforts based on the 'Friday
Chats' from the Open Education Working group mailing list. An editorial review of the handbook took
place in September 2014.
We continue to be interested in contributions from experts and practictioners who can help us to
further refine the information we have gathered, and encourage feedback.
6
4. Acknowledgements
The Open Education Handbook is a community project of the Open Education Working Group. It is
supported by Creative Commons, Wikimedia Deutschland and the LinkedUp Project.
We would like to express our gratitude to all those who have made a contribution to this handbook.
Attendees at initial booksprint (London):
Brian Kelly, Web Focus Chris Follows, UAL
Kevin Mears, University of South Wales
Leo Havemann, Birkbeck, University of London
Madi Solomon, Pearson
Marieke Guy, Open Knowledge Foundation
Mathieu d'Aquin, Open University
Michelle Brook, Open Knowledge Foundation
Pat Lockley, University of London
Phil Barker, Cetis & Heriot-Watt University
Simon Kear, Goldsmiths College, University of London
Simon Mahony, University College London
Suzanne Hardy, Newcastle University
Tony Hall
Ulrich Tiedau, University College London
William Hammonds, Universities UK
Wolfgang Greller, Open University Netherlands
Attendees of the 2nd Booksprint (Berlin):
Alek Tarkowski, Creative Commons Poland
Alessandro Adamou, Open University, UK
Anna Wertlen, VillageScribe
Balaji Venkataraman, Commonwealth of Learning
Balaji Venkataraman, Commonwealth of Learning
Davide Tailbi, Istituto per le Tecnologie Didattiche (ITD)
Elly Koepf, Wikimedia Deutschland
Frank Wittmann, Universität Potsdam
Ivana Marenzi, L3S Research Center, Leibniz Universität Hannover
Jake Berger, BBC
Jan Neumann, HBZ
Johanna Santos
John Weitzmann, Creative Commons
Kamil Śliwowski, Creative Commons Poland
Lucile Needen, SourceFabric
Marieke Guy, Open Knowledge Foundation
Martin Mehlberg, Leibniz Universität Hannover
Robert Lehmann
Sander van der Waal, Open Knowledge Foundation
Sebastian Horndasch, Wikimedia Deutschland
Sebastian Seitz, TSB Technologiestiftung Berlin
Sophie Bloemen, Common Causes Policy
Stefania Druga
7
Vera Klauer
Elhana Lernpaten
Wissam Tawileh, Technische Universität Dresden
Other contributors:
Bekka Kahn, P2PU University
Cable Green, Director of Global Learning, Creative Commons
Fabian Tompsett, Wikipedia
Jacky Hood, Open Doors Project
Jade Forester, Global Coordinator + Liaison, Mozilla Foundation
Jane Park, Project Manager, Creative Commons
Michael Chesterman, FLOSS Manuals
Raniere Silva, Open Knowledge Foundation
Brazil Stefan Dietze, L3S Research Center,Leibniz Universität Hannover
Terry McAndrew, JISC TechDis
The first draft of the Open Education Handbook was edited by Rob Farrow in September-October
2014.
8
5. Licence
The Open Education Handbook is licenced under a the following Creative Commons licence.
Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
This license lets others distribute, remix, tweak, and build upon this work (even commercially) as long
as credit is provided for the original creation. This is among the most accommodating of CC licenses
offered, and recommended for maximum dissemination and use of licensed materials.
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
9
OPEN EDUCATION
6. WHAT IS 'OPEN' EDUCATION?
7. HISTORY OF OPEN EDUCATION
8. EDUCATION: TRADITIONAL & OPEN
9. BENEFITS OF OPEN EDUCATION
10. ACCESS, PARTICIPATION, COLLABORATION
10
6. What Is 'Open' Education?
Precisely what 'open' means in open education has been the subject of some debate. Contemporary
education as a whole may be broadly understood as incorporating a wide range of pedgogical and
scholarly activities which can take place inside or outside formal institutions. Very broadly, these can
include:
learning, whether through instruction, guided activity or self-directed learning;
teaching which can include mentoring and all non-instructivist activities around the deliberate
nurturing of knowledge;
assessment which may be any combination of summative, formative and/or diagnostic;
accreditation which can include recognising learner or educator accomplishment;
policymaking at any level of education or governance where this influences curriculum, funding
and procedures in education; and
administration, dealing with recruitment, admissions, retention, progression, graduation,
timetabling, reporting, and management.
In a traditional learning environment (such as a school or university) these aspects of practice tend to
relate to each other in familar ways. When we talk about open education we're really interested in
the ways in which our practices can change as a result of adopting open practices, but also in
education outside of formal institutions.
Open Education is a collective term that is used to refer to many practices and activities that have
both openness and education at their core. First and foremost, open education is about removing
barriers to education. This may be through removing entry requirements, as The Open University (UK)
has done, or by making content and data freely and legally available for reuse. However it also
reflects other cultural changes, such as the move to open up learning methods and practices, which
sees the blurring or removal of traditional roles such as teacher and student, moving towards roles
such as mentor and learner.
Open Education is an area in which priorities and practices are continually changing. There are many
aspects of open education that engender debate (such as content licensing, definitions of open,
incentives for participation, etc.) and other aspects that are less contentious (the need for technology
to support learning, data use to support education initiatives in the developing world, etc.) Overall,
there is increasing recognition that education is being transformed and that open education can play
a significant role in this transformation.
Some people tend to think about open education in terms of the content and resources used in
education. Seen this way, a piece of data or content is open when it meets the Open Definition, "if
anyone is free to use, reuse, and redistribute it — subject only, at most, to the requirement to
attribute and/or share-alike." This means that, with the right 'open' licence, resources like textbooks,
websites, videos, curricula, lesson plans, audio and image files can be free to share and adapt
according to pedagogical needs.
Open licensing typically results in resources being made available more cheaply (or for free). Some
commentators have suggested that the distinction between 'open' and 'free' that is derived from the
open source movement. While free software focuses on the freedom of agents within the software
world (eg. users and developers) 'open source' software focuses on the advantages to the software
development process of transparency and sharing.
In open education, for a resource to be open, it must be both 'gratis' and free/open. That is, one must
be able to access the educational resource at no cost and have the legal rights to reuse, revise, remix
and redistribute the resource and/or adaptations of the resource.
In the context of open education the focus until recently has tended toward open access to resources,
but there are other ways of being open, reflected in the language of 'open educational practices'
(OEP). These are innovations in educational practice that are made possible by open licensing of
resources.
It is worth remembering that the open in 'open education' does not apply just to content, data or
resources. Openness is part of wider change and movement towards equality and collaboration.
11
Further Resources
An excellent introduction to open education is provided by the Open University's Open Learn
Open Education MOOC [http://www.open.edu/openlearn/education/open-education/contentsection-0].
Winning entries of the Why Open Education Matters video competition
[http://whyopenedmatters.org/blog/2012/07/18/winners-announced/index.html]
The Capetown Open Education Declaration [http://www.capetowndeclaration.org/]
The Hewlett Foundation's white paper on Open Educational Resources
[http://www.hewlett.org/sites/default/files/OER%20White%20Paper%20Nov%2022%202013%20Fi
nal.pdf]
UNESCO's portal to Open Educational Resources [http://www.unesco.org/new/en/communicationand-information/access-to-knowledge/open-educational-resources/]
The benefits of open - position paper by CETIS/Open Scotland [http://publications.cetis.ac.uk/wpcontent/uploads/2013/06/Benefits-of-Open.pdf]
The Battle for Open - a perspective by Martin Weller
[http://jime.open.ac.uk/jime/article/view/2013-15]
12
7. History Of Open Education
Open Education covers a broad range of activities and has a long history. From the public library
movement of the 19th century which promoted open universities and state-provided education, when
education suddenly became accessible to all, to the setting up of institutions like the Open University
in the UK which lowered the boundaries to access.
An historical reconstruction is provided by Peters and Deimann (2013) who begin with the scholastic
movement of the Middle Ages. They write:
The late Middle Ages were characterised by a number of changes that “opened” education from
what had been, until then, one mostly restricted to monastery open schools. A major factor was
the
growth of medieval towns and increasing urbanisation of society.. Out of the cathedral schools
grew what we today recognise as institutions of higher learning, then termed “studium
generale”. The “generale” or general nature already recognised the importance and signified
that it was “intended for entire Christendom without regard for national or territorial
boundaries”.
By the late 1500s access to knowledge and learning had become very different. No longer a
place for the free exchange of students, teachers and ideas, the higher education institution had
become increasingly closed. By the 1600s the invention of the printing press was beginning to
spread knowledge more widely.
17th century coffee-houses provide us with another instance of openness. Here patrons from all
walks of life were given access to the premises and could sit down and read (or listen) to the
latest news, pamphlets and books and participate in lively discussions covering science, religion,
business, literature and of course the latest gossip.
The 18th century is marked by wide-ranging popular literacy among men. The popular response
to Thomas Paine’s 1791 Rights of Man fuelled “literacy from below” as artisans and the new
industrial working class taught one another to read and established growing numbers of selfeducation societies.
From the late 19th century until the end of the Second World War, miners’ libraries emerged as
the thirst for knowledge and rise of interest in self-education coincided with the growth of the
coal industry. With few exceptions, every mining town and village had its own “workmen’s
institute”, containing, among other a reading room and a library that would be at the heart of
the establishment.
From the late 19th century until the end of the Second World War, miners’ libraries emerged as
the thirst for knowledge and rise of interest in self-education coincided with the growth of the
coal industry. With few exceptions, every mining town and village had its own “workmen’s
institute”, containing, among other a reading room and a library that would be at the heart of
the establishment.
The 20th century continued to see education “open” as the belief in the people’s right to access
society’s knowledge grew. In Argentina for instance, this is particularly visible in the University
of Buenos Aires, as shaped by the ideas of the 1918 Cordoba reform.
Openness was also enabled by further developments in distance learning. Best known is probably
The Open University (UK) founded in the 1960s, at a time of significant developments in
communications technology and mass media.
More recently it has taken on new impetus in a new direction, not disconnected with that history, but
not entirely similar in focus.
Fabian Tompsett from Wikipedia argues that:
Open Education has its roots in the Civil Rights movement in America, in particular the Freedom
Schools which were tied in with the Greensboro sit-ins where students broke down the colour
bar. The students involved in this sit-ins took their college books with them and used the time to
study.
People like Mario Savio and Tom Hayden acknowledge the role of what they learnt from their
participation in the civil rights movement in their subsequent activities like the Berkeley Free
Speech Movement and the Port Huron Statement. These social movements played a crucial role
in providing the environment which gave rise to Silicon Valley.
The People's Computer Company were advocates of Open Source, and went on to spawn the
13
Homebrew Computing Club. It was the social activism of the sixties and seventies which gave rise
to the knowledge revolution and the technological advances which have had such an impact on
contemporary society. Fabian also points out that schools played a part too and Ivan
Illich and questioned the role of schools and advocated learning webs.
Technological innovation has naturally contributed to changes in educational practice but tools are
often enablers rather than drivers. Open education is very much the result of a dialectical relationship
between technology and human aspirations. As Ivan Illich said in Deschooling Society: "Technology is
available to develop either independence and learning or bureaucracy and teaching."
As Martin Weller notes in The Battle for Open: "Openness has a long history in higher education. Its
foundations lie in one of altruism, and the belief that education is a public good. It has undergone
many interpretations and adaptations, moving from a model which had open entry to study as its
primary focus, to one that emphasises openly available content and resources. This change in the
definition of openness in education has largely been a result of the digital and network revolution.
Changes in other sectors, most notably the open source model of software production, and values
associated with the internet of free access and open approaches have influenced (and been
influenced by) practitioners in higher education. The past decade or so has seen the growth of a
global open education movement, with significant funding from bodies such as the William and Flora
Hewlett Foundation and research councils. Active campaigners in universities have sought to establish
programmes that will release content (data, teaching resources, publications) openly, while others
have adopted open practices regarding their own working, through social media and blogs. This has
been combined with related work on open licenses (notably Creative Commons) which allow easy
reuse and adaptation of content, advocacy at policy level for nation or state-wide adoption of open
content and sharing of resources, and improved technology and infrastructure that make this
openness both easy and inexpensive."
Further Resources
Open Education Timeline - the interactive online timeline created by the Open Education Working
Group [http://education.okfn.org/timeline/]
Intro to Openness in Education - a course by David Wiley for the School of Open
[https://p2pu.org/en/courses/140/intro-to-openness-in-education]
David, Kernohan and Amber, Thomas (2012) OER - a historical perspective
[http://repository.jisc.ac.uk/4915/]
Tompsett Fabian (2013) Vernacular Education, a presentation at Eduwiki 2013.
[https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Vernacular_Education_%28Cardiff_2013%29.pdf]
14
8. Education: Traditional & Open
The full effect of open education is yet to be seen. It is likely that the cultural shift that is needed for
open education to reach its potential will take time, and despite the speed of change in the
technology area open education is still in its infancy.
However studies have been carried out to gauge the effect of Open Educational Resources (OER) use
on teaching and learning. The Jisc OER Impact Study was conducted between November 2010 and
June 2011 by a team from the University of Oxford. It concluded in July 2011, reporting that the main
impact factors of OER are pedagogic, attitudinal, logistical and strategic.
Some argue that OER have so far failed to reach their potential. The paper Ten Years Later: Why
Open Educational Resources Have Not Noticeably Affected Higher Education, and Why We Should
Care notes that significant adoption hurdles to OER exist, including discoverability, quality control,
failure to organise and acquisition.
One interesting area for discussion is the affect open online courses has on closed courses through
the release of 'solutions' and 'answers'. Some open courseware providers specify that solutions to
problems should not be shared online - but of course whether it is specified or not people share
solutions, primarily with good intentions and for good reason. Jasmine Tsal talks about the "unspoken
paradoxes between a closed, formal education and its simultaneous attempt to be “open”. Jasmine
offers up three questions for discussion:
1. How does a school reconcile the consequences of making a course open?
2. Should a school rethink its policy on cheating?
3. Should a school reflect upon the nature of its assignments?
Arguably the full impact of the open education movement has yet to be felt in traditional education.
The OER Research Hub is the largest project collecting data on this topic and will be releasing reports
in 2015.
Further Resources
The Battle for Open - a perspective by Martin
Weller [http://jime.open.ac.uk/jime/article/view/2013-15]
An open education not ready to be open: Reflections on the tensions between open education
and traditional schooling by Jasmine Tsal [https://medium.com/p/5218003865a1]
Traditional vs. Open Education - Discussion from Future of Technology in Education (FOTE)
conference [http://fote-conference.com/2011/08/23/traditional-vs-open-education/]
Why are schools locked shut most of the time?' Terry Loane
[http://terryloane.typepad.com/reallylearn/2014/03/why-are-schools-locked-shut-most-of-thetime.html]
15
9. Benefits Of Open Education
There are many organisations, groups and individuals who can potentially benefit from open
education and open educational practices.
The OER Research Hub project investigates some of the key claims made about the benefits of OER
and open education. Their research hypotheses provides a good overview of the potential benefits.
Use of OER leads to improvement in student performance and satisfaction
People use OER differently from other online materials
OER widen participation in education
Use of OER is an effective method for improving retention for at-risk students
Use of OER leads to critical reflection by educators, with evidence of improvement in their
practice
OER adoption brings financial benefits for students/institutions
Informal learners use a variety of (quality) indicators when selecting OER
Informal learners develop their own forms of study support
Open education acts as a bridge to formal education
OER use encourages institutions to change their policies
Informal assessments motivate learners using OER
The latest evidence for these claims can be reviewed at OER Impact Map.
Much has been written about more specific instances where open education approaches can bring
benefit.
The Commonwealth of Learning report Benefits and Challenges of OER for Higher Education
Institutions notess that: "anecdotal evidence suggests that OER may improve educational practices,
coherence across courses, technical quality and research into pedagogy; facilitate technical
improvements and the development of high quality and shareable images; and improve mechanisms
for accreditation and external endorsement. Survey responses suggest that OER does not reduce
materials development costs directly, but instead is still requiring additional funding. However, OER
may indirectly increase the number of registrations thereby increase tuition fees; lower some of the
marketing costs; and enable a new business model through offering services around OER."
Institutions have also benefited from open data and transparency that can lead to better funding and
infrastructure.
The MIT report Open Educational Resources: Benefits for Faculty and Students argues that openlylicensed learning materials are easy to find and access, encouraging more independent and flexible
learning opportunities for students. OER courses allow students to explore materials before enrolling,
making them better prepared before they arrive in the classroom.
Open education has given access to those who previously had no access to educational materials,
resources and practices. This means that someone can study using a Massively Open Online Course
(MOOC) or OER generally without having to attend a formal learning instution.
Further Resources
Benefits of openness in education - wiki for Open Education Summit 2012
[http://benefitsofopen.wikispaces.com/HOME+-+Benefits+of+Openness]
16
10. Access, Participation, Collaboration
It is possible to regard openness in different ways. One approach is to contrast 'open access' with
'open participation' or 'open contribution'. Open Education has in the past tended to focus on access,
but an argument can be made that open participation and contribution is a more important indicator
of openness than access to resources.
P2PU offers a course in Designing Collaborative Workshops that explores ideas around open
participation.
Within the course it defines the following terms:
Participatory - Trying to break down the barriers between the student and the teacher.
Collaborative - Collaborative processes help us move away from the dominant theory of single
author works, or ownership by one organisation/individual of what is created or the tools used to
create it.
Open participation goes beyond the student-teacher relationship; it arguably can embody the studentstudent relationship, the student-course relationship and possibly more relaltionships. Open
participation can involve many different communities, from established education institutions with a
wealth of experience, to commercial companies, and individuals who are new to open practices.
The Heartbleed Bug offers a cautionary tale for the Open Education community. It occurred because
everyone was using OpenSSL code, but no one was checking the work. Participation is an important
part of an open process.
The challenge is for Open Education Practitioners and communities to bring in those from outside.
Once people recognized that open knowledge can be enriched by individual academic experience
they will feel more motivated to know and participate, not just as an audience member but as a
protagonist.
If Open Education is primarily about access to (open) resources then to some extent the burden and
responsibilty is placed on those with the technical ability to create resources and share them. The
balance of power is uneven, resources continue to be designed from a particular perspective and one
could argue that to some extent Open Education becomes a form of socio-cultural colonialism. For
example, there are still relatively few people currently taking on the dual role of consumer and
developer of open education resources (this is often more pronounced in developing countries).
Further Resources
Open as in oer and open as in MOOC by Pat Lockley
[http://www.slideshare.net/Pgogy/open-as-in-oer-and-open-as-in-mooc]
17
OPEN EDUCATION RESOURCES
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
18
OPEN EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES (OER)
TYPES OF OER
WHY USE OER?
HISTORY OF THE OER MOVEMENT
FINDING AND USING OER
ASSESSING OER QUALITY
CREATING & DEVELOPING OER
USEFUL SOFTWARE FOR OER CREATION
PUBLISHING OER ONLINE
EDITOR TOOLS FOR BUILDING AND REMIXING OERS
IMPACT OF OER
OER & ACCESSIBILITY
MOOC (MASSIVELY OPEN ONLINE COURSES)
OER FOR THE DEVELOPING WORLD
OER COMMUNITIES AND INTEREST GROUPS
OPEN TEXTBOOKS
OER RESOURCES AND HANDBOOKS
11. Open Educational Resources (OER)
One way of thinking about open education is with reference to making educational resources materials that are used for teaching and learning - more openly available. This is typically done by
putting them online and making them available on an open licence which permits or encourages
adapation and/or re-use.
The Hewlett Foundation defines open educational resources (OER) as follows:
"Open Educational Resources (OER) are teaching, learning, and research materials in any medium
that reside in the public domain or have been released under an open license that permits their free
use and re-purposing by others."
