Monthly Archives: March 2013

Licensing my output

To clarify the starting position, my unique creations are automatically protected by copyright.  So, if I want them to be more freely available, without special permission, I have to allocate a licence.  Using the Creative Commons choices I have to make choices on attribution, commercial use, derivatives and share alike.

My context (for this discussion) is the support of schools in Africa with online learning materials.  The ultimate objective is to improve education in  Africa.  So as long as this is achieved, I shouldn’t mind how.  I also have to look modestly at what I am likely to be able to achieve – not a lot of absolute value, more the work required to make something available than the inherent value of the content.  So it is unlikely that anyone is going to make much money from selling my materials commercially, because there will be free or better materials available   Those who do make money may in fact be aiding the distribution by recovering some costs/added value of getting the material a wider audience.

Commercial use.  As implied above, I am unlikely to be able to make much licence income and want to incentivise the distribution of the content.  So I should allow commercial use without further permission (broadly following the arguments in Moller, 2005).

Derivatives  For maximum value I should allow derivatisation.  However, since this will be outside my control, I may not want attribution of the result.

Attribution.  As above, I am not sure that the mix of derivatisation and attribution is attractive.  However all the CC mixes assume BY unless you are going for no rights at all.

Share alike.  Logically, I would want to encourage others to follow low restriction routes which are likely to enhance end user value.  So share alike whould seem to make sense.

This leaves me with BY-SA, the open software or Wikipedia type of licence which sounds an attractive place to be.  If it was something I treasured and felt was vulnerable to abuse via derivatisation I would probably go BY-ND (which seems to include SA by its nature).

To make life very simple, ‘no rights reserved’ would not seem an unreasonable place to be unless I felt strongly about the attribution issue.

Moller, E. (2005) The Case for Free Use: Reasons Not to Use a Creative Commons – NC License [online]. Available at http://freedomdefined.org/ Licenses/ NCExternal link  (accessed 31 Mar 2013)

OER to support primary/secondary education in Africa

My interest is in supporting teachers, and through them students, in primary and secondary schools in Kenya and Tanzania. This post will not discuss specific proposals but looks at three generic OER issues which will impact the value of OER in enabling support.
Fit of OER with local culture and pedagogy
Both countries have a very fixed, curriculum-based system with traditional teacher/textbook focused pedagogy. This has two consequences – teachers have little experience of self-directed learning (their own or their students) and little control over what they teach/how they teach it. Superficially therefore “delivering OER …..will have little effect on equipping teachers … with the competences, knowledge and skills to participate successfully in the knowledge economy”. (Geser, 2007, p.12). However, this problem has already been recognised. There are examples of successful initiatives (e.g. African Virtual Open Initiatives, the Commonwealth of Learning repository) which are targeted to this market. However, education authority policies will first have to recognise the value of less didactic, more learner-focused approaches if teachers are to be empowered and rewarded to develop skills in this area (Geser, 2007).
Difficulty of finding useful materials
It is unlikely that complete courses will be useful – they are at too high a level, too detached from current realities. It is more likely that individual lesson components or tools, which can supplement traditional approaches, will be perceived as usable. Hence learning objects rather than composite OER resources are likely to be most valuable. These resources will be at a low level of complexity “Any digital resource that can [be] reused to support learning” (Wiley cited in Albright, 2005, p.12). To find such objects requires some form of usable taxonomy and low-level reference system. This is a contentious issue which has inhibited rather than encouraged use of OER (Friesen, 2003) and is inconsistent among learning object repositories. Culture neutrality or (ir)relevance is also likely to constrain the search for usable materials with local skills unlikely to be adequate to modify open content (Hatakka, 2009). Initially support will have to come from sponsoring organisations which have the digital skills to search through relevant repositories.
Teacher/Learner recognition
There are several related issues. Text book dependency and mistrust of foreign materials may limit uptake of OER (Hatakka, 2009), not least because teachers can feel threatened by any dependence on external resources. The need to add their “personal flavour” (Hatakka, 2009, p.13) is driven as much by their need to demonstrate their own value as to increase the relevance of materials. Recognition of the teacher’s own learning or their transferred learning will therefore be important. A ‘Badges’ type of system (Mozilla Foundation, 2012) may well be ideal in that it does not pretend to assess complete learning, rather recognises evidence of specific knowledge or application. Such evidence of the teacher’s own learning might be a single OER comprehension exercise in English, chosen to demonstrate capability of semantic understanding of language. Evidence of development of skills might be an example of use of a ‘Hot Potatoes’ type of utility to develop a class learning resource (Downes, 2001).

References
Albright, P. (2005) UNESCO (IIEP): Final forum report. 2008-09-01 [Online]. Available at http://learn.creativecommons.org/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/oerforumfinalreport.pdf (accessed 25 Mar 2013).
Downes, S. (2001) ‘Learning objects: resources for distance education worldwide’,IRRODL, vol. 2, no. 1 [online]. Available at http://www.irrodl.org/ index.php/ irrodl/ article/view/ 32/ 378. (accessed 25 Mar 2013).
Friesen, N. (2003) ‘Three objections to learning objects and e-learning standards’ in McGreal, R. (ed.) (2004) Online Education Using Learning Objects, London, Routledge, pp. 59–70. Draft available online at http://www.learningspaces.org/ papers/objections.html (accessed 25 Mar 2013).
Geser, G. (2007) (ed) Open Educational Practices and Resources. OLCOS Roadmap 2012. , Salzburg Research, EduMedia Group. Salzburg, January 2007 [Online]. Available at http://www.olcos.org/english/roadmap/download/index.htm (accessed 25 Mar 2013).
Hatakka, M. (2009), ‘Build it and they will come? – Inhibiting factors for reuse of open content in developing countries’, EJISDC – The Electronic Journal of Information Systems in Developing Countries, vol. 37, no. 5, pp. 1-16 [Online]. Available at http://www.ejisdc.org/ojs2/index.php/ejisdc/article/view/545/279 (accessed 25 Mar 2013).
Mozilla Foundation (2012) ‘Open Badges for Lifelong Learning’, working paper developed with Peer2Peer University and The MacArthur Foundation [Online]. Available at https://wiki.mozilla.org/images/b/b1/OpenBadges-Working-Paper_092011.pdf (accessed 25 Mar 2013).

Are we literate and/or are we needy?

This may be preaching to the converted – those of us who are using and enjoying the H817open technical interface without any real problems. But – just in case – let me offer two scenarios:

  1. There are no material problems with the interface.
    It involves 4 links (learning site, blog registration, blog aggregator, forum) and the setting-up of a blog.  There is a print format option for those who like their learning materials full-screen or downloaded. None of this should cause difficulty to the reasonably literate group who are the audience – mainly people in academia in some way.
    There is evidence for and against this proposition.  Many of us are having few problems.  However the numerous repetitive requests for help, responded by the ever patient and helpful Paige and Alan, suggest that the set-up is either faulty or too complex.
  2. There are material problems with the interface or the instructions are too complex.
    If this is true then either Open University is inept at building a site designed for open access or the assumptions about the digital literacy of the participants is invalid.
    If the former, then the problem is temporary – just a learning curve or OpenLearn rebuild issue, however irritating to current participants.  If the latter, however, it is a fundamental challenge to assumptions that open learning is the next big thing.  If our relatively literate community is struggling, what chance for those new to the open, online environment?

Answers on a postcard please – in case the blog aggregator doesn’t work!