innovative projects in the publishing of open educational resources
DESCRIPTION
A presentation given as part of the Open Access Week 2009 at University of Toronto. These slides don't mean much by themselves, but an Adobe Connect recording is here: http://connect.oise.utoronto.ca/p98085499/ and you can download the MP3 here: http://www.archive.org/download/InnovativeProjectsInThePublishingOfOpenEducationalResources/InnovativeProjectsOER.mp3 Abstract: In Norway, the provincial governments allocate a percentage of the funds for purchasing textbooks to develop an open curriculum database for high school students. In Indonesia, the government purchases the copyright to several hundred school textbooks and makes them available online, to encourage local printers to make cheap editions. In India, the largest university in the world made all their teaching materials available online. In China, the government runs a large national competition for top level courses, making teaching more prestigious, and simultaneously sharing the results. Around the world, universities, regions and national governments are developing innovative projects that make educational resources freely available online. This presentation will present a number of case studies, discussing institutional incentives and the potential benefits from open sharing. It will also introduce the Peer2Peer University, a free online collaborative learning platform that forms learning groups around the open educational resources that exist. Stian Håklev is a second-year MA student in the Higher Education program. He is a co-founder of the Peer2Peer University, a co-chair of OISE's Open Access sub-committee, and has given a number of international talks on the topic of open education. Event sponsored by the Education Commons, OISE, University of TorontoTRANSCRIPT
Innovative Projects in the Publishing of Open Educational Resources
OA Week 2009OISEUniversity of Toronto
Stian Hå[email protected]
October 19, 2009
Innovative projects
A look at how people have organized and fundedOER projects around the world for various purposes.
Finally, introduce a project that aims to build communities of learners around these OER collections.
Sustainability problem: It’s expensive to make OERs.
Open Educational Resources
Definition: OER are teaching, learning and research resources that reside in the public domain or have been released under an intellectual property license that permits their free use or re-purposing by others. Open educational resources include full courses, course materials, modules, textbooks, streaming videos, tests, software, and any other tools, materials or techniques used to support access to knowledge. (1)
Key Questions
What kind of material is made available?
Who are doing the project?
What is their purpose?
Who is funding it?
How are they justifying the funding?
(How is it being used?)
MIT OCW
OCWC
ocwc members
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tec de monter course
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ou korea
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israel ocw
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UMICH
UiO
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?
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NPTELHRD
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OU.UK
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JPKC
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WIKIVERSITY
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CMU OLI
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IND TBOOKS
ind textbook main
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ind textbook fpag
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ind textb content
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BSE
bs-e main
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NDLA
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FHSST
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FWK
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OHS
It is expensive to make OERs.How to make it sustainable?
It is expensive to make OERs
Get lot’s of money
foundations
still have to justify it
not likely to last
It is expensive to make OERs
Justify costs
part of national/institutional mission
utility to formal education
“freemium” model
OER is side effect of something else (research, quality improvement)
It is expensive to make OERs
Reduce costs
Integrate into ordinary production process
Use student labor
Community of volunteers
P2PU
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Thank you!
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Credit
PicturesLightbulb, by tallpomlin @ flickr (is.gd/4qei2)Backgrounds, by Photoshop Roadmap @ flickr (is.gd/4qMum)Money, by Photos8.com @ flickr (is.gd/4r14J)Sign, by mukluk @ flickr (is.gd/4qXXi)Shoe, by anomalous4 @ flickr (is.gd/4qZuH)
Sources1: Atkins, D., Seely Brown, J., Hammond, A. (2007) A review of the the Open Educational Resources movement: Achievements, challenges and new opportunities. (is.gd/4qO4E)