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Joseph Hardin

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Open Scholarship in the Early 21st Century Joseph Hardin Mujoresearch.org Ontario College of Art and Design Thanks - Gracias * * * * * * * * * * * Open Scholarship ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Joseph Hardin


1
Open Scholarship in the Early 21st Century
  • Joseph Hardin
  • Mujoresearch.org
  • Ontario College of Art and Design

2
Open Scholarship
  • Ian talked about a number of Open efforts
  • Open Source Software like Sakai
  • Open Access to scholarly work
  • Open Data to improve scientific processes
  • Open CourseWare and Open Educational Resources
  • Open Textbooks
  • Open Teaching

3
Focus Of This Talk
  • Open CourseWare and Open Educational Resources
  • Recent research on OCW/OER among faculty and
    students
  • The recent interest in Open Teaching in the form
    of MOOCs
  • How OER and MOOCs build on each other
  • How a commitment to Open Initiatives can become
    part of education's Core Business, and can move
    us forward in the coming years

4
OCW - Faculty Studies
  • An ongoing series of studies looking at what
    faculty and students think about OCW/OER and
    whether or not they plan to use or contribute
  • Do they see some aspects of OCW as valuable?
  • Would they use OCW?
  • Would faculty contribute their own course
    materials to a local OCW site?

5
The Four Surveys
  • Danubius University of Galati, Romania
  • Severin Bumbaru, severin.bumbaru_at_univ-danubius.ro
  • Andy Pu?ca, andypusca_at_univ-danubius.ro
  • Universidad Politecnica de Valencia, Spain
  • Aristóteles Cañero, acanero_at_asic.upv.es
  • University of Cape Town, South Africa
  • Cheryl Hodgkinson-Williams, cheryl.hodgkinson-will
    iams_at_uct.ac.za
  • Glenda Cox, glenda.cox_at_uct.ac.za
  • University of Michigan, USA
  • Joseph Hardin, hardin_at_mujoresearch.com

See http//mujoresearch.org
5
6
Instructor Potential Use
55 to 92 would use Open CourseWare in their
class materials
6
7
Student Potential Use
72 to 87 of students would use OCW materials in
their studies.
7
8
Intention to Contribute/Publish Teaching Staff
45 to 86 would contribute their course
materials to local OCW site.
8
9
Teacher Contribution
52
40
Tenure-track
GSI
48
42
Clinical
Lecturer
9
10
'Contribution Willingness' vs 'Time as
Faculty'UM 2010 survey Younger faculty more
willing
More Willing To Publish OCW
More Time as Faculty
10
11
Participation increases Interest
  • Statistically significant, increasingly positive
    correlation between familiarity and intention to
    contribute for Tenure-track, Clinical, Lecturer
    faculty (older instructors)
  • The more faculty know about OCW/OER the more
    interest in it they have, and the more willing
    they are to participate.
  • We will see this in Open Teaching/MOOCs also.

12
Key Survey Results
  • There is a considerable base of support among
    teaching staff at schools for OCW use and
    contribution
  • Participation increases interest virtuous
    circle
  • Now, what about Open Teaching, and how does
    OCW/OER relate to MOOC creation?
  • First, How is a MOOC different from traditional
    Distance Education?

12
13
Traditional Distance EdStudent as Isolate
Graphic John Seely Brown
14
MOOC Social Ed P2PStudent as Co-Participant
Graphic John Seely Brown
15
Social P2P
  • When you think about the emergence of social
    tools or media or applications, you are seeing
    the power of Person To Person (P2P) methods
  • Finding each other... one of the powers of the
    net
  • Then working with, helping, learning from,
    impressing, motivating each other
  • Think of what makes FaceBook, or WikiPedia work
    finding a group of people with similar interests,
    and letting/helping them participate

16
MOOCs Experiences
  • Students learn by interacting with other students
  • the discussion lists were the most important
    part of the experience - (Johns Hopkins MOOC
    teacher)
  • The ones I have study groups with people, those
    are the ones I finish,(MOOC student)
  • We've always known that students teach each other
    study groups, recitations
  • Even more remarkable were the 270 self-directed
    teams that formed to work on their course
    projects and share ideas. (Stanford MOOC)
  • In a MOOC you can always find someone to help you
    over a learning hurdle P2P learning

17
MOOCs Amplify P2P
Where before you had 10-50 possible partner
participants, now you have 500-5,000-10,000
18
  • So, to personalize learning, make the class
    bigger.

