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Jon Mason, Liddy Nevile Australia

Open Courseware: realising the potential of standards as enablers of valuable global participation. Jon Mason, Liddy Nevile Australia. Introduction.

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Jon Mason, Liddy Nevile Australia

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  1. Open Courseware: realising the potential of standards as enablers of valuable global participation Jon Mason, Liddy NevileAustralia

  2. Introduction • The public good that represents our ability to communicate freely, at reasonable cost, in all languages with all people anywhere and anytime, while preserving different cultures, must be at the heart of our concerns and supported by the international community’s generous and open impulse to share as has been stated in the WSIS principles. Open Forum 2005 Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  3. Summary • An infrastructure of standards • Supports the phenomenon of open courseware • for the benefit of educationally privileged and deprived • consistent with the WSIS principles. Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  4. But… • Not everyone has the same needs and • Not all standards are created equal! Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  5. Google • has managed in a very short space of time to engage millions of people in an • activity that was once conducted only in the rarefied atmosphere of libraries and research institutions. • Everyone with a computer and a connection now engages in research, for free. Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  6. Voice Over Internet Protocol (VOIP) • Skype hit the ‘market’, as we once might have said, • with a free communications product • Millions of people use it now. Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  7. Opensource movement • significant in recent years, particularly with the network effect • Benkler refers to commons-based production or peer production. • access to the code is available so it can be modified. • It is protected by licenses Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  8. Open courseware movement • builds upon the open software movement • by adding the free use of information resources, specifically those designed for use in education and training. In the case of these resources, • there is often a blurring between software and information, as indicated by the name open courseware (OCW). Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  9. The MIT OCW Project • Two decades ago • 6.001 in Australia cost $56,000 • Now • As part of the MIT OCW project, all materials needed for the 6.001 course are online, available for anyone, anywhere, to use for free, including videos of lectures, tutorial notes, the textbook, problem sets and exam questions and answers. Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  10. OCW beginnings • Some smart people at MIT decided the best project in the world would be OCW • MIT shares research so why not teaching? • OCW builds on traditional resource sharing, and open source …. • But OCW is distinguished in that it separates knowledge from commodities Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  11. OCW free resources • OCW resources challenge the fundamental role of teachers in a new way. • Learners can progress without intervention from their teachers. • Teachers and learners are interacting in new ways. Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  12. OCW free resources • Include activities, problem sets, exam questions, and answers. • Teachers are sharing strategies and technology • Managing a room full of active students • eg using the hand-held devices • the practice of teaching has been enlivened • The students are achieving higher standards of comprehension than previously. Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  13. The iCampus Project • an extension of the OCW • distributed model with regional ‘hubs’ • to provide local customisation/ development of resources and tools • promotes the decentralisation of resource and software production • iLabs for sharing of expensive scientific instruments and equipment Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  14. iCampus at La Trobe Uni • a first year teacher of advanced graphics …. • As experts in learning, teaching staff can work alongside their students. Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  15. iCampus worldwide • By middle of 2006, 1/2 resources from outside MIT • Already 500,000 more than 30 mins visits p/month • Students do not get degrees • Many can use University of Utah’s collaborative environment Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  16. So what is happening? Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  17. The ‘open’ philosophy in action • The catalyst at MIT was simply that knowledge should be free • Public Knowledge Project in Canada • Wikibooks - over 11,000 online textbooks • Development Gateway’s Open Education portal • Etc …. Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  18. Freeingresources isa radical political idea • However, institutions such as MIT are not charities! • Good actions and materials promote institutions • There is great value in eliminating inequity of education Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  19. OCW, like OSS, means ‘resources as currency’ • Money does not have intrinsic value. • In the digital world, information and educational resources are like money - they have to be used • Interoperable money is currency. Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  20. OCW’s value is its use • Resources must be used • There must be many resources • Resources must be usable everywhere • Resources must be interoperable …. Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  21. Resource use and sharing • The complexity of interoperability is challenging. • It usually comprises four aspects: structure, syntax, semantics and system adoption. • The many solutions need to be merged or harmonised in some way. Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  22. The challenge is sharing distributed resources • This is not a new problem but its scale is hard to comprehend - its potential to benefit students is compelling. • Standards abound, so which standards should be used? ==> eg SCORM, a reference model of standards. Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  23. OCW’s value • depends upon a firm base of standards • depends on Creative Commons licenses • depends on standards compliant open source software • Respectful/independent of cultures, languages, policies, …. Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  24. Interoperability as infrastructure • Whatever way we look at the problem of how to ensure education for everyone, everywhere, beyond the production of resources, we find the problem of how to share, to interoperate. • Interoperability is, in effect, the widespread adoption of common solutions to problems. Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  25. Interoperability as infrastructure • Interoperability is not just consensus eg i18n of terms • Concepts not just vocab. must be agreed • Interoperability requires abstract models at all levels • Information models make a difference a with DCMT and IEEE/LOM Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  26. Interoperability requires TLC • Eg, SCORM‘s origins may make it difficult politically for many countries to participate. • The model of SCORM nevertheless suggests an important activity for those promoting the sharing of education and thus, OCW. Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  27. Pedagogical (r)evolution • Teaching is not always visible • Teaching is not just course materials but a valued process • Teachers move from being the sage on the stage to the guide on the side. Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  28. The emerging OCW economy • a market activity • not using traditional models of marketing that require the user to pay.. • like Google and Skype and …… Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  29. Open source software • Not destroying business but changing it: • eg free software and a support contract • "If you look at the open source, open community aspects of open source, they are definitely bringing innovations to the market, solving problems that are not being solved by standardised software." • “These are programmers building great technology to help their peers to build software to solve customer problems." - IBM's Chet Kapoor Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  30. Maturity of the open source movement • twenty years ==> a thriving economy • not just for hippies: to get a computer to do something, people need programs and they share them to get on with the business of making computers do things. • “Software is just the beginning ... open source is doing for mass innovation what the assembly line did for mass production. Get ready for the era when collaboration replaces the corporation…” - Goetz Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  31. Open source education? • Yochai Benkler, Yale Law Professor, argues: • there are so many potential creative knowledge workers, motivated by a range of psychological, social, and material gain factors, that we do not need to fear a shortage of learning materials. • The sharing of the ‘stuff’ of education enables the business of education. Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  32. OCW Quality Assurance • New ISO standards for describing quality - global and local qualities • The Times Education Supplement ranking of universities worldwide. • What emerge as de factostandards, hopefully always under review and reflective of public opinion, will affect the way universities present themselves to the public. Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  33. So how does standardisation help? • Standards provide stable reference points for a community of practice. • Innovation occurs because the wheel does not have to be reinvented. • Standards have enabled the emergence of dedicated software tools such as learning content management systems. Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  34. Standards: Think global, act local • Parmesan cheese manufacturers now put RFID chips into their cheese. • There is a need for vigilance in the adoption of standards for fear that the interests of those for whom they are relevant may not be best served by their adoption. Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  35. Conclusion • standardization must be used with care • OCW and iCampus offer promise for the global distribution of locally beneficial education • Those who give and those who receive both benefit • It is economically possible and • VERY desirable! Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

  36. Merci beaucoup! Merci beaucoup! (Photo of La Trobe University campus, early September 2005) Liddy@sunriseresearch.org

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