Some argue that for a resource to be an open educational resource, it must be both free to access
and openly licensed (or in the public domain). One could describe OER as “liberally licensed stuff for
use in education”. Wikipedia describes them (as of 21 November, 2014) as "freely accessible, openly
licensed documents and media that are useful for teaching, learning, educational, assessment and
research purposes." OER can consist of full courses or components of courses, including course
materials, lesson plans, textbooks, learning objects, videos, games, tests, software, or any other tool,
material, or technique that supports access to knowledge.
OER maximize the power of the Internet to improve teaching and learning, and increase access to
education.
Open Educational Resources meet the “4Rs Framework,” meaning that users have free access and all
of the legal rights necessary to:
Reuse: Content can be used in its unaltered form;
Revise: Content can be adapted, adjusted, modified or altered;
Remix: The original or revised content can be combined with other content to create something
new;
Redistribute: Copies of the content can be shared with others in its original, revised or remixed
form.
Although some people also consider the use of an open technical format to be an essential
characteristic of OER, this is not a universally acknowledged requirement.
Further Resources
The Hewlett definition of OER [http://www.hewlett.org/programs/education/open-educationalresources]
Understanding OER in 10 videos by OER Research Hub [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?
list=PLWZ0HETZsWsN2h70E3MFCUQD1kh59wTxt ]
The Jisc InfoKit provides an excellent introductory guide to OER
[https://openeducationalresources.pbworks.com/w/page/24836860/What%20are%20Open%20Ed
ucational%20Resources]
19
12. Types Of OER
Open Educational Resources (OERs) can divided up in many ways. For example open courseware,
open textbooks and MOOCs can all be OER.
Here are some examples of OERs:
Complete courses
Individual course units or modules
Textbooks
Lesson plans
Syllabi
Lectures
Assignments
Games
Quizzes
Podcasts
Videos
OER can also be divided up by their content format, though most OER will be comprised of a variety
of media.
Text led
Video led
Animation led
Multiple media
One distinction which may be useful to think about is between 'Big' OER and 'Little' OER.
Big OERs are institutionally generated ones that arise from projects such as OpenLearn. These are
usually of high quality, contain explicit teaching aims, presented in a uniform style and form part of a
time-limited, focused project with portal and associated research and data.
Little OERs are the individually produced, low cost resources. They are produced by anyone,
not just educators, may not have explicit educational aims, have low production quality and are
shared through a range of third party sites and services.
Further Resources
Martin Weller on 'Big and little OER'. [http://oro.open.ac.uk/24702/2/926FFABC.pdf]
20
13. Why Use OER?
Economic benefits
Releasing OER can have significant reputational gain and others may do so if you do not. It is an
opportunity to be a leader in a fast moving and highly significant area. Letting students preview high
quality resources prior to applying at your institution may boost recruitment and is good practice.
Good sharing practice
Apart from these (economic) reasons, publishing resources openly is reclaiming traditional academic
practice of sharing knowledge. Releasing material can help bridge gaps between groups. Seeing the
content used for for teaching and learning in universities can help people realise that higher
education may not be too big a step for them.
Concerns
Concerns may focus around lack of knowledge about the intellectual property rights (IPR) of your
resources. For example you may be sure about IPR but know you cut some corners. Institutions and
staff may also worry about criticism of their materials.
Educator perspectives
Creation of OER has big benefits to individuals, educational institutions and society as a whole. If you
are an educator it makes sense to create and use OER.
It should be noted that there are differences between OER activity in schools and in tertiary education
institutions. In schools, OER are hugely valuable for teachers, especially those in the developing world.
In tertiary education and for researchers, the focus shifts and it is not just about access to materials,
but about making it possible (usually via open access models) to share materials more easily and
creating platforms for more work to become visible (and therefore attract funding).
Teachers are responsible for creating great learning experiences, not (necessarily) for creating all the
resources needed for this themselves. Reusing existing OER frees up time that can be spent on other
aspects of the teaching and learning process. Their use can help you expand your range of teaching
materials.
If you are teaching a common subject, chances are that somebody else has already created great
learning resources for the same or a similar context. Students can also access these resources on
their own, so why not point them to these resources or incorporate them into your teaching? This can
provide motivation to further improve the resources and re-release them openly for others to reuse.
Getting your materials out there as an educator can both help raise your profile and allow your
resources to be improved by other users. Creating OER can also improve practice by encouraging
reflection, and may facilitate networking and collaboration with other subject experts. Use and
creation of OER facilitates looking outside your immediate environment and getting broader and
different views on topic areas.
Institutional Perspectives
Creating OER puts content-rich material on the the web that will be indexed by Google and can be
used to attract potential students to departmental web pages. OER creation and use align well with
institutional missions where (at least) part of that mission is to disseminate knowledge broadly and
with minimal impediment.
OER can also make it easier for staff to find what other educators have produced, encouraging
further sharing within your institution. It sends a message that reuse - building on the efforts of others
- is more efficient than a go-it-alone approach and can bring pedagogical benefits. OER work allows
potential partners to see what you cover in your courses, which may facilitate partnerships with, for
example, local colleges or businesses.
OER production and use can be encouraged by institutions who offer some professional recognition to
scholars who practice open education.
Learner Perspectives
21
OER help learners can find information instantly on virtually any topic, and connect with peers across
the globe. OER can help informal learners to build up confidence about formal education and support
their transition into institutional contexts. By lowering the cost of education, OER also help students to
begin and complete their courses of study, where they may feel more free to focus because of
reduced financial pressure.
Using OER allows students to be educators and start experimenting with learning and teaching
materials. As a learner you can become an educator, mentor, facilitator, or simply a much better
informed citizen.
Further Resources
Jisc: A guide to OER: case studies
[http://www.jisc.ac.uk/publications/programmerelated/2013/Openeducationalresources.aspx#Ben
efits]
Open Courseware Consortium Toolkits page for addressing concerns, making the case, getting
an OCW project off the ground [http://www.ocwconsortium.org/resources/toolkits/]
22
14. History Of The OER Movement
The Free to Learn Guide offers a brief history of the OER movement. The MIT
OpenCourseWare project is seen as the first recognised OER project, though the open education
movement predates this event with roots in open source, open and distance learning and open
knowledge. David Wiley coined the term open content in 1998 and OER was first used at
UNESCO's 2002 Forum on the Impact of Open Courseware for Higher Education in Developing
Countries. In September 2007 a meeting in Cape Town led to the Cape Town Open Education
Declaration release on 22 January 2008.
The OER movement is comprised of four main categories (from SPARC site):
OpenCouseWare (OCW): OpenCourseWare is the digital publication of high quality educational
materials that are freely and openly licensed, and are available online to anyone, anytime. They
frequently include course planning and evaluation tools along with thematic content.
OpenCourseWare initiatives range in scope from mirroring traditional classroom sized
endeavors, to the emerging MOOC (massive open online course) model, which enables largescale participation by anyone with Internet access.
OER Publishers: The rapid rise in the cost of textbooks, combined with the high demand for
affordable alternatives, has led to the emergence of new open publishing efforts for textbooks
and other OER. This category also includes initiatives geared toward developing specific
collections of OER, such as the Khan Academy and Saylor Foundation.
OER Repositories: Digital repositories have evolved into a convenient place to find, share and
remix OER from a variety of sources. They range in scope from portals and gateways that
provide access to information on OER and aggregated content resources to institutional
repositories with source content and tools to develop OER.
Publicly-Funded Initiatives: Increasingly, policymakers on the local, state and national levels are
developing policies that encourage the creation and adoption of OER. Approaches vary from
directly funding the creation of OER to conditioning federal or state research dollars to require
that any Education Resources produced as a result of that funding be made openly accessible.
(See POERUP and OER Policy in Europe)
Further Resources
Open Education Timeline by the Open Education Working
Group [http://education.okfn.org/timeline/]
OER History (University of Maryland) [http://libguides.umuc.edu/oer]
History of OER by David Wiley [http://www.hewlett.org/uploads/files/HistoryofOER.pdf]
OER History by Bernard Nkuyubwatsi [https://vimeo.com/67601519]
David, Kernohan and Amber, Thomas (2012) OER - a historical perspective
[http://repository.jisc.ac.uk/4915/]
Open educational resources - the story so far (JISC)
[http://www.jisc.ac.uk/publications/programmerelated/2013/Openeducationalresources.aspx#Op
en%20educational%20resources%20the%20story%20so%20far]
23
15. Finding And Using OER
Finding OER
Though a Google search can often provide many relevant results (tip use Google Advanced Search:
filter by "Usage Rights") several search engines exist to help users find Open Educational Resources.
The list from the OER Info Kit includes:
OCWFinder - "search, recommend, collaborate, remix"
Temoa - "a knowledge hub that eases a public and multilingual catalog of Open Educational
Resources (OER) which aims to support the education community to find those resources and
materials that meet their needs for teaching and learning through a specialized and collaborative
search system and social tools."
University Learning = OCW+OER = Free custom search engine - a meta-search engine
incorporating many different OER repositories (uses Google Custom Search)
XPERT - "a JISC funded rapid innovation project (summer 2009) to explore the potential of
delivering and supporting a distributed repository of e-learning resources created and seamlessly
published through the open source e-learning development tool called Xerte Online Toolkits. The
aim of XPERT is to progress the vision of a distributed architecture of e-learning resources for
sharing and re-use."
OER Dynamic Search Engine - a wiki page of OER sites with accompanied search engine
(powered by Google Custom Search)
The UNESCO OER Toolkit links to further useful, annotated resources and repositories.
JISC Digital Media maintain guidance on finding video, audio and images online, including those
licensed as Creative Commons.
OER Glue - tool aiming to facilitate course building by 'stitching' together OERs from a range of
sources
Creative Commons Search is not a search engine, but rather offers convenient access to search
services provided by other independent organizationsor
DiscoverEd is a search prototype developed by Creative Commons to explore metadata
enhanced search, specifically for OER
Jorum is the UK's largest OER repository
OpenCourseware Consortium / Open Education Consortium is a worldwide community of
hundreds of higher education institutions and associated organizations committed to advancing
open education and its impact on global education>
Find OER - guidance from the Open Professionals Education Network
OER Commons is a worldwide learning network of shared teaching and learning materials made
freely available online
Curriki - a nonprofit organization who provide open educational resources primarily in support
of K-12education
Wikipedia is a multilingual, web-based, free-content encyclopedia project supported by
the Wikimedia Foundation and based on an openly editable model
Project Guttenberg provides free, high qulaity e-books
Connexions / Openstax College provide open textbooks
CK-12 Foundation is a California-based non-profit organization whose stated mission is to reduce
the cost of, and increase access to, K-12 education in the United States and worldwide
TED Education provide lesson content that can be remixed
SMartHistory - a multimedia web-book about art and art history
Livebinders - online content curation
Solvonauts is an open education search engine
Open Education database provides a range of ways of navigating and finding open content
Using OER
The JISC publication A guide to OERs offers some advice in using OER. Develop a clear rationale along
24
with credible business and benefit cases, perhaps using examples from elsewhere in your institution.
OER may be of interest to almost anyone in your organisation from library staff to learners to
academics or marketing professionals
Build on previous work, tap into staff expertise and capitalise on the enthusiasm that already
exists
Help staff develop the necessary skills and knowledge to create and use open educational
resources
Support changes in teaching practice through awareness-raising, workshops, capacity building
and communities of practice
Create a culture of openness across the institution
Find ways to reward and recognise staff members who create and use open educational
resources
Consider building open educational resources into the approval processes for your virtual
learning environment
Take an incremental approach starting with the low-hanging fruit
Adapt existing policies (relating to intellectual property, learning, teaching and assessment)
where they already exist to create a gentle, less threatening transition towards openness
Alternatively, initiate a new special open educational resources policy to act as a powerful signal
that the institution is fully committed to supporting implementation
Embed the creation and use of open educational resources into other institutional activities to
make it more sustainable
25
16. Assessing OER Quality
Naturally there are concerns about the quality of OER because they are typically made available for
free. Users may worry about the source of a resource; for example, whether the resource was
created by a legitimate institution or knowledgable individual. Institutions may worry that releasing
materials exposes flaws in teaching practices or materials. Many argue that the transparency of
process will result in better quality resources than those developed in a closed environment.
Jisc infokit suggests the following criteria for assessment of quality:
Accuracy
Reputation of author/institution
Standard of technical production
Accessibility
Fitness for purpose
There is also a role for subject specialists (educators and librarians) in assessing the quality and
suitability of a particular resource.
If a resource can be improved, it should be improved: and then re-released on an open licence so
others can benefit from better quality OER.
Further Resources
Open educational resources Infokit: Quality
[https://openeducationalresources.pbworks.com/w/page/24838164/Quality%20considerations]
OER Quality ( David Wiley) [http://opencontent.org/blog/archives/2947]
Quality Assurance Framework by Wiki Educator
[http://wikieducator.org/WikiEducator:Quality_Assurance_Framework/Contribution_Levels]
OER Quality Project [http://oerqualityproject.wordpress.com/]
OPAL | Open Educational Quality Initiative [http://www.oer-quality.org/]
26
17. Creating & Developing OER
Both educators and institutions need to understand the landscape of open education. As an educator
you need to familarise yourself with your institution’s licenses and policies. You can start to find
alternatives to questionable resources in one of the OER repositories and talk to OER practitioners, or
join a group like OER-Discuss. Look at what is out there and see if there is anything that you could use
or re-purpose, and talk to colleagues to get their perspectives.
Once you have made the decision to develop OER you need to think about a strategy for moving
forward. Successful approaches have used the following ideas:
Develop incrementally, making generic versions available too
Each part of an OER, such as a picture, or text, can also be an OER and can be shared as well
You probably already have potential OER - any resource you use which does not use other
people’s copyrighted work could be an OER
You don’t need to be an elearning genius to make an OER, a Powerpoint file can be an OER
Once developed - all you need to do is choose an open licence
(http://creativecommons.org/choose/)
Construct the resource with the intention of releasing it as an OER from the start to avoid 3rd
party copyrighted material rather than fix it retrospectively.
When creating OER you will need to:
Check the license
Attribute the author, and include a disclaimer and takedown
If stuck, people working openly tend to like helping
Share what you’ve made
Share what you’ve learned
OERs in a completed state can sometimes be difficult to reuse. It is often the case that the separate
components or elements of an OER have more reuse potential.
There has been some exploration around this idea. Megan Beckett from Siyavula proposes that
“when creating/authoring/aggregating OER/open textbooks for reuse, the final step should then be to
disaggregate it into its component parts to allow for easy and accessible remixing (ie. make up then
break up!).” (http://meganbeckett.wordpress.com/2014/04/25/oer-make-up-then-break-up/)
27
Other ideas are the use of http://coursefork.org/ described as a sort of a OER github.
The Open Educational Ideas project is looking at this area. It argues that one of the main challenges
of OER reuse is their complete state: "What is clearly lacking is a feeling that learning opportunities
have to be created by educators themselves. We call this concept emotional ownershipwhich
describes what kind of emotional / affective relation an educator has towards certain resources. Thus,
the not-invented-here syndrome seems to be even more relevant in the educational domain".
If you have made the decision to develop OER at your institution it is worth being aware of some of
the biggest challenges. The three most significant challenges that you will need to address
are copyright issues, quality control and sustainability of any OER developed. Researching in advance
and planning for the future should help mitigate issues around copyright and sustainability. Starting
out with a well-defined specification and testing content on both teachers and learners should help
with quality assurance.
Challenges
The main challenge in OER creation is striking the balance between simplicity, as a requirement for
educators, and complexity, as a requirement for developers. A number of other issues that might
arise are listed below:
Be sure to have appropriate permissions before you assign an open licence
Think about what kind of metadata will be relevant and include only this
Make sure that consent has been attained from relevant parties
Don't ignore rights other than copyright (such as performance rights and data protection)
Include a disclaimer and takedown policy, and act on it if necessary
Think carefully about attribution
Practise what you preach - use stuff that’s already out there where possible rather than making
more
Encourage re-purposing and re-use
Educators need an editor that is simple and easy to use, otherwise they will not use it, developers
need a level of complexity to achieve the functionality required,
Dirk Uys from P2PU explains:“I think the problem has two parts to it. The first part is to provide a tool
that is easy to use. The second part is to teach the user more about the medium they are using.
Without the second part I feel that we are just providing tools and not empowering educators. The
questions for me becomes - in what way do you teach more about the medium without distracting
from the short term goal of creating/remixing some content and without intimidating the user too
much?”
Another question posed by Raniere Silva is what way do you teach more about the medium without
28
distracting from the short term goal of creating/remixing some content and without intimidating the
user too much?
Some of the proposed solutions pose barriers for most educators self-publishing materials due to their
technical nature. Many argue that tools for remixing ultimately need to make it easier to ‘copy and
paste from one place to the other’.
Other challenges include licences, which as well as technical formats, effect the practicalities of
moving course materials; version control which can also cause problems; and the benefit of using a
distributed version control system versus a centrealised system.
There are also issues with tools being editor dependent resulting the user will be limited by the editor
features. It should be possible to use git and allow the user choose the HTML convert tool to allow
he/she use the editor (or markup language) that best suit his/her needs. E.g. for a K-8 teacher a
WYSIWYG editor is better but for a math high education teacher LaTeX can be preferable and for a
engineering high education teacher IPython Notebook. MathML is also an issue, to some degree
addressed by using the Aloha editor.
Michael Chesterman of FLOSS Manuals makes an argument for using ePubs. He explains that most
OER are shared by the person / team that writes them and that online courses, Moocs, OER
repositories are increasingly the place where OER are collaboratively written using blog type,
wysiswyg tools which output HTML pages. Format specs like Scorm and metadata standards like LOM
are too hard for self publishers to use, however epubs are the most suitable candidate to allow
importing and exporting of OER into these platform allowing us the freedom to exit and remix
between repositories. EDUPUB is in danger of bringing a lot of complexity to the equation and
hindering uptake. He argues that we shouldn’t get hung up on interactivity but should get the
workflow working with simple epubs first and use the web coding priciple of "progressive
enhancement" to bring more interactivity to OER. He points out that exported ePubs work well on
mobile devices. However Math on the Web and EPUB has many issues. MathML is W3C
recommendation for how insert math on Web pages and was adopt by EPUB3. The first issue is that
only a few browsers and epub readers support it. Firefox is the web browser with best support to
MathML and it doesn’t support many important features. iBooks support part of MathML specification
there are currently no ereaders that do it. Right know, almost all web pages that need maths is using
some polyfill solution, e.g. MathJax, and this approach has some problems, specially for EPUBs.
Another issue is that type math isn't easy. Some times you request that the user knows LaTeX or
other markup and others time the user need to spend time selection "anchors" at a WYSIWYG editor.
Pat Lockley argues that most reuse of OERs is through linking. With this practice comes the massive
problem of link-rot. Especially given the influence of venture capital in the sector where OER are
online for as long at the funding is coming in. A case in point is coursefork.org - which stopped before
it even really started. Linking out to resources on a platform that invites user contributions with no
real commitment to keeping them there is a real problem. Data portability should mitigate the
problem so users of the platform can at a minimum archive their own data and upload it somewhere
else. And ideally it encourages reuse /remix. Also, as a hack, where the licence permits it, users
should grab HTML pages and import them into longer lasting community driven OER repositories
which are in it for the long run. It is possible handle URLs, or mirror sites (some form of LOCKSS)
would help here.
Further Resources
Open Educational Resources: Opportunities and
Challenges [http://www.oecd.org/edu/ceri/37351085.pdf]
Challenges of developing OERs for an international
audience [http://sloanconsortium.org/conference/2012/aln/challenges-developing-openeducational-resources-international-audience]
Realising the Open in Open Educational Resources: Practical Concerns and Solutions
[https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/757135/Friesen2013chap6.pdf]
Wikieducator OER Handbook for Educators
[http://wikieducator.org/OER_Handbook/educator_version_one]
29
18. Useful Software For OER Creation
There is a considerable amount of software that can support the development and release of OER.
