Title: Learning Resources a personal educational view from UK HE
1Learning Resourcesa (personal) educational view
from UK HE
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3Who am I?
- Assistant Director, CETIS
- Very Occasional Lecturer, Bangor University
- http//www.cetis.ac.uk/members/scott
4What this talk is about
- How to make resources useful in higher education
- A lot of rambling on about learning objects
- Some thoughts about repository services and
ecology
5Learning Objects
6From library to learning
Learning object creation, re-use
Learning Teaching workflows
Repositories institutional,
e-prints, subject, data, learning objects
Institutional presentation services portals,
Learning Management Systems
Deposit / self-archiving
7Learning Objects?
- any entity, digital or non-digital, which can be
used, re-used or referenced during technology
supported learning - Or, nothing cant be a learning object from a
resource management viewpoint
8Reusability
- The primary intent of Learning Object technology
is reusability - A course or module content is broken up into
small, discrete pieces, each without a dependency
on the whole
9Re-assembly
10Learning Objects
- So, we can create libraries of learning objects,
and assemble them in all kinds of combinations to
suit any need, all a teacher need do is select
the correct combinations for their context - But there is one small problem
11It doesnt work
12Well, lets qualify that
- The current technology model embodied by
specifications such as IMS and SCORM doesnt seem
to fit very well with some models of education,
such as university education - Why not?
13Problem 1 ContentWhat is the content of a
university education?
- Textbooks
- Primary sources (journals, books, etc)
- Original research
- Lectures
- Conversations
- Lab instructions, assignments
- Supporting slides, notes, study guides etc.
14How much of this content can typically be turned
into LOs?
- Textbooks
- Primary sources (journals, books, etc)
- Original research
- Lectures
- Conversations
- Lab instructions, assignments
- Supporting slides, notes, study guides etc.
15Or, in other words
- Learning Object technology is best positioned to
deal with the lowest-value content in existing
course structures - To deliver value, the Learning Object approach
therefore requires a change of teaching strategy
and course organization
16Are LO assumptions at odds with university
pedagogy?
- A one-on-one instructional model is preferable
above others, - human interaction in large scale learning
environments is economically impossible, and
(therefore), - automation via intelligent instructional systems
is the only viable solution to providing anywhere
anytime learning.
David Wiley, Learning Objects Difficulties and
Opportunities http//wiley.ed.usu.edu/docs/lo_do.
pdf
17SCORM
From Slosser, S. (2001) "ADL and the Sharable
Content Object Reference Model." MERLOT 2001
18Problem 2 Lecturers
- Lecturers dont see themselves as a delivery
device for content - They have opinions about the content
- They have opinions about how they teach
- They view their original materials as added value
- they are also content creators - and one of the
more interesting parts of their profession
19Problem 3 Sharing
- Lecturers like reusing materials
- Provided the materials are good
- Provided the materials appear to be free of
charge - Provided they can change the materials to fit
their context - Provided they are in a usable format
20But
- Learning objects are often designed as black
boxes of web content licensed from producers - Most learning objects of the SCORM/IMS variety
are not open source
21But
- Most LOs are licensed to be used as-is, not
modified then reissued with all sorts of changes
(share-alike with derivative work in CC parlance)
22But
- LOs of the SCORM and IMS variety are too fiddly
to pick apart and put together again without
specialist tools and knowledge (e.g. RELOAD)
23So if we really wanted to make learning objects
useful for lecturers
- They would be open source
- They would be liberally licensed
- They would be easy to edit and repurpose without
special tools - You could easily make and publish your own objects
24Problem 4 students
- Students like having resources for their studies
- Especially if they are free
- Quality or authenticity?
- Especially if they can use them directly in their
own work and projects - that is, if they are
easily edited and liberally licensed - In the future, they may want to include or link
to resources from an e-portfolio long after the
end of their course
25- if we dont conceptualize learning objects as
edit-able primitives designed for learners to use
in the construction of new artifacts, what are we
doing? Steve repeats the popular notion that he
learns more by teaching than by learning. Guess
why? Because teaching is a construction process
in which a person adapts parts of many existing
components to create a new artifact (whether they
create a tangible expression of the artifact or
not). Learning is generally, as Steve says,
consuming. So guess why we always learn more when
we teach? And guess how we should think about
learning objects? - David Wiley, comment on weblog (http//opencontent
.org/blog/archives/185)
26Even the idea of learners as consumers of
learning objects may be misguided. Learners
may well be most usefully thought of as producers
of learning resources as well. In other words,
learning objects may ultimately be a consumer
culture approach misapplied to a producer culture
environment. Stephen Carson, http//openfiction.
blogspot.com/2005/08/rise-of-producer-culture.html
27Alternative technologies for creating and sharing
learning objects?