19
OCW/OER Foundation of MOOCs
Building the culture for one prepares the ground
for the other.
John Seely Brown
20
Survey of MOOC TeachersOriginal video
OERMOOC
http//chronicle.com/article/The-Professors-Behind
-the-MOOC/137905/idoverview
21
Changing Minds By Participation
  • Participating in Open activities can change
    faculty minds we saw this in OCW, so it is with
    MOOCs
  • By the time his six-week course was over, the
    Princeton professor had changed his mind about
    what online education could do. Mr. Sedgewick now
    classifies himself as "very enthusiastic" about
    virtual teaching, and believes that soon "every
    person's education will have a significant online
    component."
  • Nearly one-third of professors surveyed were
    "somewhat" or "very" skeptical about online-only
    courses before teaching a MOOC. Now more than 90
    percent are enthusiastic about online classes.
  • http//chronicle.com/article/The-Professors-Behind
    -the-MOOC/137905/idoverview

22
Participation Increases Interest
23
This also reflects back on classroom teaching
And, remember, these teachers usually had NO
previous experience with online teaching. See
above.
24
Goal Also to Improve Residential Ed
  • In May 2012, when the presidents of Harvard
    University and the Massachusetts Institute of
    Technology announced that they would enter the
    MOOC fray with 60-million to start edX, they
    were emphatic that their agenda was to improve,
    not supplant, classroom education.
  • "Online education is not an enemy of residential
    education," said Susan Hockfield, president of
    MIT at the time, from a dais at a hotel in
    Cambridge, "but an inspiring and liberating
    ally."
  • MIT and Harvard see this as crucial to their
    educational future - its worth the investment to
    see where this goes, and be on the leading edge
    of it
  • They see it as Core Business effort

25
MOOCs for non-consumers
  • Open Teaching also has other clients
  • "What we need to bear in mind is that the MOOCs
    are trying to make better quality education
    available to a great mass of people who are
    currently non-consumers of education and such
    quality is currently superior by far to whatever
    they may be getting right now.
  • The MOOCs are not aimed to people who are willing
    to cheat but to those willing to learn."

Wayan Vota via Steven Downs
26
MOOC as Open Source using AGPL
  • EdX releases Open Source under AGPL - open
    service stipulation must release modified
    service under AGPL - service provider copyleft
  • In March 2013, EdX, (the nonprofit MOOC platform
    from MIT and Harvard) released part of its code
    under an open source license. The OSS Watch blog
    reported
  • EdX, the nonprofit organization set up by MIT
    and Harvard to provide a MOOC platform, released
    part of its code under an open source license
    the Affero GPL.
  • This is a form of service provider copyleft
    that ensures that EdX will have access to any
    improvements on their platform used by third
    parties.
  • Otherwise you could use the software to provide
    an online service and, never 'releasing' the
    software, just using it, not have to contribute
    changes back to the commons
  • MOOC development pushing on open innovative
    boundaries in many ways, including open source
    licensing

27
Credit is coming
  • In a major step for MOOCs, the first five courses
    were evaluated and deemed worthy for credit by
    the American Council on Education in February.
    About 2,000 colleges and universities consider
    the organizations recommendations in determining
    whether to use online courses.
  • Dr. Agarwal predicts that a year from now,
    campuses will give credit for people with edX
    certificates. He expects students will one day
    arrive on campus with MOOC credits the way they
    do now with Advanced Placement.

http//www.nytimes.com/2012/11/04/education/edlife
/massive-open-online-courses-are-multiplying-at-a-
rapid-pace.htmll
28
Conclusions from Overview
  • An open culture is becoming more and more
    important to provide best services, to
    anticipate the future
  • Faculty are ready to participate in OCW/OER and
    that will increase their desire for participation
    in the future same for MOOCs
  • Building a Culture of Contribution is good
    business for HE
  • And, there are open resources to help with that,
    including doing your own surveys

29
Interested in the Surveys?
Mujoresearch.org
30
Do Your Own
31
Lists of Questions to Use
32
Step-by-Step Procedures
33
Building the Culture
  • Research - Understanding and giving voice to your
    own community of scholars on Open issues
  • Gather your own data and make it open from your
    own campuses and OER/MOOC efforts
  • These efforts help us understand and generate the
    local culture of contribution
  • They provide resources for local innovation
    efforts and contribute to the global conversation
  • Maintaining leadership in educational futures
    will require looking at Open Initiatives as Core
    Business

34
Thanks - Gracias
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