Take a look at:
Audacity - a free and open source audio editing tool
Open Office - a free and open source alternative to Microsoft Office, handy for changing the
formats of files
Jing or Camstudio - handy for making screen captures
Xerte - an open source tool developed by the University of Nottingham
(http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/xerte)
BlueGriffon http://www.bluegriffon.org/ an open source WYSIWYG HTML editor
USEEK is a public tool providing search over a wide range of software tools available for
educational purposes (such as OER authoring) http://linkededucation.org/applications/#useek &
http://www.gsic.uva.es/seek/useek/
The OERPub is in the process of developing an online editor (to be ready in 2014), which will
allow for easy development and editing of OER, facilitating the process of sharing, licensing and
adapting resources.
You might want to avoid some software. For example Adobe Acrobat (PDF while handy is not really an
open format). Good practice is to provide open versions of closed documents like PDF as well (e.g.
on OpenOffice, LibreOffice .ODT, .ODS, .ODP formats). It's possible to bundle both versions using a
free compression software like 7-Zip. Popular formats like Microsoft Word, Excel, Powerpoint
etc. while ubiquitous are not truly open. Open alternatives would e.g. be RTF or
the OpenOffice formats, ODT for texts, ODP for presentations etc. Be careful with anything having an
Apple sign on it because most Apple formats are proprietary (e.g. iTunesU). You can release stuff on
iTunesU but good OER practice would be to release them in Open formats in parallel (which is little
extra effort). Also try and avoid anything that needs a plugin and Flash.
These sites are also very useful:
Xpert Picture attribution (http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/xpert/attribution) allows you to search
Creative Commons Licensed content and embed the license
Flickr allows you to search for pictures and videos with a Creative Commons License
Wikimedia Commons (http://commons.wikimedia.org) allows you to search for media files, some
of which will have Creative Commons Licenses
Creative Commons (http://creativecommons.org) lots of useful links and resouces on licensing
content
Web 2 Rights (http://www.web2rights.org.uk/) lots of resources on intellectual property on the
internet
There are certain sites where you may need to tread carefully:
Content on Youtube may be in violation of copyright - public doesn't mean open
Content from MOOC sites - MOOCs refer to 'open' in that the cources are free and open to
everyone, but they are generally not openly licensed.
Resources in the Public Domain - some resources are “Public Domain”, but “Public Domain” can
mean “Free of Copyright”- but it’s meaning is not consistent internationally
University Sites - just because it is on a University site, doesn’t mean you have the right to use it
Your own VLE - other lecturers may have different licence agreements.
30
19. Publishing OER Online
There are lots of options for publishing OER online, including:
Pictures - Flickr is widely used, free and has Creative Commons support
Video - Vimeo and Youtube have support for Creative Commons licenses
Sound - Soundcloud has support for Creative Commons licenses
Powerpoint - Slideshare has support for Creative Commons licenses
Your own blog - you can use the Creative Commons Licence Picker to get the HTML to attribute
your resources (http://creativecommons.org/choose/)
Jorum is the UK's largest OER repository
OER Commons is a worldwide learning network of shared teaching and learning materials made
freely available online
Curriki is a nonprofit organization who provide open educational resources primarily in support of
K-12education
Creative Commons has a wiki page featuring a few of the most popular communities where you
can publish your media under CC licenses
However, it shoudl be noted that no well-known definition of Open Educational Resources (OERs)
states that the resource must be available online in order to be considered open.
In fact OERs do not even have to be digital. Public domain novels, poetry, photographs, and
videos can be used as OERs. Modern creators can open license their artwork, film photographs and
videos, and hand-written or manually-typed materials. These can be reproduced using photocopier
techniques. Creative Commons give details on how to apply licenses offline. The original Open Bible,
advocated through the work of William Hunter and others, can be seen as an early offline OER. Even
some sculptures can be reproduced using moulds.
Materials that are digital need not be online; they can be used on paper or on devices not
connected to the Internet. Two studies (PIRGS and PEARSON) show that students prefer bound
textbooks 3 to 1 over digital (note that other surveys also show an increasing preference for digital
books). If open textbooks are to compete with commercial textbooks, they must be available as
bound paper books.
If we define online as "on the Internet" then we are overlooking other technologies to allow us to
share resources, such as: radio, television, telephone, and text.
A early forerunner of Massively Open Online Courses (MOOCS) were correspondence courses
invented by, among others, Briton Isaac Pitman in 1840. American university level distance education
began in 1874 at Illinois Wesleyan University where bachelor and graduate degrees could be obtained
in absentia. Educational radio began in 1920 and educational television mid-century.
If a resource is not available online then some might argue that stops it from being available to a
global audience. However these resources are already open so when the conditions are right and
some has the time they can be digitised and uploaded and made available.
However when a version is available online there is need to encourage OER producers to
offer an offline/portable version wherever feasible. The main reason for this is to enable those
who do not have access to broadband, computers or internet-enabled devices to still be able to use
open resources. This issue was discussed at the Making it Matter workshop held in London in May
2014:
"Poor infrastructure (energy, ICT, etc.) means that education can rarely be carried out solely online.
We need to stop making technology and device assumptions and ensure adaptability of resources and
data."
The Khan Academy is seen as exemplary in this regard. At least two different groupings of Wikipedia
(in English) are available for schools offline and are highly valued in schools in relatively remote
locations (for example, in the islands of Fiji or in Vanuatu).
It has been noted that there is a reluctance in the mainstream IT community (corporates as well as
most academic researchers ) to work with anything offline because today’s big profits in IT are
available in Internet technologies. However there is no reason why a MOOC cannot be partly offline.
In fact, processes like examinations-for-certificates are increasingly “offlined” if they were to have
value to future or current employers (an example: https://onlinecourses.nptel.ac.in/explorer). Similar
to the examination, part of an online course can be delivered offline.
Back in the 1990s a lot of emailing in India used to be part offline: people composed email in a standalone computer and bicycled to an Internet café from where it was emailed and mail was also
received. As recently as 2007, a small campus of an international Ag research center in Niger enabled
31
staff to compose email on the Local Area Network (LAN). Twice daily someone carried a CD to the
only city nearby to up/download messages.
There is however a hidden assumption that unless one has the level of IT infrastructure fairly
comparable with what one obtains in a mid-level OECD country, many of the online processes would
not be viable. This is not valid. It is also important to note that, in emerging economies, Internet
access from mobile devices is fast outstripping access from laptops and PC’s- a fact reported in the
famous Meeker’s report (KPCB) on Internet Trends even in 2013.
Ideally a resource should be in an open format using an open standard (a standard that is
publicly available and has various rights to use associated with it) to be open. However this will not
always be the case. Some OERs are not available online and others may use proprietary formats.
Further Resources
Student PRGs Report: Make Textbooks Affordable [http://www.studentpirgs.org/reports/coursecorrection]
Pearson Foundation: Survey on Students and Tablets
[http://www.pearsonfoundation.org/downloads/PF_Tablet_Survey_Summary.pdf]
KPCB Internet Trends 2014:
[http://www.kpcb.com/internet-trends]
Open Floss Manuals: Rights and Freedoms - data portability
[http://en.flossmanuals.net/an-open-web/your-rights-and-freedoms/]
The $5 Textbook - Utah Open Textbook Project [http://utahopentextbooks.org/2011/08/26/the-5textbook/]
The Open Professional Education Network's (OPEN) tech formats for open educational resources
as specified for the US Department of Labor's TAACCCT program grantees:
[http://open4us.org/about/what-is-open/#techstandards]
32
20. Editor Tools For Building And Remixing OERs
Once OERs have been created then building on them, remixing them, forking them and restructuring
them requires editor tools. Currently tools are available but aren’t always suitable.
Software carpentry describes the problem:
"And then there's the maintenance problem. Software Carpentry's lessons are constantly evolving;
how can someone who depends on them know whether everything they require is still there a year or
two down the road? With software, they can recompile their program or re-run its unit tests and see
whether things still work. There's no equivalent for lessons---no easy way to find out whether
dependencies that used to resolve are still there. Sooner or later, any large, multi-author project has
to find a way to track and manage dependencies. Conversely, I believe that if a project can't do this, it
won't be able to scale up. It isn't the only obstacle to collaborative lesson development, or the biggest,
but it is an obstacle, even within Software Carpentry itself. If we can figure out how to solve it, we'll be
one step closer to helping all the potential Lorena Barbas out there create a network of wonderful
lessons."
Tools
There are many possible solutions including:
Github [https://github.com] - is a repository web-based hosting service, it provides a web-based
graphical interface and desktop as well as mobile integration.
Mercurial [http://mercurial.selenic.com] - a cross-platform, distributed revision control tool for
software developers.
CrossFork [http://coursefork.org/] - a wysiwyg git editor
Kathi Fletcher's OER ePUB editor [http://oerpub.org] - open-source tools for authoring, adapting,
remixing, and publishing open education resources and then delivering them to the web, mobile,
tablet, and print, based on github too.
OpenStax and Connexions [http://devblog.cnx.org/2014/07/openstax-cnx-developmenttools.html] - developer tools.
ePub [http://idpf.org/epub/30] - a free and open e-book standard by the International Digital
Publishing Forum (IDPF).
Grabmy books [http://www.grabmybooks.com/] - application that allows you to grab content
from the web and easily convert it in an epub file.
Booktype [http://www.sourcefabric.org/en/booktype/] - The open source platform to help you
write and publish print and digital (used to produce this handbook).
Pressbooks [http://pressbooks.com] - makes it easy to create files you need to publish your books
and ebooks.
Calibre e-pub editor [http://calibre-ebook.com] - free and open source e-book library
management application developed by users of e-books for users of e-books.
Xerte Online Toolkits [xerte.org.uk] - is a learning object editor. It is open source, integrates with
moodle, allows LOs to be shared between users and you can allow people to download the entire
LO and import it into their own system.
Case Studies
Siyavula have been working with Kathi Fletcher on the OERPUB editor, helping to test it and also at an
actual workshop with educators. In 2013 they facilitated a workshop to remix one of their Physical
Sciences textbooks using the OERPUB editor. This was initiated and driven by a group of South African
teachers.
They intend to use an instance of the OERPUB editor once it is finished to enable educators to come
and create their own versions of our textbooks and export their own pdf/ePUB/etc. They have already
seen cases where teachers have created their own versions of our content by adding some of their
notes, taking out images for tests, etc. But, they often just do this by taking screen shots. Megan
Beckett at Siyavula believes that for OER to be remixed, we need to break it down into its parts again.
She has had many requests for the images and concept maps in textbooks as teachers want to re-use
these to create their own summary notes for learners or tests. So, although they have created the
whole, nicely packaged, open textbook, when they actually want to reuse it, we need to break it down
again to make it accessible.
Raniere Silva and Rémi some time looking at these questions at the Mozilla Science Lab Sprint. Their
notes are available at https://softwarecarpentrylessonmanager.github.io/lesson-manager/04howto.html and https://etherpad.mozilla.org/sciencelab-2014summersprint-lessons-packagemanager.
33
Further Resources
Lengthy discussion about the use of tools such as Git on the oer-discuss Jiscmail list in 2012
[https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/webadmin?A1=ind1207&L=OER-DISCUSS#19]
The git and the pendulum [http://fragmentsofamber.wordpress.com/2012/07/01/the-git-and-thependulum/]
Dataportibility [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DataPortability]
Open Web Floss manuals [http://en.flossmanuals.net/an-open-web/your-rights-and-freedoms/]
WYSIWHAT Aloha Editor selected as OERPUB & Sourcefabric booktype editor [http://alohaeditor.org/blog/2012/08/wysiwhat-aloha-editor-selected-as-oerpub-sourcefabric-booktype-editor/]
When does a book become a web platform? Cetis blog - by Wilbert Kraan
[http://blogs.cetis.ac.uk/wilbert/2014/06/24/when-does-a-book-become-a-web-platform/]
Software Carpentry import lessons [http://software-carpentry.org/blog/2014/04/importlesson.html]
Import Lesson - Is it Possible?
[http://blog.rgaiacs.com/2014/07/02/import_lesson_is_possible.html]
When MOOC Profs Move [http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2014/03/18/if-mooc-instructormoves-who-keeps-intellectual-property-rights]
Digital literacy in practice: Developing an interactive and accessible open educational resource
based on the SCONUL Seven Pillars of Information Literacy by Nick Shephard and Erin Nephin looks at reuse issues and Xerte [http://www.sconul.ac.uk/sites/default/files/documents/21_13.pdf]
Mick's ePub series [http://discourse.webmakerprototypes.org/t/part-three-final-experiment-increating-remixable-oers/456]
34
21. Impact Of OER
Studies have been carried out to gauge the effect of Open Educational Resources (OER) use on
teaching and learning. The Jisc OER Impact Study was conducted between November 2010 and June
2011 by a team from the University of Oxford. It concluded in July 2011, the research
report concluding that OER's main impact factors are pedagogic, attitudinal, logistical and strategic.
The OER Research Hub is also looking at the question 'What is the impact of OER on learning and
teaching practices?' and will be releasing reports in forthcoming years. Some argue that OER have so
far failed to reach their potential. The paper, Ten Years Later: Why Open Educational Resources Have
Not Noticeably Affected Higher Education, and Why We Should Care notes that significant adoption
hurdles to OER exist including discoverability, quality control, failure to organise and acquisition.
A recent study by Pirkkalainen, Jokinen & Pawlowski lists the following barriers to OER adoption:
Lack of motivation to share resources or information around those resources
Lack of time for production and localization of OER
Need for Rewards and Acknowledgement
Lack of contextual information for the resources – how can be used or modified
Open content do not fit the scope of the course / curriculum
Lack of trust towards unknown authors or systems where resources retrieved from
“Not invented here” notion; hesitation to receiving knowledge someone else has created
Hard to assess the quality and relevance
The EU funded Open Educational Ideas project claims: "The main purpose of licensing educational
material under open licences is to allow for anyone to use, re-use or re-purpose them. However,
despite a strong movement in recent years to publish such material, OER reuse is still not a common
practice in Higher Education, schools and enterprises."
OER are being used by K-12 teachers (who teach school education), but this is still an emerging area.
The teachers in some countries have embraced open materials more that those in others, this is often
driven by cost and availability of traditional materials. For example in the United States College open
textbooks have become more common due to the high cost of textbooks that has to be borne by
parents and students.
One interesting project is the initiative by Leicester council in the UK to create guidance for secondary
school staff. The OER projectis part of the Council’s DigiLit Leicester initiative, designed to support
schools in making the most of the city’s current investment in technology, as part of Leicester’s £340
million pound Building Schools for the Future Programme. The project has identified a gap in support
and information for teachers relating to the use and creation of Open Educational Resources. An
understanding of OER and open licencing will support schools and staff in sharing and accessing
resources, and in developing staff and learner digital literacy skills and knowledge.
The team working on the project have previously worked on several initiatives which support the
creation and use of use of Open Education Resources by schools across Europe and internationally,
including the ORBIT project and the OER4Schools programme, at the Faculty of Education, University
of Cambridge.
Further Resources
OER Impact Map from OER Research Hub [http://oermap.org]
OER4Schools, Cambridge University [http://oer.educ.cam.ac.uk/wiki/OER4Schools]
Open Educational Resources for Teacher Education (ORBIT)
[http://oer.educ.cam.ac.uk/wiki/Home]
Open Education Germany - by Zwetana Penova [http://education.okfn.org/open-educationgermany/]
OER Research Hub collaboration with K12 [http://oerresearchhub.org/about2/collaborators/school-k12/]
Understanding Open Educational Resources: Information for
Schools [http://lccdigilit.our.dmu.ac.uk/2014/05/12/understanding-open-educational-resourcesinformation-for-schools/]
ORBIT [http://oer.educ.cam.ac.uk/wiki/ORBIT]
OER4Schools [http://oer.educ.cam.ac.uk/wiki/OER4Schools]
What's wrong with Open Educational Resources? Barriers and Solutions [http://www.ideaspace.eu/whats-wrong-with-open-educational-resources-barriers-and-solutions/]
35
22. OER & Accessibility
(Content taken from chapter of the Into the wild – Technology for open educational resources.)
Accessibility is about the provision of content and services in a manner most suitable to the user, no matter what
disability they may have, in order for them to fully participate with it. By sensible design, based on awareness of
user needs (and provider responsibilities) the delivery of materials should not present any significant barriers to the
user.
Why accessibility is important
Accessibility is absolutely vital for a project to produce truly "open" educational resources. The ethos
of "open" is to be accessible – consider "open" in the widest social sense, not (as often illustrated)
geographically. If the outputs are not meeting appropriate accessibility requirements then they have
failed to be 'open' before they have even left the building, and a sustainability decline has already
commenced.
A principal philosophy behind open educational resources is to maximise opportunity for others to be
able to engage, not only as recipients but also as potential contributors. For a resource to be adopted
(i.e. used "as is") or adapted (i.e. enhanced, disaggregated or integrated into other resources) in
another institution it must be attractive in terms of its content and the standards it follows. But
accessibility does not have to be onerous or restrictive; a lowest common denominator. It merely
needs to be carefully considered to avoid creating accidental barriers and provide alternative routes
or enhancements. For a simple example, it may be just provision of an image - perhaps something
difficult for another individual to obtain themselves e.g. an electron micrograph captured during a
research investigation which would have value for other communities, if it was made readily available
to them. Its potential issues have to be considered as soon as possible: its description needs to be
concise and accurate (not only to use it but also to discover it) with some authentic provenance; its
licence may need to be suitable not only for re-use, but also for editing or annotation for a wider
audience including those with disabilities, not as a possibility but as a certainty because it is, by
philosophy, open to all. Therefore, some thought needs to be given to its other potential uses before it
is exposed to a wider audience: this is necessary for OER projects, it's not "showing off". The resource
description therefore can be made to a standard suitable for a radio listener or podcast thereby
automatically meeting the needs of visually impaired students. If a quality description is a core
element of the resource's metadata then the resource is far more likely to be discovered and reach a
wider audience, perhaps drawing more to the project it is embedded within. Another simple example
is the use of video transcripts; far easier to translate into other languages and search, and if prescripted (thereby providing the accessibility option by default) the narrative is often far more focussed
on the topic, a higher quality of output is generated for all.
Programme approaches to accessibility
For a project to meet its accessibility requirements it needs to consider users with disabilities as equal
stakeholders to the generic "students" that were probably quoted in the project specification: a
project may have assumed that identifying "students" alone was sufficient, using this broad descriptor
in its inclusive sense. By recognising "students with disabilities" as separate stakeholders their needs
can be addressed with some equivalence, i.e. not as a small fraction of the wider population and
therefore an equivalent small fraction of the effort available, a 'bolt-on' solution. The irony is that to
solve the requirements for this stakeholder group alone all other non-disabled students are catered
for: two tasks collapse into one.
For many projects it has often been thought efficient to create the resources first, then tackle the
additional requirements for a series of appropriate "special needs", be it a visual or hearing
impairment, or a learning disability like dyslexia. Planning for this retro-fitting is easier, there is no
plan! However, it is expensive in terms of time and effort; and difficult to complete in a compressed
time-scale towards the end of the project, when the funding is becoming exhausted, as well as the
staff. Accessibility is not a process of fine tuning, it's a design principle; there is no reason why this
content should not be understood for what it is by anyone who meets it. It is a far easier solution to
direct a little effort during the design stage and realise that many other barriers and issues will be
removed in this way before they can grow to become difficult hurdles towards the end.
There are many sources of information for solving most digital delivery problems already available in
the JISC network, including those from JISC TechDis, where a pedagogical approach to the application
of inclusive Accessibility technologies helps explain the issues they address. Note that experiences in
one education sector can lend themselves to OER in others. If a resource is to have an impact then it
must not hold any unnecessary limitations. The structures and hierarchies of Higher Education will
inevitably be challenged by a population circumventing the barriers of its "walled garden".
Reporting requirements for projects need to highlight the value of accessibility for the wider usability
and sustainability of the project or initiative. An "Accessibility Challenges, Issues and Benefits" tactic is
36
therefore recommended:
Challenges: What would challenge those with visual or hearing impairments, motor difficulties or
print impairment? How might alternatives be provided?
