Last week I participated both as a Facilitator and Learner in a new short open course. I'm really grateful to Chrissi Nerantzi for offering this opportunity to join her team. The team included: Chrissi Nerantzi, Paul Booth, Peter Reed, Alex Spears, Carol Yeager, Anne Hole, Simon Thomson, Lenandlar Singh, Neil Currie, Helen Webster and Betty Hurley-Dasgupta.
The five-day course ran from 10-14th March and was led by the North-West OER Network and Chrissi Nerantzi from the Centre for Excellence in Learning and Teaching at Manchester Metropolitan University, to celebrate Open Education Week 2014. The course used Open Educational Resources by reusing the Openness in Education course developed by Dr. David Wiley at P2PU. The course uses some of the content and the course outline, combined with other resources, social media and a team of academics who volunteered to help facilitate the course across the week. All resources are given a Creative Commons Licence so that anything can be shared and re-used. A Facebook group, Google community and Twitter all formed useful spaces to share. Individuals also blogged and shared their posts via these forum.
During the week there was a webinar, Google hangouts and three Tweet Chats. I led a Tweet Chat with Peter Reed on Thursday evening on Open Practices. The hashtag used was #nwOERchat.
Have you been following #OpenEducationWk events hosted by @nwOER? #nwOERchat starts in half an hour. http://t.co/YMD3OaPBcG
— Open Education Week (@openeducationwk) March 13, 2014
The hour flew by and was an engaging discussion prompted by the following questions:- Q1 Have you ever taken an open online course (before this one)? What was your experience like?
- Q2 How important is the orientation period and what aspects did you value most?
- Q3 How would you redesign open online courses, if you could?
- Q4 How might open learning impact on teaching? Or how can they evolve to impact teaching more?
- Q5 What barriers prevent sharing and how can we make our teaching more open?
BIG thank you to our fab facilitators @suebecks & @reedyreedles & all for participating in our #nwoerchat
— Chrissi Nerantzi (@chrissinerantzi) March 13, 2014
NWOER is a HEA funded project to help develop, support, share and build a community around Open Education Resources in the North-West of England. I have no doubts that this work will continue and grow!Open Education Week
Open Education Week is a global, community event that seeks to raise awareness of the benefits of Open Educational Resources and open educational practices.
Educators from all over the world have been hosting open courses, webinars, Google hangouts, Twitter chats and sharing blog posts of numerous open resources and case studies of use. Via Twitter you can see the many links via the hashtag #OpenEducationWk.
JORUM
JORUM is a place where you will find free open educational resources produced by the UK Further and Higher Education community. It is a Jisc funded Service in development in UK Further and Higher Education, to collect and share Open Educational Resources (OER), allowing their reuse and repurposing. This free online repository service forms a key part of the Jisc Information Environment, and is part of the wider landscape of repositories being developed institutionally, locally, regionally or across subject areas. JORUM can also be found on Facebook and TwitterEducators may upload educational resources to the site. To date I have made a small contribution of two lectures:
The Power of OER
Professor David Wiley shares his thoughts on open educational resources. Key messages are the value of Creative Commons licences to allow:
- Reuse: Use in a wide range of ways
- Revise: Adapt, modify, and improve
- Remix: Combine two or more
- Redistribute: Share with others
The Power of Open Educational Resources from David Wiley
Throughout Open Education Week numerous resources have been shared. I was interested to pick up contributions from the US. The U.S. Department of Education held a contest to create videos on “Why Open Education Matters". Below are the winning entries.
Within a statement made by the White House on Expanding Opportunity through Open Educational Resources there is a clear steer on how universities can be involved.
Why Open Education Matters
From a personal perspective it has allowed me as an Educator the opportunity to learn so much from others through the sharing of their practice. Open courses and social media have provided forums to discuss, debate and share new ideas. It has opened an entirely new ethos for open social learning.
Within a statement made by the White House on Expanding Opportunity through Open Educational Resources there is a clear steer on how universities can be involved.
The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) are exploring an effort to inspire and empower university students through multidisciplinary OER focused on one of the USAID Grand Challenges, such as securing clean water, saving lives at birth, or improving green agriculture. This effort promises to be a stepping stone towards leveraging OER to help solve other grand challenges such as the NAE Grand Challenges in Engineering or Grand Challenges in Global Health.The opportunities for collaborations to solve international and local issues are endless.
The Creative Commons Education Programme
As Educators, by giving our own work a Creative Commons licence, we are paving the way to creating a rich library of open educational resources that others can put to good use. It has to be the way forward. The Creative Commons education page states the following:
With the internet, universal access to education is possible, but its potential is hindered by increasingly restrictive copyright laws and incompatible technologies. The Education program at Creative Commons works to minimize these barriers, supporting the CC mission through consulting, education, and outreach on using the right technologies and licenses to maximize the benefits of open educational resources (OER) and the return on investment in publicly funded education and research programs. Our work cuts across all levels of education (K-12 to postsecondary) and sectors of industry (nonprofit to corporate).
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