- This one -)
- Web pages
- Text (RTF, Word, PDF)
- Open-source textbooks
- Blogs and RSS/Atom
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30Whats in OCW?
- Lots of PDF files of assignments, projects, labs,
lecture notes - Reading lists
- Online textbooks
- Syllabi
- Are these learning objects?
31Open Source Textbooks
- California Open-Source textbook project aims to
save 400m on textbook purchasing in K-12 - Grassroots opposition to escalating cost of texts
for students (Rip-Off 101)
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35RSS/Atom
- XML and RDF metadata publishing
- X/HTML content and media enclosures
(podcasts/vodcasts) - Aggregation tools build personal libraries that
are continually updated
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38Other kinds of resources
- E-Prints
- Media (image, audio, video)
- Simulations and visualizations
- Maps
39So how are we to share 1?
- Share the sources not just the objects, so we can
edit them easily - Use licenses that actually permit us to use
resources in learning activities - Share the data and metadata underlying an item,
not just its visualization
40Repositories
41Using Resources - the repository view
- Specialized Online Collections
- Precision searching
- Classification-based browsing
- Licensing DRM
- Authentication/Registration
42Using resources - the web view
- Google - Simple keyword searching
- The King Of Search
- Flickr - Creative Commons Search
- find images you can actually use!
- Google Maps
- WikiPedia
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46Using resources - the web 2.0 view
- Networked collaborative filtering discovery
through recommendations and conversations about
resources in social networks - Social bookmark services
- Feed aggregation
- Deep linking to stable resource URLs is a
requirement for these kinds of capability
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50The Web 2.0 Checklist
- Structured Microcontent
- Data outside
- Licenses
- Feeds galore
- Web APIs
- Desktop integration
- Single identity
- Microweb
- Wild microcontent
http//www.sivas.com/aleene/microcontent/index.php
?idP2205
51Repository services
- A repository is basically a database of some
sort, with some added services on top - Typically services for searching, browsing,
harvesting, and obtaining resources and their
metadata - These can be human or machine-usable in nature
52APIs for creative re-use
- Services can enable creative re-use of
repositories and their resources - Examples
- Google Maps API
- Flickr API
- RSS/Atom feeds
- Services can layer on top of individual
repository services, such as topic maps and tag
clouds, portals and aggregators
53Google Maps
http//www.scipionus.com/katrina.html
54http//www.chicagocrime.org/types/theft/58/
55Flickr
http//www.marumushi.com/apps/flickrgraph
56http//krazydad.com/colrpickr/
57Tag Cloud
http//www.tagcloud.com
58Apple desktop widgets using web service APIs
59Content Enrichment via Services
- Availability of repository services supports
content enrichment - http//www.hackdiary.com/archives/000070.html
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62Service users
- Personal spaces of learners and lecturers
- Traditional LMS-type systems in universities
- Third party visualizations, aggregators,
processors, remix tools
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64Repository ecology
- The personal desktop repository (file system,
feed aggregators, email clients) - The personal networked repository (.Mac, Gmail)
- Collaborative discovery services (furl,
bloglines, technorati etc.) - Specialized online collections (flickr, Google
Maps, LO reps., library collections) - The open web (Googleverse)
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66Questions
- How do dedicated LO repositories library
collections fit in the ecology? - What are the best discovery strategies? For
teachers? For learners?
67So how are we to share 2?
- Share the sources not just the objects, so we can
edit them easily - Use licenses that actually permit us to use
resources in learning activities - Enable collaborative filtering via social
bookmarking and other services - Provide feeds and other APIs to permit reuse of
services as well as resources - Let Google find this stuff, too.
- Dont just tolerate deep linking - encourage it
68Thanks!
- s.wilson_at_bangor.ac.uk
- http//www.cetis.ac.uk/members/scott