Issues: How were disabled people included in user testing? What were the situations that arose
that required consideration and the decisions made to ensure the resources remained
accessible? Did user-testing give valuable feedback?
Benefits: How did accessibility improve during the project? What wider benefits might this bring
(e.g. accessing on a mobile device, or benefits to ESOL (English for Speakers of Other
Languages) students, or enhanced usability)?
The term "disabled student" can be misleading as it can subconsciously imply the disability affects the
"studentness" of the individual, whereas thinking of a "student with disabilities" can isolate this issue.
The facility to gather, evaluate and synthesise knowledge is rarely affected if suitable (often
inexpensive and ubiquitous) technologies are utilised. With appropriate support, disabled students can
excel just like any other learner.
Many software solutions to accessibility are available as FOSS - Free and Open Source Software,
freely available to download and use at no cost, often without needing a costly technical install if used
from a pen-drive or memory-stick. Without adequate environmental provision (including managed
software permissions) we are disabling students themselves. OER projects that link to recommended
support FOSS support tools would often assist both internal and external users. There are many
resources available through JISC TechDis resources to assist with improving accessibility; FOSS
resources, techniques and technologies, to tools to help validate the outputs; Sim-dis2 enables
authors to visualise how content may appear to users with disabilities, and the Accessibility Passport3
helps producers check they have considered other needs.
Issues
During the preliminary Phase One of the UK OER Programme many projects sought to make their
outputs accessible but it was often difficult to highlight the advantages of the approach as these were
often "taken for granted" and not emphasised. This was highlighted by a survey by Anna
Gruszczynska4 which sought to discover how embedded accessibility as a design process was within
UK OER. Gruszczynska notes that although accessibility was a consideration by most respondents, this
was less apparent in the outputs, "rarely mentioned or incorporated in the project workflow". For the
issue to be addressed it needs to be explicitly reported and disseminated for the benefit of these
stakeholders.
Future directions
In the future, the information about the accessibility of a resource may be an expected part of its
accompanying metadata; perhaps as part of the Dublin-Core initiatives or community developments
in other countries e.g. Merlot.org6, to raise the profile of this more professional approach. Publishers
are also working with JISC TechDis to create a framework for accessibility as part of EDItEUR7. If
better metadata becomes coupled with community generated paradata (usage data about learning
resources including pedagogic context, inferred through the actions of educators and learners) then
more novel uses of resources may be better realised, practice shared, and benefits maximised.
Access for all is attainable and sustainable if we know what we want and we can agree how to get it.
Accessibility is a design component best tackled early. Explicit inclusion of accessibility in testing and
reporting will considerably improve the usability of the output and links to appropriate FOSS support
tools may also help. Finally, consider accessibility as a component of resource metadata to explain to
potential users how best to utilise the OER.
Further Resources
JISC TechDis is an advisory service for inclusion and accessibility [http://www.jisctechdis.ac.uk/]
JISC TechDis Accessibility passport [http://www.accessibilitypassport.org/]
Gruszczynska, A. (2012). OER-related accessibility issues and their relevance to practices
of repurposing/reuse
[http://www8.open.ac.uk/score/files/score/file/Anna%20Gruszczynska%20SCORE%20Fello
wship%20Final%20Report%20-%20web%20version.pdf]
Dublin Core Metadata Initiative AccessForAll Framework
[http://dublincore.org/accessibilitywiki/AccessForAllFramework]
Merlot OER and Accessibility [http://oeraccess.merlot.org/]
37
23. MOOC (Massively Open Online Courses)
Massive Open Online Courses (MOOC) are a recent development in distance learning and open
education. MOOC combine different OER, e-learning methods and social networks culminating in an
online learning experience. MOOC have a relatively high media profile and are often the subject of
controversial claims.MOOC grew out of the OER movement in Canada, where Stephen Downes and
George Siemens developed the first MOOC ('Connectivism and Connective Knowledge') in 2008.
MOOC can take place entirely within a virtual learning environment, entirely outside it, or in some
hybrid form. By definition MOOCs should be open in many respects, though this can mean different
things in different contexts. They typically do not require entry requirements or tuition fees, and do
not carry course credits that are valid towards a formal qualification.
It is common to distinguish different types of MOOC. The distinction made most often is between
xMOOC and cMOOC.
Broadly speaking, xMOOC tend to:
Strive for large scale education, transmitting information to a wide audience
Make use of short video lectures
Feature quizzes and automated assessment
While cMOOC tend to:
Emphasize learner interaction
Make use of Connectivist and Constructivist pedagogies
Place the accent on forming learning communities
Use peer assessment
Some have argued that cMOOC represent the original spirit of the MOOC experiment more
authentically, while xMOOC focus on scalable business models and sustainability.
MOOC Providers
There are an increasing number of ways to find MOOCs. Some of the search engines below are a
good starting point.
MOOC list
Course talk
MOOC Resource page
MOOC.org
Open Culture MOOC list
MOOC directory
CourseSites MOOCs
Unimooc
The LinkedUp Project is encouraging the development of apps and prototypes that ease access to
recommendations and guidance when choosing appropriate curriculum of courses and related
resources. The Pathfinder track includes MOOC recommendations.
Coursera
Udemy
Udacity
EdX
EduKart in India
ALISON in Ireland
Aprentica in Latin America
Khan Academy
10gen Education
Lore
FutureLearn
NovoEd
OpenUpEd
iversity
Canvas
OpenLearning
Institutions that offer MOOCs include:
Europe
38
University of Southampton
University of Edinburgh
University of Reading
Univeristy of Sheffield
German Hasso Plattner Institute, Potsdamen OpenHPI
Worldwide
MIT and MIT’s Open Courseware
Udemy
Harvard
ITunesU
Stanford
UC Berkeley
Duke
UCLA
Yale
Carnegie
Peking University
University of Amsterdam
MRUniversity
Further Resources
A Comprehensive List of MOOC (Massive Open Online Courses) Providers
Edupunk: Open Content
Wikipedia: MOOCs - includes history
MOOCs and anti-MOOCs - a blog post on the recent ups and downs of MOOCs by Audrey Watters
xMOOC vs cMOOC
Proposed Taxonomy of 8 types of MOOC
Making Sense of MOOCs: Musings in a Maze of Myth, Paradox and Possibility
Mooc creators criticise courses’ lack of creativity
MOOC Research Hub
39
24. OER For The Developing World
The current publication system creates a developed world bias, leaving researchers in the developing
world without a voice and without access to publication spaces. The developing world is an area
where OERs can have real impact. Initiatives include
Commonwealth of Learning
National Developments
Sakshat: One Stop Education Portal
OSCAR: Open Source Courseware Animations Repository
Free or open textbook programmes, such as Siyavula in South Africa
Previous programmes focused on the developing world have suffered from a lack of commitment
locally and no clear strategy for implementation. There has also been a ‘not-made-here’ mentality
and materials were considered too generic. On reflection the Commonwealth of Learning
recommends that projects not only to develop capacity and content but to ensure a buy-in from local
partners and to have a clear implementation strategy
Just as most other projects and activities of the "open movement", Open Educational Resources can
have real impact on local development in developing countries. Direct benefits of developing, using,
sharing and distributing OER in local contexts include:
Increase access to educational resources
Unlock knowledge for the local needs
Reduce authoring and distribution costs of educational resources
Increase efficiency and optimize resources by reusing OERs
Capacity building at teachers and authors levels
Increase awareness at students and institutional levels
Facilitate collaboration in the local educational communities
Cost/Effort effective modernization of the local educational resources
Potential of OER in developing countries
The potential of OER in developing countries
The lack of intellectual property protection laws or their enforcement by authorities resulted in a wide
use of "illegally" copied or "pirated" software and content in many of developing countries. While not
considering copyright and license agreements in data and information sharing activities including
education, developing countries can still have limited access to very useful educational resources in
other parts of the world. Educators in developing countries, like their peers all over the world, may not
be aware of the license restrictions on the materials they use in their classes. Authors and producers
of educational resources may also want know more about using, reusing and sharing available
resources and offering their resources under an appropriate licanse to increase their outreach and
benefit.
The potential of OERs in developing countries arise in multiple areas including:
Spreading locally developed educational resources that meet local needs
Building local contribution communities and increase resources' quality
Establishing the culture of sharing in the educational context
Further Resources
OER Africa [http://www.oerafrica.org/]
Open Learning Exchange [http://www.ole.org/content/about-us]
Making it Matter: Supporting education in the developing world through open and linked data
[http://linkedup-project.eu/2014/05/21/what-we-learnt-at-making-it-matter/]
TESS-India [http://www.tess-india.edu.in/]
Commonwealth of Learning [http://www.col.org/Pages/default.aspx]
40
25. OER Communities And Interest Groups
Europe
Open Education Europa http://www.openeducationeuropa.eu
The University of Southampton - has a large OER repository http://edshare.soton.ac.uk
The University of Nottingham - has a large OER repository http://unow.nottingham.ac.uk
The University of Oxford - has several OER sites, including http://podcasts.ox.ac.uk
The Open University has http://openlearn.open.ac.uk
The textbook project "L3T" (textbook for learning and teaching with technologies") is a
prizewinning CC-BY-SA project in German language, its second version was collaboratively
developed within 7 days and more than 250 people (http://l3t.eu)
US And Australia
"Copyright for Educators" courses aimed at primary school teachers and librarinas in the US and
Australia. While there is a jurisdiction-specific focus, they provide a great grounding for anyone in
the teaching space (https://p2pu.org/en/groups/schools/school-of-open/)
Global South
The African Virtual University (http://www.avu.org/)
OERu (http://wikieducator.org/OER_university/Home)
MIT OpenCourseWare (http://ocw.mit.edu)
Various initiatives in Utah (http://opencontent.org/blog/)
Temoa in Latin America (http://www.temoa.info/)
CORE (http://www.core.org.cn/)
Siyavula Education in South Africa (www.siyavula.com)
National Repository of Open Educational Resources in India (http://nroer.in/home/)
OER Africa (http://www.oerafrica.org)
Groups Of People Or Individuals Interested In OER
OER-Discuss mailing list
Open Knowledge Foundation Open Education Working Group
OER research hub
SCORE fellows
OER Asia
OER Advocacy mailing list
OER University
School of Open Google Group
UNESCO OER community
Educause Openness Constituent Group
Open Courseware Consortium
OER Community at Athabasca University
OER Forum
WikiEducator
P2PU Community
Peer 2 Peer University (P2PU) (https://p2pu.org/en/)
41
26. Open Textbooks
An open textbook is an open educational resource or set of open educational resources that either is
a textbook or can be used in place of a textbook at a higher education institution. The rising cost of
text books has led to alternative solutions being considered and in the United States in particular
there is a growing open textbook movement.
Some have argued that open textbooks could be the most significant step in the OER movement. A
summary of the arguments in favour of open textbooks can be found on US senator Dick Durbin's
website.
Gerd Kortemeyer writes in his article Ten Years Later: Why Open Educational Resources Have Not
Noticeably Affected Higher Education, and Why We Should Care: "The flaws in the textbook market
are clear, as is the solution: An outside player needs to provide a platform for content from various
sources (faculty, grant projects, publishers, etc.) to be shared under common licensing schemes,
including the means to sell content on a fine granularity level. In this model, faculty put together
online course packs. They could choose and sequence content at granularity levels anywhere from
individual pages or problems to whole chapters or modules, or even to complete prefabricated course
packs, depending on how much work they want to invest in individualizing their materials. Students
would buy access to these course packs at a price that depended on the contents, and the "playerdevice" (an iPod in the music-world example) would be the integrated CMS. The service provider for
this system would collect the fees from students and distribute them to the content providers. If a
particular course pack only contained OER content, it would be free."
Providers of open textbooks include:
California Open Source Textbook Project
Global Text Project
CK12
Siyavula Free text books
WikiFM
College Open textbooks
OpenStax College
Another tool worth mentioning here is the Open Content Toolkit. Specifically aimed at the schools
sector the toolkit is a gateway to both contemporary and historical open digital media content from
media archives and collections around the world. It includes links to resources, exemplars of how
open digital content might be used in schools and links to resources for in depth study. It has been set
up as a collaborative space to explore, discuss and share examples of the use of open media at all
school stages and at all levels of education. It is intended to be a truly cross curricular resource.
42
27. OER Resources And Handbooks
A vast amount of introductory material has already been created relating to OERs. These provide
both introduction and practical examples of OER programmes and of OER creation and use.
OER handbook for educators Great handbook created in 2010, so a little out of date. Created by
the Center for Open and Sustainable Learning (COSL) and hosted on WikiEducator (cc-by)
Introduction to OERs on Wikibooks. Wikimedia project (cc-sa)
CETIS publication Into The Wild by By Amber Thomas, Lorna M. Campbell, Phil Barker and Martin
Hawksey (Eds). December 2012. This book is not intended as a beginners guide or a technical
manual, instead it is an expert synthesis of the key technical issues arising from a national
publicly-funded programme. It is intended for people working with technology to support the
creation, management, dissemination and tracking of open educational resources, and
particularly those who design digital infrastructure and services at institutional and national
level.(cc-by)
InfoKit on OER. This infokit includes information about the three year UK Open Educational
Resources Programme (UKOER) (2009 - 2012) and offers links to a wide range of resources
which describe the outcomes (lessons learned) and outputs (reports, guidance materials and
toolkits) that emerged.(cc-by-sa)
OER IPR Support/Web2Rights. This website was set up to provide IPR and licensing support for
JISC/HEA funded OER Phase 1, 2 and 3 projects in order to help them identify and manage IPR
issues with particular emphasis on the use of Creative Commons Licences. It includes a starter
pack, diagnostic tools and a range of videos.
UKOER synthesis and evaluation report.. This site is the JISC/HE Academy OER Programme
synthesis wiki. Lots of useful resources. (cc-by-nc)
Creating OER and Combining Licenses. Video intended to help you choose compatible resources
and choose a valid license for your work. (video, cc-by)
Free to Learn Guide. An overview of OER for higher education and how governance officials can
initiate OER at the policy level.
OER White Paper (pdf) by the Hewlett Foundation. The foundation's exploration to better
understand how its philanthropic can help integrate OER into mainstream education.
The Commonwealth of Learning have published several books about OER on a CC BY SA licence.
A Basic Guide to Open Educational Resources (OER) by Asha Kanwar (COL) (Editor), Stamenka
Uvalić-Trumbić (UNESCO) (Editor), Neil Butcher (Author)
Guidelines for Open Educational Resources (OER) in Higher Education, COL, UNESCO (November
2011)
A report on the Re-use and Adaptation of Open Educational Resources (OER): An Exploration of
Technologies Available by Ishan Sudeera Abeywardena, COL (May 2012)
Perspectives on Open and Distance Learning: Open Educational Resources and Change in Higher
Education: Reflections from Practice by Jenny Glennie (Editor), Ken Harley (Editor), Neil Butcher
(Editor), Trudi van Wyk (Editor) COL, UNESCO (June 2012)
Report on the Assessment and Accreditation of Learners using OER by Dianne Conrad (Author),
Wayne Mackintosh (Author), Rory McGreal (Author), Angela Murphy (Author), Gabi Witthaus
(Author), COL (July 2013)
Copyright and Open Educational Resources by Achal Prabhala, COL (2010)
Perspectives on Open and Distance Learning: Open Educational Resources: An Asian
Perspective by Gajaraj Dhanarajan (Editor), David Porter (Editor), COL (2010)
Survey on Governments’ Open Educational Resources (OER) Policies by Sarah Hoosen (Neil
Butcher & Associates) (Editor), COL, UNESCO (June 2012)
Fostering Governmental Support for OER Internationally, COL (March 2012)
43
Exploring the Business Case for Open Educational Resources by Neil Butcher (Author), Sarah
Hoosen (Author), COL (September 2012)
Open Educational Resources in Poland: Challenges and Opportunities by Kamil Śliwowski,
Karolina Grodecka, UNESCO Institute for Information Technologies in Education (October 2013)
Open Educational Resources in Brazil: State-of-the-Art, Challenges and Prospects for
Development and Innovation, Andreia Inamorato dos Santos, UNESCO Institute for Information
Technologies in Education (2012)
Further Resources
Additional guides may be listed at the OER Policy Registry's supporting
resources: http://wiki.creativecommons.org/OER_Policy_Registry/Supporting_Documents#Guides.
Bibliography of OER, ROER and
related subjects http://oerqualityproject.wordpress.com/2014/09/17/bibliography-of-oer-roer-rlorelated-themes/
44
OPEN LICENCES AND COPYRIGHT
28. INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY, RIGHTS & LICENSING
29. OPEN LICENCES
30. MISPERCEPTIONS ABOUT OER & COPYRIGHT
45
28. Intellectual Property, Rights & Licensing
Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) are the legal rights given to persons over creations. Under
intellectual property law, owners are granted certain exclusive rights to creations including musical,
literary, and artistic works. Copyright is the right to control the copying and dissemination of an
original work. Clarification of copyright is essential for release, use and remixing of open educational
resources and for open educational practices.
IPR and copyright are important in the open education field because for others to make full use of a
resource it needs to have been released under an open licence. This means that the owner/creator
has agreed to allow others to use it, and indicated this through open licensing.
The verb 'to licence' means to give permission while the noun 'licence' refers to that permission as
well as to the document recording and representing it. Licences can be thought of as legal tools that
allow certain actions. They make the materials they apply to more useable.
In some legal traditions licences are unilateral acts of permission, in others they are simply bilateral
contracts dealing with rights. Usually licences state very precisely which rights are granted by whom
(licensor) to whom (licensee) for how long. They often also include details on whether these rights are
granted exclusively to the licensee or not and describe the territory they are to cover, which can be a
specific country or worldwide.
Furthermore, licences can be based on conditions, meaning that the grant of rights they represent is
only valid as long as certain conditions are met. Once these conditions are not met anymore, the
licence automatically also ends.
Further Resources
Jisc Infokit: Legal aspects of OER
[https://openeducationalresources.pbworks.com/w/page/25308415/Legal%20Aspects%20of%20O
ER]
Web2Rights OER IPR support [http://www.web2rights.com/OERIPRSupport/starter.html]
Jorum: Copyright and licensing for OER [http://find.jorum.ac.uk/resources/16107]
UNESCO: Open educational resources and intellectual property rights
[http://iite.unesco.org/publications/3214680/]
46
29. Open Licences
The definition used in the Open Definition effectively limits open content to libre content; any free
content license would qualify as an open content license. According to this narrower criteria, the
following still-maintained licenses qualify:
Creative Commons Licenses: only Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY), Attribution-Share Alike
(BY SA)
Creative Commons Public Domain Tools: CC Zero (not a license but a tool that allows creators to
dedicate their works to the public domain)
Open Publication License (the original license of the Open Content Project, the Open Content
License, did not permit for-profit copying of the licensed work and therefore does not qualify)
Against DRM license
GNU Free Documentation License
Open Game License (a license designed for role-playing games by Wizards of the Coast)
Free Art License
In addition to Open Definition aligned licenses, more copyright licenses exist. For example, the full
suite of Creative Commons licenses are outlined at http://creativecommons.org/licenses. Below are
the CC licenses as aligned to a spectrum of Most Open to Least Open. Examples of use for each
license are provided at http://creativecommons.org/examples.
47
Further Resources
Open content licensing for educators
[http://wikieducator.org/Open_content_licensing_for_educators/Home]
Software Licenses in Plain English [http://www.tldrlegal.com/]
Creative Commons FAQ [http://wiki.creativecommons.org/Frequently_Asked_Questions]
Creative Commons Toolkit [http://cctoolkits.wordpress.com]
Open.Michigan guide to releasing content [http://open.umich.edu/share]
P2PU course - Get CC Savvy [https://p2pu.org/en/groups/get-cc-savvy/]
48
30. Misperceptions About OER & Copyright
When you openly license an educational resource, you keep your copyright while allowing certain uses
of your work through the open license, giving the world the legal rights and permissions to reuse,
revise, remix and redistribute your work. Most OER creators use Creative Commons licenses to openly
license their OER, which are considered the global standard for openly licensing content like
educational resources.
There are several common misperceptions of copyright among educational practitioners. Copyright is
only one of several intellectual property rights (IPR). You do not need to study the legal intricacies but
you should be aware of the basic outlines of IPR in education. Being ignorant or taking a gentlemanly
approach to intellectual property rights can backfire, certainly when protected material is re-released
into the commons as OER.
“Certainly I can use copyrighted material because it is for educational purposes”
There is no blanket license for educational purposes. This is a misconception that conflates US with
British law (fair use / fair dealing). Normally your institution will have a license with the copyright
agency setting out what you are allowed to do (in the UK: typically making as many photocopies of 5%
or one chapter (whichever is greater) of any book your institution holds. This does not automatically
include scans / digitisations for your VLE.
“Certainly I can use copyrighted material because it is behind closed doors (our VLE is
only accessible to staff or students of my institution with a password)
You may be less likely to be caught but you are still violating IPR. Many institutions archive VLE
contents and things may come back to haunt you later. There are even reports of cases where
students have tried to blackmail teachers about their copyright violations. Do you really want to
expose yourself?
“It was not copyrighted because it had no © sign on it”
The © sign is just a symbol that a creator may choose to use to indicate copyright protection. Just
because there is no © sign does not mean that the work is not protected. For example, in the US, the
creator is granted exclusive copyright to her work at the moment of creation; she does not have to
register or it or attach a © to it to gain this protection. Any artefact whether or not marked with a ©
is protected in the UK, and elsewhere, by intellectual property rights.
“It was available freely on the web, so I can use it.”
Nope. Local and international copyright laws apply to the Internet as well.
“My institution has a licence with the copyright agency, so we can use everything”
There are differences between photocopy licenses and online / digitisation licenses. Best to check with
your institution. A typical license would be: staff are allowed to make as many photocopies as
necessary for teaching, of up to a chapter or 5% (whichever is greater) from any book held by the
institution. This does not automatically mean that these photocopies can be scanned in and made
available on the institutional VLE. Your institution will have (or not) have a separate license for
digitised content, e.g. restricting digitisation to books published in a certain jurisdiction (e.g. the UK
and/or US only). Annoying as this is, this means you can only legally use some teaching material
offline not online.
Last but not least this is also an issue of academic credibility, with reputations of individuals and
institutions at risk. Avoidance of plagiarism is a fundamental academic value that should be respected
at all times.
49
OPEN EDUCATION IN POLICY AND PRACTICE
31.
32.
33.
34.
35.
36.
50
PRACTISING OPEN LEARNING
OPEN EDUCATIONAL PRACTICES (OEP)
OPEN ASSESSMENT
OPEN BADGES
OPEN POLICY
OPEN ADVOCACY
31. Practising Open Learning
The Cape Town Open Education Declaration (with over 2,500 signatories) reads: "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. It may also grow to include new approaches to
assessment, accreditation and collaborative learning".
Open learning is a term used to describe activities that either enhance learning opportunities within
formal education systems or broaden learning opportunities beyond formal education systems. It
often uses open education elements - such as open educational resources - but because it often takes
place in a formal education infrastructure it is not always open in the way open education is.
Traditional pedagogy is based on the idea that a teacher transfers their knowledge to their students.
The traditional form of teaching at a school also derives from the traditional way of knowledge storing
in books and book storing in libraries. Schools and libraries have for the longest time been essential
for teaching, and the easiest way was to get everyone together physically to be close to that
knowledge. Teachers had to mediate between the books and the learners, i.e. they had to transfer
the knowledge from the books to the learners. The situation has changed with the introduction of the
Internet and the wider distribution of knowledge. Access to knowledge is (theoretically) given
everywhere in the world with Internet access. At the same time, the amount of accessible knowledge
has increased significantly. The challenge now is not to appropriately transfer the knowledge, but to
teach learners how to appropriately extract the knowledge that they need independently. Teaching
and learning is evolving from fact learning to competence development, where competence is the
combination of knowledge and motivation for application.
Since the late 1970s the idea of open learning has developed. Open learning and practice (so called
open pedagogy), see the blurring or removal of traditional roles such as teacher, student and
educator and moves towards mentor and learner. These new approaches to learning where people
create and shape knowledge openly together promotes practices and policies that advance the vision
of removing barriers to learning.
Reconceived in this way, the boundary between learner and teacher can become blurred. Often in
informal learning the result is individuals and groups who share personal and professional practice
online through participatory blogs and online community networks.
Open learning and practice is still being shaped but there are a variety of approaches that provide
interesting opportunities for more open processes.
Traditional classroom style
Teacher in front of class, ex-cathedra.
Uni-directional knowledge transfer.
Single holder of knowledge (person), students are mere recipients.
Examples: State schools, state universities.
Autonomous learning
DIY-style.
Self-driven appropriation of knowledge from a medium instead of a person.
Examples: Books.
Feedback system
Feedback in exercises.
Examples: MOOCs.
Collaborative learning
Knowledge is exchanged between equals. Teamwork.
Self-reinforcing system which facilitates creativity and sharing.
Examples: Forums (eg. MOOC discussion boards)
Workshops
Less strict hierarchy; mentors/coaches/moderators. Learners are encouraged to share acquired
knowledge.
Talk about sharing of results, eg. showing works of arts or sharing results.
Examples: OpenTechSchool.
Expert groups
51
Expert groups
Individuals are assigned niche areas where they have to become an expert, only to share (teach)
their acquired knowledge with others.
Peer-to-peer
Bi-directional.
Examples: P2PU.
Variations in these elements of educational systems have given rise to new forms of pedagogy.
The Open University Innovating Pedagogy 2013 report suggests a number of different new and open
ways of learning, including:
Learning analytics
Seamless learning
Crowd learning
Digital scholarship
geolearning
Learning from gaming
Maker Culture
Citizen inquiry
The biggest challenges associated with open learning are:
Culture change
Social change
Institutional ambition and evolution
Fostering mutual understanding between stakeholders
Open accreditation
Relevance
Further Resources
Open University course on openness and innovation in elearning:
[http://www3.open.ac.uk/study/postgraduate/course/h817.htm]
Dial blog: what does open practice mean to you? [http://dial.myblog.arts.ac.uk/2012/04/28/whatdoes-open-educational-practice-mean-to-you/]
52
32. Open Educational Practices (OEP)
Open Educational Practices are teaching techniques that draw upon open technologies and open
educational resources in order to facilitate collaborative and flexible learning. There are many ideas
in this space including thoughts around collaborative working, fusing post-web pedagody, andragogy
(adult learning) and heutagogy (self-determined learning).Open licensing, open research,
collaboration, and new approaches to assessment
OEP have begun to be included in policy descriptions of open education. Existing definitions include:
Center for Open Learning and Teaching (COLT), University of Mississippi: Open Educational
Practices (OEP) offer contact with learners around the world, supporting self-directed learning
and personal networking that can greatly enhance more traditional learning
environments. Teachers and learners alike have much to gain from engaging openly with expert
and diverse partners around the world.
Cape Town Open Education Declaration: 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. It may also grow to include new approaches to assessment, accreditation and
collaborative learning. Understanding and embracing innovations like these is critical to the long
term vision of this movement.
Graphic: Conole, G. (2011) Defining Open Educational Practices. Available
from http://e4innovation.com/?p=373.
Food for thought... learning is changing (with Fred Garnet) [http://e4innovation.com/?p=373]
53
33. Open Assessment
Open assessment is the process of making assessment of students work open and driven by
community rather than closed and proprietary. It is also used as an umbrella term for describing
models used to recognise informal learning.
In Open Learning – Open Assessment?! the ideas of formal assessment and open assessment are
contrasted. Open assessment takes the form of:
Formative Assessments
Assessment for learning
Assessment as learning
Assessment for growth and development (transforming learning)
Assessment of competences
Performance, portfolios E-Assessment
It can also consider prior learning (RPL), prior learning assessment (PLA), or prior learning assessment
and recognition (PLAR).
Open badges can be seen as accreditation related to open assessment.
Further Resources
OPASnet workspace for informed decision making [http://en.opasnet.org/w/Main_Page]
Stephen Downes on open source assessment [http://halfanhour.blogspot.co.uk/2007/06/opensource-assessment.html]
Introduction to Open Assessment (Canvas) [https://learn.canvas.net/courses/4/wiki/intro-to-openassessment]
54
34. Open Badges
A digital badge is an online validated indicator of accomplishment, skill, or achievement. Digital
badges are now awarded in a variety of online learning environments. Digital badges take their form
from physical badges (such as those awarded by scouting movement). Badges can be issued by
anyone (educational institution, work place, online learning organisations) to anyone. These badges
can then be displayed publicly on a digital (or non-digital) space (blog, Web site, Facebook, email
signature, CV etc). Digital badges are seen as having several significant motivation factors: they
encourage users to participate and collaborate, they offer recognition for carrying out tasks and they
offer an alternate assessment and accreditation approach.
“Digital badges will make the accomplishments and experiences of individuals, in online and offline
spaces, visible to anyone and everyone, including potential employers, educators and communities.”
from The Badges for Lifelong Learning: An Open Conversation YouTube video.
Many digital badges are open. Open Badges started as a collaborative project between MacArthur
Foundation, HASTAC and Mozilla and has continued to grow through an open, collaborative approach.
Mozilla have built a digital badge infrastructure system called Mozilla Open Badges
(http://openbadges.org/). Mozilla Open Badges are not proprietary — they use free software and an
open technical standard. That means that any organization can create, issue and verify digital
badges, and any user can earn, manage and display these badges all across the web.
Open Badges help knit your skills together. Badges can build upon each other, joining together to tell
the full story of your skills and achievement. With Open Badges, every badge is full of information.
Each one has important data built in that links back to the issuer, the criteria it was issued under and
evidence verifying the credential — features unique to Open Badges. Open Badges let you take your
badges everywhere. Users now have an easy and comprehensive way to collect their badges in a
single backpack, and display their skills and achievements on social networking profiles, job sites, their
websites and more. Open Badges are designed, built and backed by a broad community of
contributors, such as NASA, the Smithsonian, Intel, the Girl Scouts, and more. The open source model
means that improvements made by one partner can benefit everyone, from bug fixes to new
features.
Individuals can earn badges from multiple sources, both online and offline. Then manage and share
them using the Open Badges backpack (Mozilla Backpack), other organizations can use Open Badges
to make their own backpacks too.
The paper Six Ways to Look at Badging Systems Designed for Learning gives an overview of how the
badging system works and why people would chose to use open badges:
1. Badges as an alternative assessment – This is the idea that assessment can take the form of
‘validated accomplishments’ instead of tests
2. Gamifying education with badges – The games based achievement system has it’s origins in the
Xbox 360 game score system – qualifications filtered through achievements.
3. Badges as Learning Scaffolding – Badges, as a form of scaffolded learning, reveal multiple
pathways that youth may follow and make visible the paths youth eventually take.
4. Badges to Develop Lifelong Learning Skills – By offering names for their new competencies and
supporting communities.
5. Badges as driver of digital media learning – Badges support digital, media and learning
practices.
6. Badges to Democratize Learning – Some badges change who does the assessment and allow
learners to shape the content of their badging system and perhaps even the structure itself.
Mozilla explain this in more simplistic terms. They see badges as a way to:
Get recognition for the things you learn. Open Badges include a shared standard for
recognizing your skills and achievements and helps make them count towards job opportunities
and lifelong learning.
Give recognition for the things you teach. Anyone who meets the standard can award
badges for skills or learning.
To achieve recognition Mozilla emphasise the importance of displaying your verified badges across
the web. They suggest you earn badges from anywhere, then share them wherever you want—on
social networking profiles, job sites and on your website. Badges also verify skills. Employers,
organizations and schools can explore the data behind every badge issued using Mozilla Open Badges
to verify individuals’ skills and competencies.
The main challenges posed by open badges include:
55
Standardisation - How do you benchmark level or attainment for a certain skill or quality from
one issuer of a badge to another. How do employers make sense of badge collections?
Proliferation - Badges can be created easily, but might this lower their value?
Motivation - Do badges actually motivate people?
Accreditation - Should we be awarding/accrediting informal learning at all?
Some examples of use of open badging include:
User stories - Everyday examples of badges in the real world.
The 2 Million Better Futures project from CGI America aims to help 1 million workers and 1
million students succeed using Open Badges.
This Chicago Summer of Learning was the first citywide badging initiative developed, and it was
so successful that Mayor Emmanuel committed to continuing the program next year.
Participating Issuers on the Open Badges site for an updated list of badge issuers and designers.
Badges in the real world http://openmatt.org/2011/03/17/badges-in-the-real-world/
Badges on P2PU - create a badge and get feedback on something you want to learn. Or give
feedback to other people’s projects.
P2PU - course - Open badges
Wikipedia: Digital badges
56
35. Open Policy
Open policies require access to, and open licensing of, resources financed through public funding. For
the purposes of open policies that contribute to the public good, we define policy broadly as
legislation, institutional policies, and/or funder mandates.
A government open policy requires publicly funded educational resources be either openly licensed
(CC BY preferred) or put directly into the public domain. Goverments may also require government
created and/or grant funded data be put directly into the public domain (e.g, using CC0) and publicly
funded software to be openly licensed with an OSI certified open source software license.
Foundations are also adopting open policies on some of their grants. For example, the Hewlett
Foundation's Education division requires (with some exceptions) its grantees to CC BY license
resources produced with Hewlett funds.
Education systems are also adopting open policies. The Chancellor's Office of the US California
Community Colleges recently adopted a CC BY requirement on all resources produced with its public
funded grants and contracts.
It is relatively rare for K-12 educational institutions to adopt open institutional policies. Such policies
are more common among academic institutions - although these often limit their open mandates to
academic publications and research articles, and not educational resources.
There are several types of policies that concern open education.
International policies: These are adopted by intergovernmental organizations and are usually
not binding for its members. The most important such policy now in force is the UNESCO OER
Declaration, formally adopted at the 2012 World Open Educational Resources (OER) Congress
held at the UNESCO Headquarters in Paris from 20 – 22 June 2012.
National policies: Many governments have required open licensing for the educational outputs
of certain programs, eg. the U.S. Department of Labor's $2 billion TAACCCT program requires CC
BY on all educational outputs (more information: http://www.doleta.gov/taaccct/). Some countries
have had national declarations in this space e.g. Scottish Open Education declaration, Welsh
Open Education declaration of Intent.
Regional policies (for example, state-level policies): In several countries, policies have been
introduced by state governments. Examples of such policies is the Bill HB 2337 “Regarding open
educational resources in K-12 education”, passed by the Senate of the State of Washington
(more information: https://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/31756).
Institutional policies set out a committment to supporting open education through, for
example, mandating or authorising OER production as a valid activity for staff; aligning
curriculum with materials or textbooks that are openly available; or encouraging use of open
resources in teaching and learning.
Funders mandates can be seen as specific types of policies that apply to funding programs of
charitable organizations. They are important in themselves, but also set standards for other, public
policies.
See the OER Policy Registry or OER Policy Map for examples of OER policies. The POERUP project has
also collected a lot of data on OER policy.
57
36. Open Advocacy
Convincing policy makers requires making both a business and a social case for open education.
Advocates need to help policy makers to see that open education matters and that open policy
effectively supports open education.
Open policy advocates need to present a coordinated case to policymakers that 21st century legal
and technical tools can be used to significantly improve the effectiveness of investments in publicly
funded resources. For instance:
The global reach and increasing speed and bandwidth of the Internet
The decreasing cost of hardware and marginal costs of digital storage, copying and distribution
Open licensing and the popularity of mobile devices are making content more easily accessed
When policy makers understand the power of open policies, they can avoid the lock-in of stale
frameworks and existing financial models, so they can maximize the positive societal impact of
publicly funded resources.
Many open advocates use the OER Advoccy Coalition email group (https://groups.google.com/forum/?
hl#!aboutgroup/oer-advocacy-coalition) to share their experiences and form strategies for change.
There are some good arguments for open education in the videos from the Why Open Education
Matters video competition.
Further Resources
EC Opening Up Education [http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_IP-13-859_en.htm]
OER Africa Policy
[http://www.oerafrica.org/policy/PolicyReviewandDevelopmentHome/tabid/914/Default.aspx]
POERUP Research Project into OER policy in the EU [http://www.poerup.info]
58
OPEN DATA
37.
38.
39.
40.
41.
42.
43.
44.
45.
OPEN EDUCATION DATA
OPEN DATA & INSTITUTIONS
TYPES OF OPEN DATA
CREATING OPEN DATA
USING OPEN DATA
OPEN DATA AND LEARNING ANALYTICS
OPEN SOURCE EDUCATION TOOLS
OPEN DATA FOR EDUCATION: LINKEDUP CHALLENGE
OPEN DATA - USEFUL LINKS
37. Open Education Data
The phrase 'Open Education Data)' is loosely defined, but might be used to refer to:
all openly available data that cou be used for educational purposes
open data that is released by education institutions
Understood in the former sense, open education data can be considered a subset of OER where data
sets are made available for use in teaching and learning. These data sets might not be designed for
use in education, but can be repurposed and used freely.
In the latter sense, the interest is primarily in the release of data from academic institutions about
their performance and that of their students. This could include:
Reference data such as the location of academic institutions
Internal data such as staff names, resources available, personnel data, identity data, budgets
Course data, curriculum data, learning objectives,
User-generated data such as learning analytics, assessments, performance data, job placements
Benchmarked open data in education that is released across institutions and can lead to change
in public policy through transparency and raising awareness.
The World Economic Forum report Education and Skills 2.0: New Targets and Innovative Approaches
sees there as being two types of education data: traditional and new. Traditional data sets include
identity data and system-wide data, such as attendance information; new data sets are those created
as a result of user interaction, which may include web site statistics, and inferred content created by
mining data sets using questions.
Whatever their classification it is clear that open education data sets are of interest to a wide variety
of people including educators, learners, institutions, government, parents and the wider public.
Finding Open Data
One good source of open data is governments, who increasingly make data about their citizens
available online. Examples from the UK include as school performance data
59
(http://www.education.gov.uk/schools/performance/download_data.html), data on the location of
educational establishments (http://data.gov.uk/dataset/location_of_educational_establishments) and
pupil absenteeism (http://data.gov.uk/dataset/pupil_absence_in_schools_in_england). There is also
data from individual institutions such as that collated on linked universities
(http://linkeduniversities.org/lu/index.php/datasets-and-endpoints/) and on data.ac.uk
(http://www.data.ac.uk/data ) and from research into education, such as the Open Public Services
Network report into Empowering Parents, Improving Accountability (http://www.thersa.org/actionresearch-centre/community-and-public-services/2020-public-services/open-public-servicesnetwork/empowering-parents,-improving-accountability).
Previously much of the release and use of open educational data sets has been driven by the need for
accountability and transparency. A well-cited global example has been the situation in Uganda where
the Ugandan government allocated funding for schools, but corruption at various levels meant much
of the money never reached its intended destination. Between 1995 and 2001, the proportion of
funding allocated which actually reached the schools rose from 24% to 82%. In the interim, they
initiated a programme of publishing data on how much was allocated to each school. There were
other factors but Reinikke and Svensson’s analysis
(http://qje.oxfordjournals.org/content/119/2/679.short) showed that data publication played a
significant part in the funding increase.
However recent developments, such as the current upsurge of open data challenges (see the ODI
Education: Open Data Challengehttp://theodi.org/education-open-data-challenge-series and the LAK
data challenge http://www.solaresearch.org/events/lak/lak-data-challenge/), have meant that there is
an increasing innovation in data use, and opportunities for efficiency and improvements to education
more generally. Their potential us is broad. Data sets can support students through creation of tools
that enable new ways to analyse and access data e.g. maps of disabled access and by enriching
resources, making it easier to share and find them, and personalize the way they are presented.
Open data can also support those who need to make informed choices on education e.g. by
comparing scores, and support schools and institutions by enabling efficiencies in practice e.g. library
data can help support book purchasing.
Education technology providers are also starting to see the potential of data-mining and app
development. So for example open education data is a high priority area for Pearson Think tank
(http://thepearsonthinktank.com/research/education-data/), back in 2011 they published their blue
skies paperHow Open Data, data literacy and Linked Data will revolutionise higher
educationhttp://pearsonblueskies.com/2011/how-open-data-data-literacy-and-linked-data-willrevolutionise-higher-education/. Ideas around how money, or savings, can be made from these data
sets are slowly starting to surface.
Using Open Data
Some of the interesting UK applications of these data sets can be see through services like Which?
University (http://university.which.co.uk ) which builds on the NSS annual survey held in Unistats, the
Key information sets and other related data sets to allow aid students to select a university; Locrating
(http://www.locrating.com/), defined as ‘To locate by rating: they locrated the school using
locrating.com’ which combines data on schools, area and commuting times; Schools Atlas
(http://www.london.gov.uk/priorities/young-people/education-and-training/london-schools-atlas), an
interactive online map providing a comprehensive picture of London schools; equipment data.ac.uk
(http://equipment.data.ac.uk) - which allow searching across all published UK research equipment
databases through one aggregation “portal.
The UK is not alone in seeing the benefit of open education data, in Holland, for example, the
education department of the city of Amsterdam commissioned an app challenge similar to the
current ODI one mentioned earlier. The goal of the challenge was to provide parents with tools that
help them to make well-informed choices about their children. A variety of tools were built, such as
schooltip.net, 10000scholen.nl, scholenvinden.nl, and scholenkeuze.nl. The various apps have now
been displayed on an education portal focused on finding the ‘right school’.
Further afield in Tanzania Shule.info allows comparison of exam results across different regions of
Tanzania and for users to follow trends over time, or to see the effect of the adjustments made to
yearly exam results. The site was developed by young Tanzanian developers who approached
Twaweza, an Open Development Consultant, for advice, rather than for funding. The result is
beneficial to anyone interested in education in Tanzania.
The School of Data, through their data expeditions, are starting to (http://education.okfn.org/schoolof-data-using-education-data/) do some important work in the area of education data in the
developing world. And in January the World Bank released a new open data tool called SABER (The
Systems Approach for Better Education Results), which enables comparison of countries education
policies. The web tool helps countries collect and analyze information on their education policies,
60
benchmark themselves against other countries, and prioritize areas for reform, with the goal of
ensuring that in those countries all children and youth go to school and learn.
All over the world prototypes and apps are been developed that use and build on open education
data.
Challenges
There are still challenges that those keen to develop applications using open education data face.
Privacy and data protection laws can often prevent access to some potentially useful data sets, yet
many data sets that are not personal or controversial remain unavailable, or only available under a
closed licence or inappropriate format. This may be for many reasons: trust, concerns around quality
and cost being the biggest issues. Naturally there is a cost to releasing data but in many cases this
can be far out-weighed by cost-savings later down the line, so for example a proactive approach is
likely to save time and effort should Freedom of Information (FOI) requests be made.
Further Resources
Market place: Quantified student [http://www.marketplace.org/topics/world/navigating-datadriven-education]
38. Open Data & Institutions
Open education is fundamentally about removing barriers to education. Opening up data of any sort
fits with this agenda and activities around open licensing in particular are both important and hugely
supportive. But secondly, and possibly more importantly, opening up education data gives us the
potential to see education and its components differently. This new perspective provides us with an
opportunity to revolutionise education and make it better.
As David Lassner, Interim president and former chief information officer at the University of Hawaii
explains: “Our opportunities for improvement are immense, and data provide a powerful lens to
understand how we are doing internally and relative to our peers. This applies across all segments of
what we do, from teaching and learning to administrative support. Performance metrics and
dashboards are the beginning, but using data to understand deeper correlations and causality so we
can shape change will be critical as we strive to advance our effectiveness.”
The movement for open education is ultimately about wanting better education for all. Open
education data is proving to be an important instrument in achieving that goal.
Principle
The charitable mission of education can be helped through a commitment to open data, help
educators and institutions to engage with learners more effectively and in better ways. Data openness
and exchange can drive quality research (collaboration, testing, replication) while promoting the
social role and place of institutions themselves, helping maintain public and political commitment to
the insitution and making it more transparent.
Policy
Education institutions are already subject to freedom of information, but new open research data
policies (such as the HEFCE consultation on inclusion as part of next Research Excellence Framework)
may alter obligations. Large amounts of institutional data (finance, student performance, etc.) are
already collected by HESA and UCAS and made widely available, and this is a trend which can be
observed in many countries. The next logical step is for more open data about institutions to be made
available. With agreed frameworks and metrics in place it will be easier to substantiate comparisons
and claims about widening participation, or student performance, for example.
Practice
Institutions can use their own data to inform decisions and management practices, and improve
business and pedagogical intelligence. By linking across other open data sets and curating the most
relevant information staff and students can be supported in teaching and learning.
Always check with your institution before releasing any institutional information openly!
39. Types Of Open Data
There are many different types of data that can be relevant to education and come from education.
Relevant sources might include:
Publications & literature: ACM, PubMed, DBLP (L3S), OpenLibrary
61
Domain-specific knowledge & resources: Bioportal for Life Sciences,
historic artefacts in Europeana, Geonames
Cross-domain knowledge: DBpedia, Freebase, ...
(Social) media resource metadata: BBC, Flickr, ...
Explicitly educational datasets and schemas include:
University Linked Data: eg The Open University UK, http://data.open.ac.uk, Southampton
University, University of Munster (DE), http://education.data.gov.uk
OER Linked Data: mEducator Linked ER (http://ckan.net/package/meducator), Open Learn LD
Schemas: Learning Resource Metadata Initiative (LRMI, http://www.lrmi.net/), mEducator
Educational Resources schema (http://purl.org/meducator/ns)
Learning Analytics & Knowledge (LAK) Dataset
Vast Open Educational Resource (OER) & MOOC metadata collections (e.g. OpenCourseware,
OpenLearn, Merlot, ARIADNE)
KIS data http://unistats.direct.gov.uk/
Education GPS is the OECD source for internationally comparable data on education policies and
practices, opportunities and outcomes. Accessible any time, in real time, the Education GPS
provides you with the latest information on how countries are working to develop high-quality
and equitable education systems.
There are also many different ways to categorise this data.
Student data: attendance, grades, skills, exams, homework
Course data: employability related to courses, curriculum, syllabus, VLE data, number of
textbooks, skills, digital literacy…
Institution data: location data, success/failure rates, results, infrastructure, power
consumption, location, student enrolment, textbook budget, teacher names and contracts, drop
out rates, total cost of ownership, sponsorship, cost per pupil, graduation rates, male vs female,
years in education, ratio of students to teaching staff
User-generated data: learning analytics, assessments, performance data, job placements,
laptop data, time on tasks, use of different programmes/apps, web site data
Policy/Government data: equity, budgets, spending, UNESCO literacy data, deprivation and
marginalisation in education, participation
In addition to information about open licensing, a more detailed description of an open data set may
include:
62
Provenance
Reference (gov data, geo-data, etc.) - e.g. national curriculum
Location of schools, Unis etc
Core/Internal (course catalogue, course resources, staff data, buildings, etc.)
User-generated/contributed (user activities, assessments, etc.)
Granularity
individual/personal
aggregated/analytics
report
Descriptiveness
data streams (multimedia resources)
data content (textual content, database)
resource metadata
content metadata
paradata (as in metadata about data collection)
Content
Usage/activity data (paradata as in the learning analytics definition)
student personal info
student profiles (interest, demographics, etc.)
student trajectories
curriculum / learning objectives / learning outcomes
educational resources (multimedia or not)
resources metadata (including library collections, reading lists -- see Talis Aspire)
assessment/grades
institutional performance (e.g., ofsted, KIS)
resource outputs (publication repositories, etc.), research management data (projects and
funding, etc.), research data
cost and student funding data, budgets and finances
Classifications/disciplines/topics (e.g. JACS)
Further Resources
Call for more data on job placements of PhD students [https://chronicle.com/article/Just-Look-atthe-Data-if-You/139795/]
Linked Universities [http://linkeduniversities.org]
Linked Education [http://linkeduniversities.org]
UK Department for Education: Open data
strategy [http://data.gov.uk/sites/default/files/DfE%20Open%20Data%20Strategy_0_10.pdf]
40. Creating Open Data
How you open up data is covered in detail in the Open Data Handbook. There are three key rules
recommend when opening up data:
Keep it simple. Start out small, simple and fast. There is no requirement that every dataset must
be made open right now. Starting out by opening up just one dataset, or even one part of a large
dataset, is fine – of course, the more datasets you can open up the better.
Remember this is about innovation. Moving as rapidly as possible is good because it means you
can build momentum and learn from experience – innovation is as much about failure as success
and not every dataset will be useful.
Engage early and engage often. Engage with actual and potential users and reusers of the data
as early and as often as you can, be they citizens, businesses or developers. This will ensure that
the next iteration of your service is as relevant as it can be.
It is essential to bear in mind that much of the data will not reach ultimate users directly, but
rather via ‘info-mediaries’. These are the people who take the data and transform or remix it to
be presented. For example, most of us don’t want or need a large database of GPS coordinates,
we would much prefer a map. Thus, engage with infomediaries first. They will reuse and
repurpose the material.
Address common fears and misunderstandings. This is especially important if you are working
with or within large institutions such as government. When opening up data you will encounter
plenty of questions and fears. It is important to (a) identify the most important ones and (b)
address them at as early a stage as possible.
Opening Up Data
Choose the dataset(s) you plan to make open. Keep in mind that you can (and may need to)
return to this step if you encounter problems at a later stag
Apply an open license.
Determine what intellectual property rights exist in the data.
Apply a suitable ‘open’ license that licenses all of these rights
Make the data available - in bulk and in a useful format. You may also wish to consider
alternative ways of making it available such as via an API.
Make it discoverable - post on the web and perhaps organize a central catalogue to list your
open datasets.
When making data open it's important to think about the possible ethical implications of a release. A
useful resource in thinking about this is the OER Research Hub Ethics Manual.
Machine-readable data
While human users are unequivocally the ultimate consumers of open data, as in education so in any
other domain, human interaction is not necessarily the only means to consume and process these
data until they are delivered to end-users in a form that responds to their needs. More often it will be
for software systems, in the form of applications and services, to take the role of consuming data and
delivering them, or a byproduct thereof, to the user.
Much existing content, however, is presented or even simply exists in a form that is for the human
brain to process, such as natural language text, images and audio-visual footage. Although there are
63
technologies for software systems to extract meaningful data out of this content, a cleaner and less
error-prone way is for the data providers to publish their content in a machine-readable form. In most
cases, these data do not replace their natural language or audio-visual forms: on the contrary, they
can be used to enhance the content presented in human-readable form in a variety of ways.
Common open data technologies:
CSV, XML, Linked Data
Common Data Management
RDBMS
Common tracking tech.
Logs, analytics platform
Specific metadata standards
XCRI, MLO, LRMI, LOM, ...
Linked Data
A fundamental principle to be understood concerning the availability of linked data as resources
reachable via a URI, is that they do not prevent the same resource to be presented in another format
on the same URI. It is not implied that pasting the same URI in a Web browser will necessarily deliver
an RDF document that describes that resource, just as it does not mean that only one RDF format can
be delivered at that address. Thanks to modern Web Service standards such as the REST architectural
style, for any URI an application can negotiate on-the-fly a format that both the application itself and
the data provider support.
41. Using Open Data
Well-defined use cases are starting to emerge but can be still hard to find. It would be good to find use cases for
policy makers, university managers, academic instructor, researchers, policy and education departments and in
the vocational area. This section discusses some case studies and provides information about a range of projects
using open data for education.
Open Discovery Space Case Study
The EU funded Open Discovery Space (ODS) project aims to create a platform for teachers across
Europe for sharing and repurposing of open educational resources. This objective is covered well in
the resources section of this handbook. However, ODS, also deals with mining data and usage for
further improving the value chain of educational resources and open education. It creates a social
data layer around education resources that crowd sources appreciation and usage data. Social data
in this context is appreciation metadata that further describes a resource. It comprises intentional
user inputs such as likert scale star ratings, comments, free or guided tags, shares, etc. From these
datasets aggregations can be used in an infinite number of mashups to provide e.g. resource
recommendations or karma measures. In addition, ODS also uses tracking data (called paradata)
which collects users’ activities in the ODS portal (e.g. looking at a resource, downloading, etc). This
allows for other statistical analytics such as most looked at, or most downloaded resource. In more
sophisticated ways it also permits to draw conclusions about the similarity of users that looked at or
downloaded the same resources or that follow similar type users. Analogous methods are well known
from social networks (Facebook: “friends you may know”, Twitter: “people who you may want to
follow”), sales sites (Amazon: “people who looked at this also looked at…”), or review portals
(Tripadvisor: “most popular or most highly rated hotel”).
ODS goes beyond collecting data from users of the portal alone, but also harvests social data from
other OER portals. This is to say that if a user star-rates a resource in a sister portal to ODS, this
rating will enter the ODS ratings data through a data harvesting cycle. In this way, opinion mining is
not restricted to a single portal alone and enhances the value of the resource descriptor no matter
where the users tag it. Harvesting social metadata from other portals encounters no legal obstacles,
even if this data is not linked open data, because: (1) it is anonymous data and cannot be connected
to a user’s identity, (2) there is no copyright associated with protecting user expressions like star
ratings, bookmarks or keyword tags. This is because it does not constitute an act of (substantial)
creativity on behalf of the author of such social metadata.
ODS not only re-uses social data from associated repositories, it also aims at exposing its own data as
open linked data to other third party service providers. It has to be said, though, that paradata
(recording user activities in the portal) is not going to be exposed due to ethical and privacy reasons.
64
Higher Education
Equipment data: The development of equipment.data is funded by EPSRC in response to the
need to improve visibility and utilisation of UK research equipment. This relatively simple
technology enables searching across all published UK research equipment databases through
one aggregation “portal”, allowing greater accessibility with the aim to improve efficiency and
stimulate greater collaboration in the sector. The data used is available to download from the
site.
Interacting with Linked Data [http://greententacle.techfak.unibielefeld.de/~cunger/qald/2/proceedings_ILD2012.pdf]
Discovering Open University Content from Other Online Resources
[http://discou.info / http://data.open.ac.uk/applications/iswc2012-demo.pdf]
Interpreting Data Mining Results with Linked Data for Learning Analytics
[http://data.open.ac.uk/applications/lak2013.pdf]
65
School
London Schools Atlas: The London Schools Atlas is an innovative interactive online map providing
a uniquely detailed and comprehensive picture of London schools, current patterns of
attendance and potential future demand for school places. Data behind the atlas is available
from the data store.
RM Schoolfinder: School Finder allows you to compare and contrast different schools, find out
about what they excel at and how well children do academically. Most of the information comes
from official statistical releases published by the Department for Education and Ofsted including
School Performance Tables, GCSE Subject Results, school information from Edubase and
summaries of the Ofsted school inspection report.
Guardian GCSE schools guide: The Guardian GCSE schools guide is designed to help parents find
and research local schools in England. Search by postcode to find which schools offer individual
subjects, and compare how they have performed in GCSE results. Data is supplied by the
Department of Education. School impact measures are based upon FFT contextual value-added
scores by permission of FFT Education Ltd.
Ofstead School Data Dashboard: The School Data Dashboard provides a snapshot of school
performance at Key Stages 1, 2 and 4. The dashboard can be used by school governors and by
members of the public to check the performance of the school in which they are interested. The
data is available in RAISEonline - you will need to login to access the data and not all is openly
available.
Shule.info: Shule.info presents Tanzanian Form 4 exam results in some very interesting ways.,
the site was put together by a group of young Tanzanian software developers, led by Arnold
Minde, with some support from Twaweza. The site uses open data from the Tanzanian
government.
E-school Estonia - Provides an easy way for education stakeholders to collaborate and organize
teaching/learning information. The system has a range of different functions for its various
users. Teachers enter grades and attendance information in the system, post homework
assignments, and evaluate students’ behavior. Parents use it to stay closely involved in their
children’s education. With the help of round-the-clock access via the internet, they can see their
children’s homework assignments, grades, attendance information and teacher’s notes, as well
as communicate directly with teachers via the system. Students can read their own grades and
keep track of what homework has been assigned each day. They also have an option to save
their best work in their own, personal e-portfolios. District administrators have access the latest
statistical reports on demand, making it easy to consolidate data across the district’s schools.
Education GPS - the OECD source for internationally comparable data on education policies and
practices, opportunities and outcomes. Accessible any time, in real time, the Education GPS
provides you with the latest information on how countries are working to develop high-quality
and equitable education systems.
http://thelearningcurve.pearson.com/ - The Learning Curve Index combines national data and a
number of international rankings - including PISA, TIMSS and PIRLS - to provide an interpretation
of how countries systems are performing relative to each other.
The Open Institute based in Nairobi worked on KCPE Trends which aggregates and visualizes
education performance data for the Kenya Certificate of Primary Education (KCPE) from 2006 to
2011.
In Brazil the school census collects data about violence in school area (like drug traffic or other
risks to pupils). Based on an open data platform developed to navigate through the census, it
was possible to see that, in a specific Brazilian state, 35% of public schools had drug traffic near
the schools. This fact created a pressure in the local government to create a public policy and a
campaign to prevent drug use among students: https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?
set=a.484468108297027.1073741826.273872446023262&type=3.
66
In Burkina Faso they have opened their open data portal (data.gov.bf). The open data team of
the government have worked with civil society and some start-up to realise a pilot project that
consist on visualizing on a map the primary schools of a municipality. In addition, some important
indicators for Burkina were present. Those indicators (proximity of canteen, latrine, or potable
water point) can help parents choose the best school for their children, investors to choose the
better place to build a school, or the government itself to measure the impact of its actions.
They also have information on success rates in examinations, the number of classes, the
number of teachers, the number of girls and boys, the geo-localisation of the school, and we also
displayed a picture of the school.
Kenya - http://openinstitute.com/portfolio-item/kcpe-trends-roundtable/ - Using data that we
collected from the Kenya National Examinations Council (KNEC) and the Kenya Open Data Portal,
the Open Institute released KCPE Trends (http://apps.openinstitute.com/kcpetrends), a simple
tool designed to visualise Kenya Certificate of Primary Education (KCPE) performance records of
primary schools in Kenya from 2006 to 2011.
Social Accountability for the Education Reform in Moldova - website for enabling the public to
monitor the schools performance (http://expert-grup.org/en/proiecte/item/916-gpsa-moldova).
We've put up the planned expenditures for all the schools in Moldova (2014),
on http://www.budgetstories.md/bugetul-scolii-2014/, until we build the new website. There is
budget expenditure for 2013 and investment for capital repairs, data displayed using
OpenSpending's treemap.
Open Government Data: Helping Parents to find the Best School for their Kids (World
Bank). http://blogs.worldbank.org/ic4d/open-government-data-helping-parents-find-best-schooltheir-kids
Discover Your School, developed under the Province of British Columbia of Canada Open Data
Initiative, is a platform for parents who are interested in finding a school for their kids, learning
about the school districts or comparing schools in the same area. The application provides
comprehensive information, such as the number of students enrolled in schools each year, class
sizes, teaching language, disaster readiness, results of skills assessment, and student and parent
satisfaction. Information and data can be viewed in interactive formats, including maps. On top
of that, Discover Your School engages parents in policy making and initiatives such as Erase
Bullying or British Columbia Education Plan.
The School Portal, developed under the Moldova Open Data Initiative, uses data made public by
the Ministry of Education of Moldova to offer comprehensive information about 1529 educational
institutions in the Republic of Moldova. Users of the portal can access information about schools
yearly budgets, budget implementation, expenditures, school rating, students’ grades, schools’
infrastructure and communications. The School Portal has a tool which allows visitors to compare
schools based on different criteria – infrastructure, students’ performance or annual budgets.
The additional value of the portal is the fact that it serves as a platform for private sector entities
which sell school supplies to advertise their products. The School Portal also allows parents to
virtually interact with the Ministry of Education of Moldova or with a psychologist in case they
need additional information or have concerns regarding the education of their children.
RomaScuola, developed under the umbrella of the Italian Open Data Initiative, allows visitors to
obtain valuable information about all schools in the Rome region. Distinguishing it from the two
listed above is the ability to compare schools depending on such facets as frequency of teacher
absence, internet connectivity, use of IT equipment for teaching, frequency of students’ transfer
to other schools and quality of education in accordance with the percentage of issued diplomas.
Open Data for Education in Brazil (http://stop.zona-m.net/2013/03/open-data-for-education-inbrazil/)
In New Zealand: open government data on schools in an app to help you find schools in local
area https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/recredible/id620437846?mt=8
Education.data.gov (http://www.data.gov/education/ ) provides a wealth of information about
education in the USA. The Open Data inventory (http://datainventory.ed.gov/AboutTheInventory)
provides more data reported to the Department of Education.
Brazil example where local schools analysed data on crime in the local area and used this to
encourage government intervention. (http://fundacaolemann.org.br/novidades/qedu-e-fonte-dedados-para-campanha-sobre-drogas-nas-escolas-do-df)
Bahawalpur Service Delivery Unit (BSDU), an initiative by the Government of Punjab province in
Pakistan, aims to engage citizens in the governance of service delivery. Led by Imran Sikandar
Baloch, District Coordination Officer of Bahawalpur district in Punjab, this initiative is built on
open data and has already delivered increased attendance of teachers and students over the
past year. Technology and design partner for this initiative is Technology for People Initiative
based at the Lahore University of Management Sciences. It features a mobile app that allows
officials and citizens to monitor attendance by teachers and students at school. The information
is aggregated online and made publicly accessible. The aim is to enable and motivate citizens to
67
collect, analyze and disseminate service delivery data in order to drive performance and help
effective decision making. The initiative has led to improved teacher attendance, which in turn
has led to improved pupil grades. By showing how open data can help in the developing world,
BDSU won the Making Voices Count global innovation competition.
Check My School is a social accountability initiative designed and instituted by the Affiliated
Network for Social Accountability in East Asia and the Pacific (ANSA-EAP), and uses a blended
approach through on-the-ground mobilization effort and community monitoring, tapping modern
technology as a key tool. The CMS project is supported by the Open Society Institute and the
World Bank Institute. http://www.checkmyschool.org
Open Education Challenge (http://openeducationchallenge.eu) is an EU funded initiative to
support projects who receive mentoring and seed funding through the European Incubator for
Innovation in Education. Their ten finalists present different approaches to the use of open data
in education.
Using open data relating to the UK education system. As part of the Open Data Challenge
Education, the Open Data Institute has compiled a set of interesting resources, including a list of
potentially interesting datasets.
42. Open Data And Learning Analytics
Online education is producing vast amounts of data about students. Much of these online courses are
openly available and the data from them should be too. The data will enable academic institutions and
course providers to deliver their courses more efficiently and more appropriately to their students. It
will also allow students to personalize their educational experience to best suit their needs. Data
collected can include administrative data, demographic information, grade information, attendence
and activity data, engagement metrics, course selection etc.
Learning analytics is defined as the measurement, collection, analysis and reporting of data about
learners and their contexts, for purposes of understanding and optimising learning and the
environments in which it occurs
Data from online courses can:
Enable grade prediction and student success
Improve student retention
Determine what learners know and what they currently do not know
Monitor learner engagement
Personalize learning
Ensure relevant content is delivered
Reduce classroom administrative work
Measure student performance
Have other uses yet to be discovered
Open data can support students:
Through creation of new tools that enable new ways to analyse and access data e.g. maps of
disabled access, tools for disciplines
By enriching resources, making it easier to share and find them, and how to personalize the way
they are presented
By allowing student to explore resources, concepts, ideas and objects in various areas
To make informed choices on education e.g. by comparing scores, course data etc.
Open data can support education institutions:
Learning analytics data can help retain students
Use data can enable efficiencies in practice e.g. library data can help support book purchasing
Benchmarking and performance measuring
Providing real world examples for learning
68
43. Open Source Education Tools
Open source software is software where the source code is openly licensed so others can change and
distribute the software to anyone and for any purpose.
Naturally the open community are keen to support open tools and there are a significant number of
open source open education tools available.
There is a considerable amount of open source software for use in the education sector. An
impressive list is available from OSSWatch (http://oss-watch.ac.uk/resources/ossoptionseducation)
The Free Software Foundation Europe(FSDE) also write a blog and have a section on education:
http://blogs.fsfe.org/guido/category/education/
Other Resources
Why Aren’t More Schools Using Free, Open Tools? [http://blogs.kqed.org/mindshift/2014/06/whyarent-more-schools-using-free-open-education-resources/]
Open Source School: An initiative to replace monolithic and proprietary educational technology
with open source software. [http://opensourceschools.org/]
69
44. Open Data For Education: LinkedUp Challenge
The LinkedUp Project organised the LinkedUp Challenge: three consecutive competitions looking for
interesting and innovative tools and applications that analyse and/or integrate open web data for
educational purposes. Here are some of the highlights from the shortlists.
LinkedUp Veni Shorlisted Entries - Use Cases
There were 8 shortlised entries in the LinkedUp Veni competition. They offer real-world examples of
how linked and open data can be used in an educational way. Three of the shortlisted demos and
tools show how linked data from various resources allows learners to explore resources, concepts,
ideas and objects in various areas.
Knownodes is a collaborative websites that enables relating, defining and exploring connections
between web resources and ideas, making use of graph visualizations. Knownodes scored high
on educational innovation.
Mismuseos connects museum data with sources including Europeana, Dbpedia and Geonames.
With Mismuseos, learners can browse and explore the backgrounds and relations between
objects from multiple Spanish museums.
ReCredible is a browsable topic map with wikipedia-like content next to it. The topic library
showcases interesting topics varying from dog breeds and alternative medicine to
nanotechnology and information systems.
Another focus, which can be seen in the next three shortlisted candidates, is how open and linked
data can be used for enriching resources, making it easier to share and find them, and how to
personalize the way they are presented.
DataConf is a mobile mashup that enriches conference publications. The reviewers applauded its
nice and effective design. DataConf is especially useful at the graduate education level.
We-Share is a social annotation application for educational ICT tools. We-Share can help
educators to find tools to support teaching at all educational levels, and received high scores on
educational innovation.
YourHistory is a Facebook app that makes history tangible by showing historic and global events
that are related to your own life events and your interests.
Last but not least, the next two applications are less generic than the previous ones, but both of them
are great examples on how effective use of linked data can help to learn about and make sense of
the world we live in.
Globe-Town is a ‘fun to use’ tool that lets users find out the most important trade partners,
migrant populations and airline routes of their own countries. It also provides infographics on
issues regarding society, environment and economy.
Polimedia connects transcripts of the Dutch parliament with media coverage in newspapers and
radio bulletins. Polimedia employs innovative information techniques and provides an attractive
front-end that invites exploration and browsing.
LinkedUp Vidi Shorlisted Entries - Use Cases
In the LinkedUp Vidi Competition we asked for tools and demos that analyse or integrate open web
data for educational purposes. We received fourteen submissions with innovative ideas in areas such
as agriculture, arts and medicine.
Apart from innovative aspects, attractiveness, usefulness and other forms of ‘awesomeness’, our
evaluation panel also looked at the relevance for education, the usability and performance of the
70
tools, the data it uses or provides, and the way privacy and other legal aspects were dealt with.
It was not an easy task to select the nine submissions for the shortlist, and not all of the panelists’
personal favorite submissions are included. What we do all agree upon is that the following demos
and tools are really outstanding examples on how to use open data for education.
Open track submissions
The open track received seven submissions that all aim to make it easier to find or explore data.
Some tools even allow you to connect data.
Two submissions seem to provide just a simple search box, but there is far more behind it.
AGRIS links bibliographic references from the agricultural domain to external datasets, among
others DBPedia, World Bank and nature.com. For end-users – researchers, scientists, cataloguers
– it is simply a single point of access to these resources. AGRIS also provides a Sparql endpoint.
[Read more about AGRIS]
Solvonauts is an open educational search engine, which searches over 1,500 open educational
resource end points. All resources are licensed Creative Commons or Public Domain. They also
have plugins for Moodle and WordPress. [Read more about Solvonauts]
The following tools have been made for connecting things and people with one another.
Rhizi is the revamped version of KnowNodes, which was submitted to our Veni competition. Rhizi
allows users to make connections between things, such as blogs, research data, video segments
and people. The site is interactive, with chat, commenting, notifications, voting and a reputation
system. [Read more about Rhizi]
Konnektid is all about connecting people for educational purposes. When you want to learn
something you can ask the people nearby to help you. If you allow the system to do so, it creates
your personal profile based on data from Facebook, Google+, Twitter and Linkedin. [Read more
about Konnektid]
LOD Stories lets you connect artworks, artists and places into a chain that functions as a
storyboard.
The cool thing is that you can actually transform the storyboard into a narrated video. In order to
get this done, LOD Stories exploits DBPedia. [Read more about LOD Stories]
Finally, the next two tools help you to make sense of data with various visualizations.
DBLPXplorer is a browsing and exploration interface for the DBLP computer science
bibiliography, which provides insight in research published at conferences. The attractive
visualizations are made with D3 and based on DBLP data, annotated using WikipediaMiner. They
also expose the DBLP data via a Sparql endpoint. [Read more about DBLPXplorer]
TuVaLabs has a growing number of interesting datasets on various topics, including drought in
California, AIDS and Barbie. Students and teachers can explore and visualize these datasets and
teachers can create activities or assignments around them, to stimulate them to think critically
about data. [Read more about Tuvalabs]
Focused track submissions: Simplificator
The Simplificator track called for applications that make access to complex information easier by
71
The Simplificator track called for applications that make access to complex information easier by
summarizing them in a simpler form. We received two interesting submissions.
This visualization of labour conflicts in the Netherlands for the last 700 years connects statistical
data on strikes with articles from the Dutch KB newspaper archive. It provides several timeline
and map overviews that allow you to zoom in to a particular period. [Read more about
visualization of labour conflicts in the Netherlands for the last 700 years]
eDL is an app that can be used for creating semantically enriched electronic Discharge Letters,
for patients who leave the hospital. eDL uses various knowledge sources and vocabularies to
ensure that patient information can be automatically translated into another language. Patients
can use the eDL for finding relevant background information about their diagnoses. [Read more
about eDL]
LinkedUp Vici Shorlisted Entries - Use Cases
The LinkedUp Vici Competition is the last competition on tools and demos that use open data for
educational purposes. This time we asked for mature prototypes that are actually in use or that have
been used.
We received thirteen submissions that have been evaluated by a panel of experts, who rated the
submissions on their innovative aspects, attractiveness, usefulness, usability, performance, use of
data, and the way privacy and other legal aspects were dealt with.
We are happy to announce the shortlist of ten submissions, which are all running sites or apps that
you can try out yourself.
Several submissions bundle and offer open educational resources to growing educational
communities.
AGRIS from the FAO of the United Nations provides access to publications on food and agriculture.
Linked data and mash-up techniques are used to create one hub for different repositories. “Even
though the application displays a lot of information in a single page, it is still easy to use”, according to
one reviewer.
Didactalia, developed by the people from GNOSS (who participated before), helps you to browse, find
and use learning material on many different topics, for different age groups and from various
educational repositories. The reviewers found it an outstanding initiative. Currently, most material is in
Spanish.
LearnWeb-OER gives users the opportunity to search for resources from the Web and to reuse them
in a learning context. The platform allows for collaborative searching and sharing. The reviewers
could see that the tool would be very useful to students and teachers alike.
Two other submissions use and enhance existing material to provide users with novel opportunities
for learning.
FLAX is a site that helps you to learn a language by reading and watching open source material,
72
varying from TED talks to academic collections. Learn to distinguish different word types and the
context in which particular words are typically used. The reviewers called it a “very sophisticated
application that is also easy to use”.
As the name already indicates, HyperTED lets you explore TED talks. It automatically annotates the
textual material, recognizes where the main concepts and topics are discussed and provides quick
links to reference sites while you watch. The reviewers found it a great addition to watching ‘talking
heads’ online.
GroupMOOC is not a site but an app (for the iPhone) that you can use for creating course plans based
on MOOCs (Massive Open Online Courses). You can check your workload and deadline, and connect
and collaborate with groups of friends. The reviewers noted that “A MOOC agregator with social
network functionality addresses a real need”.
The final two submissions to the open track use visualization techniques for making it easier to find
and connect information.
ResXplorer focuses on scientific publication and shows you
relations between authors, papers and conferences. By clicking on an author, paper or conference
you make it the center of the next round of exploration. The reviewers found it “a good looking site
with actionable information’.
Histropedia lets you interactively build and publish timelines that give an overview on events in
history, based on data in Wikidata and Wikipedia. Teachers can create their own timelines by
combining events that they think should be included. “A powerful tool for fast timeline creation.”
Last but not least, the shortlist contains two submissions to the Focused Tracks of the competition.
The creators of these submissions spent a great of effort to work with the data required for these
tracks and to address the track-specific goals.
ISCOOL is a serious game, submitted to the focused track ‘Supporting Developing Countries’. It is an
informal learning environment that creates a visual game based on the text that you provide. The
reviewers found it “a very innovative idea that could help particular aspects of the learning very well”.
The visualization of Water Resources & Ecology provides rich
means to search journals, tweets and Wikipedia annotations. The interactive visualizations address
the targeted content track, proposed and supported by Elsevier, to see how linked data can be used
for making the learning experience more appealing and enhanced. The reviewers spent quite some
time clicking around and were “overall happy with the interface and with the data”.
45. Open Data - Useful Links
Two useful starting points come in the form of other handbooks:
73
Open Data handbook http://opendatahandbook.org/
The Data Journalism Handbook http://datajournalismhandbook.org/
There are also many online resources on the subject of open data:
LinkedUp competition: http://linkedup-challenge.org
LinkedUniversities: http://linkeduniversities.org
LinkedEducation: http://linkededucation.org
Katy Boner – her research focuses on the development of data analysis and visualization
techniques for information access, understanding, and management. She is particularly
interested in the study of the structure and evolution of scientific disciplines; the analysis and
visualization of online activity; and the development of cyberinfrastructures for large scale
scientific collaboration and computation. http://ella.slis.indiana.edu/~katy/
Equipment.data.ac.uk - Funded byEPSRC in response to the need to improve visibility and
utilisation of UK research equipment. Enables searching across all published UK research
equipment databases through one aggregation “portal”, allowing greater accessibility with the
aim to improve efficiency and stimulate greater collaboration in the sector. The technology
behind this development has been a partnership between a number of UK universities, primarily
outcomes of the UNIQUIP Project.
ViVo network - Network of scientists facilitating scholarly discovery. Institutions will participate in
the network by installing VIVO, or by providing semantic web-compliant data to the
network. http://vivoweb.org/
LRMI - The Learning Resource Metadata Initiative (LRMI) is working to make it easier to publish,
discover, and deliver quality educational resources on the web. http://www.lrmi.net/
Linked Data for Open and Distance Learning by Mathieu D’Aquin - Commonwealth of
Learning http://www.col.org/resources/publications/Pages/detail.aspx?PID=420
BBC knowledge and learning - The BBC Knowledge and Learning product will bring together
factual and learning content from over 100 existing BBC
websites. http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/internet/posts/Knowledge-Learning-Product
LAK data challenge - The LAK dataset provides access to structured metadata from research
publications in the field of learning
analytics http://lak.linkededucation.org,http://www.solaresearch.org/events/lak/lak-datachallenge/
LUCERO project - Linking University Content for Education and Research Online http://luceroproject.info/
XCRI - The XCRI Knowledge Base was created in response to requests from educational
institutions to Jisc for a single source of information on XCRI - the information model and schema
recommended by the national Information Standards Board in January 2009 as the UK
eProspectus standard. http://www.xcri.co.uk/
MLO - Metadata for Learning Opportunities - Advertising (MLO-AD), supported by CEN WS-LT
(CWA 15903:2008), is a European standardized model addressing metadata sufficient for
advertising a learning opportunity. http://www.cen-ltso.net/main.aspx?put=1042
Ariadne - ARIADNE has created a standards-based technology infrastructure that allows the
publication and management of digital learning resources in an open and scalable
way. http://www.ariadne-eu.org/
PAR framework- The Predictive Analytics Reporting (PAR) Framework is a non-profit multiinstitutional data mining collaborative that brings together 2 year, 4 year, public, proprietary,
traditional, and progressive institutions to collaborate on identifying points of student loss and to
find effective practices that improve student retention in U.S. higher
education. http://wcet.wiche.edu/advance/par-framework
Which? University - brings together information that exists about UK full-time and part-time
undergraduate courses, including the Guardian and Times league tables, official employment
and satisfaction statistics and UCAS course information. http://university.which.co.uk/
EDUCATION.DATA.GOV.UK - contains a snapshot of Edubase taken in 2009 and published as
linked data.
Pan-European open data porta - PublicData.eu is a Pan European data portal, providing access to
open, freely reusable datasets from local, regional and national public bodies across Europe.
74
The Global Partnership for Education today launched its Open Data Project, providing instant
access to key education indicators and more than 11,000 data points from 29 GPE developing
country partners. For each country, the GPE Data catalog presents 57 indicators in 6 education
categories encompassing key elements of each country's education sector, including domestic
and external financing, learning outcomes and aid effectiveness indicators. Developing country
partners played a central role in gathering and validating the data, which reflects their specific
national education strategies and objectives.
EUCLID project- EUCLID is a European project facilitating professional training for data
practitioners, who aim to use Linked Data in their daily work. EUCLID delivers a curriculum
implemented as a combination of living learning materials and activities (eBook series, webinars,
facetoface training), validated by the user community through continuous
feedback. http://euclid-project.eu
Wikidata is a free knowledge base that can be read and edited by humans and machines alike. It
is for data what Wikimedia Commons is for media files: it centralizes access to and management
of structured data, such as interwiki references and statistical information. Wikidata contains
data in every language supported by the MediaWiki software.
Further Resources
A Survey on Linked Data and the Social Web as facilitators for TEL recommender systems
[http://stefandietze.files.wordpress.com/2013/03/diedragio-recsystel-cameraready.pdf]
Interlinking educational Resources and the Web of Data – a Survey of Challenges and
Approaches [http://stefandietze.files.wordpress.com/2009/01/dietze-et-al-linkededucation-surveyfinal.pdf]
75
OPEN COMMUNITIES
46. CONFERENCES AND EVENTS
47. OPEN EDUCATION DATA - CONFERENCES AND
COMPETITIONS
48. OPEN EDUCATION DIRECTORY
49. OPENNESS AND THE DEVELOPING WORLD
50. WIKIPEDIA
76
46. Conferences And Events
There are several points in the calendar where awareness of openness in education is raised. These
include:
Open Education Week (March): http://www.openeducationweek.org
Open Access Week (October) http://www.openaccessweek.org
Open Data Say (February) http://opendataday.org
Education Freedom Day (January) http://www.educationfreedomday.org
There are also many conferences dedicated to open education which take place all around the world.
Open Education Conferences
Europe:
Online Educa – Annual global elearning conference held in Berlin.
OER14 conference – Annual conference held in the UK, focused on OER.
Mozilla Festival – Annual event usually held in London, lots of teaching and learning activities
related to web.
OKFest – The Open Knowledge Foundation Festival – this year open education is likely to an
important area.
Wikimania - Annual conference centered on Wikimedia projects with tracks dedicated to
education, free culture, open data, and more.
Cetis Conference - Annual Conference from Cetis, UK centre that specialises in technology
innovation and interoperability standards in learning, education and training.
USA:
OPPI - Helsinki Learning Festival: Held in Helsinki, first year in 2014. Focuses on new learning
practices.
OpenEd conference – Annual conference held in US, currently the biggest Open education
conference in the world.
OCWC Conference – Held in the US and organised by the Open Courseware Consortium.
Connections - US conference that brings together leading policy, academic and technology
experts to discuss the future of open education resources (OER) as well as the technologies that
are making this future a possibility.
Non-Western:
Inaugral International Conference on Open and Flexible Learning (ICOFE) – Annual event held last
year in Hong Kong.
International Conference of the African Virtual University – This year was the first year this
conference ran, held in Kenya.
Pan-Commonwealth Forum on Open Learning – Bi-annual event organised by the
Commonwealth of Learning, held in Africa.
Asia Regional OpenCourseWare And Open Education Conference - Held in Kuala Lumpur,
Malaysia and organised by University of Malaya.
EELU ICEL 2014 - EELU International conference on e-learning - Held in Egypt.
OER Asia - Open Educational Resource Community in Asia Symposium - Held in WOU in Penang,
now in its 2nd year.
77
47. Open Education Data - Conferences And Competitions
Data competitions and challenges are not new to universities and research institutes but there is now
also an increasing number taking place outside the academic space. Here are some example
competitions where open data has played, or is playing a role.
Some conferences are devoted to open data and its social and educational value. These include:
Open data dialog - held in Berlin
International World Wide Web Conference (WWW2014), Seoul, Korea
ARIADNE/GLOBE Convening – Open Federations 2013: Open Knowledge Sharing for Education, A
Convening of Aggregators & Networks of Educational Repositories
OKFest – The Open Knowledge Foundation Festival
There are also many 'challenges' which encourage novel or effective uses of open data in education.
These include:
The Open Education Challenge
Website: http://openeducationchallenge.eu
The Open Education Challenge, launched in partnership with the European Commission, is part of
Startup Europe. It is an opportunity for cutting-edge education startups to receive mentoring and
seed funding through the European Incubator for Innovation in Education, and get direct access to
investors from day one. The competition is not focused on open data but open data use is
encouraged.
The Open Data Challenge series
Website: http://theodi.org/challenge-series
The Open Data Institute is running a series of seven challenges to generate innovative and
sustainable open data solutions to social challenges. So far the areas covered have been education,
crime and justice and energy + environment.
The Mass EduData Challenge
Website: http://www.eventbrite.com/e/the-mass-edudata-challenge-registration-11540647387
The Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (DESE) maintains extensive
78
data sets on education from all of the state’s 351 cities and towns and is seeking to spark additional
engagement and innovation around its data through the launch of the Mass EduData Challenge- a six
week competition aimed at engaging the public in viewing, analyzing, and visualizing Massachusetts
educational data to produce new insights, tools, and opportunities to improve outcomes and drive
social benefit in the Commonwealth.
Apps4Europe
Website: http://www.appsforeurope.eu
Apps for Europe is a support network that provides tools to transform ideas for data based apps into
viable businesses. They are bringing together a powerful European network of individuals and
organisations who have been involved in open data programmes and in supporting promising ideas to
help ideas to scale. As part of their programme they are supporting a series of data events,
competitions and hackathons.
Science for Solutions open data competition
Website: http://www.qld.gov.au/dsitia/initiatives/science-open-data/about-competition/
A competition to promote the use, reuse and repurposing of science that is freely available on the
Queensland Government open data portal. The aim is to encourage data visualisations, application
development or other unique treatments of the science datasets provided by the Department of
Science, Information Technology, Innovation and the Arts.
Open Data Stories
Website: http://blog.okfn.org/2014/02/20/enter-the-partnership-for-open-datas-impact-storiescompetition/
Partnership for Open Data (POD) is inviting people to share stories about how open data has positively
impacted you, or those around you; technologically, politically, commercially, environmentally,
socially, or in any other way.
LAK Data Challenge
Website: http://www.solaresearch.org/events/lak/lak-data-challenge/
What do analytics on learning analytics tell us? How can we make sense of this emerging field’s
historical roots, current state, and future trends, based on how its members report and debate their
research? The LAK data challenge uses data sets from the learning analytics field.
Career Hack
79
Website: http://careerhack.appchallenge.net
The CareerHack contest, run by the UK Commission for Employment and Skills (UKCES), asked
developers to find innovative and inspiring ways of using data made available through its Labour
Market Information (LMI) for All data site.
Land Registry Open Data Challenge
Website: http://www.landregistry.gov.uk/campaigns/open-data-challenge
A challenge to develop a creative idea that clearly demonstrates how the Land Registries public data
can make a positive impact on the UK economy. The competition marked the release of the Land
registries price paid data.
Apps voor Ouders Challenge 2012
Website: http://www.openonderwijsdata.nl/2012/05/30/hackathon-workshop-apps-voor-ouderschallenge/
The Dutch network Open Education Data ran an open data hackathon using open data sets from the
Ministry of Education, Culture and Science released through data.duo.nl.
Open Data Challenge
Website: http://opendatachallenge.org
The Open Data Challenge was the first large-scale open data competition with 20,000 euros in prizes
to win, and a total of 430 entries from 24 EU Member States. The winners were selected by an all star
cast of open data gurus, and announced by Vice President of the European Commission Neelie Kroes
at the Digital Agenda Assembly in Brussels.
80
81
48. Open Education Directory
Linked Universities
OKFN Open Bibliography
Learning Analytics Google Group
DCMI Education Community
European Association for Technology-Enhanced Learning
W3C Public Linked Open Data
Adaptive Hypermedia - including Educational Adaptive Hypermedia
ACL Community in Wales
Association of History and Computing-UK
Network for Aimhigher Data Analysts
Advancing Research into Technology Enhanced Learning
BCS Machine Translation
Built Environment E-Learning Network
Data Publication
Evlauation of Online Learning
Combining Data
Technology in support of learning and teaching mathematics in HE
Discussion on components of current and emerging library, publishing, and related bibliographic
metadata
EVIDENCE-BASED-LIBRARIES
Economic and Social Data Service
Educational Development Research Network
CETIS-METADATA
Digging for Data
Research in Distance Learning
EduBlog
e-learning Research
Digital technology in the theatre and theatre education
Issues in museum education
Higher Education CLose Up - research into HE
Data.ac.uk
Web support Jisc mail
Web site info management
Jisc managing research data
Museums Computer Group
DBpedia discussion
Spotlight group
Best Practices for Multilingual Linked Open Data Community Group
Data Driven Standards Community Group
Development Linked Data Community Group
Microdata/RDFa Task Force
Linking Open Data project and the broader Linked Data community
Networked Data Community Group
Semantic Web Activity
Semantic/Open/Data/Community/Group
Web Dev Data Community Group
datameetups
Google Group LODLAM
ePsi Platform: open data in education group
Open practitioners & academics
Ale Armellini, University of Northampton, OER and pedagogy
Grainne Conole, University of Leicester, OER and pedagogy
Simon Kear - Learning Technologist, Goldsmiths?
Chris Follows - Open practice in art and design
Anne-Marie Cunningham - GP and Clinical Lecturer
Martin Weller - Open University
James Clay - Group Director of Learning Technologies at Activate Learning
Diane Laurillard, Institute of Education, open practice - rethinking university teaching
OER Research Hub
82
49. Openness And The Developing World
Open data can help identify gaps in the availability of education and provide simple solutions that can
be delivered through the existing education system. In order to achieve this you need a robust
analytical culture that demonstrates the impact of its work.
To date much work has been on the supply side of the education equation. Improving the quality of
demand is key to making long term changes. Akshara Foundation recognised that a lack of publicly
available data about public education was causing an imbalance between the education system and
its usersand within the system itself, so they set up the Karnataka Learning Partnership.
"We need to bring about transparency and use data-based evidence to push for reforms and
accountability across the system.Usually, that would mean using existing government data, but our
experience has highlighted a lack of technical and legal systems to be able to publish open
educational dataand we have had to create the data sets ourselves."
Akshara Foundation
Karnataka Learning Partnership
Norrag reports on Sub Saharan African education issues and states that :
"Progress in the above areas requires both better use of existing resources and more
resources. There is good scope for improving quality and internal efficiencythrough more
strategic deployment and better management of teachers, improved accountability for teachers and
principals, and provision of more and better training materials. Progress in these areas is often
constrained more by weak technical capacity and political resolve than shortage of funding. But such
constraints often prove more difficult to address than funding constraints."
The Ugandan government allocated funding for schools, but corruption at various levels meant much
of the money never reached its intended destination. Between 1995 and 2001, the proportion of
funding allocated which actually reached the schools rose from 24% to 82%. In the interim, they
initiated a programme of publishing data on how much was allocated to each school. There were
many other factors (Hubbard 2007) but Reinikke and Svensson’s (2004) analysis showed that the data
publication played a significant part.
Reinikka, R., and J. Svensson. May 2004. Local capture: Evidence from a central government
transfer program in Uganda. Quarterly Journal of Economics: 679–705.
Hubbard P. (2007); Putting the Power of Transparency in Context: Information’s Role in Reducing
Corruption in Uganda’s Education Sector; Center for Global Development Working Paper No. 136
accessed at www.cgdev.org/files/15050_file_Uganda.pdf on March 2nd 2012
Uganda Open Government data readiness study
Is money reaching schools in Tanzania? and where does education money go?
Natonal Initiatives:
Moldova : http://bit.ly/19Vwn6N
Nigeria: http://nigeria.opendataforafrica.org/
Rwanda: http://africaopendata.org/group/rwanda
Kenya: https://opendata.go.ke/
Uganda: http://www.opendev.ug
Ghana : http://data.gov.gh/
Sub-national initiatives:
Edo state Nigeria http://data.edostate.gov.ng/
Sub-sector education
CHET South Africa Higher EducaBon Open Data project http://chet.org.za/data/sahe-‐open-‐data
83
50. Wikipedia
Wikipedia, the free online encyclopedia that anyone can edit, is arguably the biggest Open Education
Resource in the world. The Wikimedia Foundation, the overarching foundation of which Wikipedia is a
project, has the following statement at the heart of its mission: "Imagine a world in which every single
human being can freely share in the sum of all knowledge". Wikipedia has been utilised by people all
over over the globe as a way to "find out the answer to things".
Wikipedia continues its fight to be seen as credible in an education context despite the fact that
research has shown Wikipedia to be a hugely useful tool in education. For some, Wikipedia itself
raises significant questions about education and the way we learn.
David White from the University of Oxford explored some of these questions in a talk given at
Wikimania2014. David argues that the fundamental problem with both Google and Wikipedia is that
they are ‘too easy’ and lose the side effect of finding information - learning. The problem is not
Wikipedia but that learning needs to evolve and we need to shift from a 'pedagogy of answers' to a
'pedagogy of questions'.
Other Resources
Wikipedia Education Programme: http://outreach.wikimedia.org/wiki/Education
Wiki Education Foundation: http://wikiedu.org
Wikimania 2014: Wikipedia belongs in Education: http://education.okfn.org/wikimania-2014wikipedia-belongs-in-education/
Wikipedia challenges us to adopt a pedagogy of questions: https://medium.com/teachinglearning/wikipedia-challenges-us-to-adopt-a-pedagogy-of-questions-a6814ed25a76
Almost Wikipedia: What eight early online collaborative encyclopedia projects reveal about the
mechanisms of collective action: http://mako.cc/academic/hill-almost_wikipedia-DRAFT.pdf
84
OTHER
51. GLOSSARY
52. FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS (FAQ)
85
51. Glossary
1:1
Adaptive
learning
Blended
learning
Refers to a programme in which each learner is provided with a device, such as a
laptop or tablet. Can also mean one 'tutor' for each learner.
An educational process that adapts teaching materials and methods to each student’s
individual needs. Several software solutions use learning analytics to provide an
adapted learning path to users.
A teaching approach that combines online and in-person learning, allowing a higher
degree of personalisation and learner autonomy
BOOC
Big Open Online Course. Similar to a MOOC but with a limited number of places.
CMOOC
Connectivism MOOC where learners are expected to make an active contribution via
different digital platforms. Tend to be organised by collections of people rather than
one institution.
Bring Your
Own Device
(BYOD)
Creative
Commons
Data
dashboards
An approach that encourages students to use their personal devices in a school
context for educational purposes.
A non-profit organisation that has designed a series of licenses for the use, reuse and
distribution of materials. Authors can select a license to apply to their work based on
which permissions they wish to attach to their material.
Snapshots of data given in a visual and easy to read way.
Digital
literacy
The essential skills required for using digital technology competently and participating
in our current knowledge society.
DOOC
Distributed Open Online Course. A course format first piloted in September 2013 at 15
colleges in the USA, where professors at each institution teach their own version of the
course based on the same core materials. Each professor can develop additional
materials for their students, and students can collaborate across the network.
Distance
learning
EdTech
E-learning
Flipped
classroom
A broad term used to cover methods of study in which classes are conducted by
correspondence or over the Internet without the student's needing to attend a school
or university. Online learning is a form of distance learning.
An abbreviation for Education Technology, a broad concept that encompasses the
creation and use of technological resources or processes for the purpose of teaching
and learning.
Electronic learning, using a computer or electronic media to deliver elements of
learning either as part of an online course or in a classroom.
A teaching model in which students access directed teaching at home, for example by
watching video lectures, and then using class time to apply new knowledge in a
collaborative and interactive space.
The use of game mechanics and design principles in a (learning) activity to increase
Gamification motivation and engagement. Some examples of game mechanics are competition,
badges, leveling up, and immediate feedback.
Informal
learning
Learning
Learning that takes place outside a dedicated learning environment and delivered in
flexible and informal ways, often focused on the activities and interests of students.
Aquiring knowledge through various means.
Learning
Management A piece of software that manages, analyses, and runs educational courses or
System
programs. Moodle and Blackboard are two popular examples.
(LMS)
Learning
object
Localisation
Machine
learning
Mentor
MOOC
Open
86
Any-sized unit of information or material (whether digital or not) that can be used to
support learning.
Adaptation of OER from any other place to suit the culture, language, and other
requirements of a new other specific local context, where the resulting OER appears to
have been created in the end-user local culture
The science of making computers act without commands, based on the identification
of patterns in large datasets. In education, this technology is being already being used
in MOOC management.
An experienced person who trains and counsels others.
Massive Open Online Course. An online course that is freely accessible to anyone and
often includes open course materials and opportunities for interaction and
collaboration between students.
Educational
Resources
(OER)
Any online material that is freely accessible and openly licensed for anyone to reuse
and repurpose for teaching, learning, and researching.
Online
learning
Online learning refers to courses delivered over the Internet.
Open access
A publishing model whereby authors make their content freely available, albeit often
with partial copyright restrictions or low copyright barriers.
Open
A piece of data or content is open if anyone is free to use, reuse, and redistribute it —
subject only, at most, to the requirement to attribute and/or share-alike.
Open
Awarding participation in new open types of education in new types of ways.
accreditation
Open
assessment
Open
business
models
Open
content
Open
courseware
Open data
The process of making assessment of students work open and driven by community
rather than closed and proprietary.
Using ideas from the open source movement to make money out of open approaches.
Content that is made available under an open licence.
Courses or course components that are available under an open licence.
Open data is data that can be freely used, reused and redistributed by anyone subject only, at most, to the requirement to attribute and sharealike.
Open data in
an
The use of open data for educational purposes, such as enabling improvement of
educational student -led choices.
context
Open
education
data
Open
educational
data
Data, such as administative data created by educational institutions and educational
practices, that is made available under an open licence. It can be used to improve
efficiency, allow students to make informed decisions etc.
Similar to open education data but a broader term that includes open research data.
Open
educational
resources
a digital self-contained unit of self-assessable teaching with an explicit measurable
learning objective, having an open licence clearly attached to allow adapting, and
generally
Open
learning
Learning that incorperates open technologies and approaches.
Open
pedagogy
Teaching that incorperates open technologies and approaches such as use of OERs.
Open learner An individual who embraces open technologies and approaches in their learning.
Open
movement
Open
practice
Open
practitioner
Open
publishers
Open
repository
Open
research
Open
resources
for
education
Open
science
Broad reaching movement who embrace and support aspects of openness, such as
open licensing.
Using open technologies, approaches and open pedagogy as part of teaching.
An individual who embraces open technologies and approaches in their teaching.
Creating news or other content that is transparent to the readers.
A repository that is fully open to users by containing open access materials and openly
licensed metadata.
Research that is conducted using open practices and approaches. Data will be openly
published and research papers will be be open access.
Resources that are openly licensed.
Approaches that enable scientific knowledge to be free to use, re-use and distribute
without legal, technological or social restrictions.
Open source
Software with a free source code that is often developed through peer-production.
software
Anyone can use or modify the code for their own purposes.
87
(OSS)
Public
Domain
Remix
Repurpose
Reuse
SPOC
Teaching
XMOOC
Anyone can use or modify the code for their own purposes.
The collection of works which are not eligible for copyright, whose copyright term has
expired, or whose author has donated the work to the public domain.
the modification or re-interpretation of a resource, possibly combining fragments of
material from various sources.
to make use of a resource either after modification or for a purpose different than
that for which it was originally intended.
to make use of a resource as it is, for its intended purpose.
Self-Paced Open Course. Similar to a flipped classroom, it is a university course that
heavily uses online resources and technology. This course format is currently being
piloted on the edX platform.
The act of sharing and imparting knowledge and supporting learners.
Originally a MOOC as an eXtension of another course. XMOOCs require less interaction
and tend to be delivered by individual institutions.
Other Resources
Open Education Europa: Key concepts in EdTech and Open Education
Open Educational Resources Toolkit - Glossary
SI521 "Open Educational Resources at the University of Michigan" Open Textbook/Glossary
MOOCS.com - MOOC, SPOC, What? Untangling the Online Course Vocabulary
Edshelf - The Education Technology Dictionary
Common Sense Media - EdTech Glossary
COL: OER TIPS Framework with CC Glossary
88
52. Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Is fair dealing/use equivalent to OER?
No. Fair dealing and fair use rights are critical, but that is not the same as OER. See the OER
definition.
Can OER be used to train teachers?
Yes, and this a key activity especially in the developing world.
Is a MOOC an OER?
MOOCs can be OERs if and only if their content is free to access and openly licensed (or public
domain) to legally allow the '4 Rs' (reuse, redistribute, revise, remix).
What is the role of OER in open pedagogy/ open learning?
An open learner is an individual who embraces open technologies and approaches in their
learning. An open learner model a type of learner model that encourages learner autonomy
through self-awareness and self-regulation of the learning process.
How does policy relate to open education?
Open policies support the adoption and development of OER and OER uptake. They can help
establish climates where open practices can have impact.
What support exists for open policy/policies?
Creative Commons, OKFN, SPARC and many other open advocates are building an Open Policy
Network (http://openpolicynetwork.org) to support governments, systems and institutions as they
create, adopt and implement open policies.
What is an open practitioner?
The term 'open practitioner' isn't widely used but suggests an educator who embraces open
technologies and approaches in their teaching.
What is Open Accreditation?
Open accreditation is about awarding participation in new types of education. Open Badges are
an example of dealing with accreditation, but you can also think about how MOOC participation
can be awarded to make it more acceptable as part of a more traditional (eg. university)
education. Other open assessment ideas include e-assessment, portfolios/diaries, PLEs, selfevaluation and learner created content.
What is the difference between open education and open learning?
Open learning is a term used to describe activities that either enhance learning opportunities
within formal education systems or broaden learning opportunities beyond formal education
systems. It often uses open education elements - such as open educational resources - but
typically occurs within formal education infrastructure while open education per se is arguably
unrestricted to formal learners.
89