936 Matching Annotations
  1. Jan 2016
    1. Apprendre à programmer permet aux enfants un nouveau rapport aux technologies: de consommateur interactif de manuels scolaires numérisés à la capacité de créer des ressources éducatives numériques et même des mini-jeux.
    1. people loading their own music up to SoundCloud
    2. own music projects, exchanging tunes and coding in the online community that has sprung up around it. 

      Like teaching, music is sharing. In both cases, the impulse for generalized reciprocity varies quite a bit, but musicians and teachers who know to get together can help shape a world of deep insight and learning.

    1. massive advances in Open Educational Resources

      Some may be surprised to hear about OERs in a post about proprietary technology, especially since this was before iBooks Author allowed the creation of ePUB3 books.

    1. the internet has become essential to our everyday life

      What if we had pockets of non-Internet connectivity, though? A mesh network doesn’t necessarily need to have nodes on the Internet. For instance, a classroom could have a “course in a box”, with all sorts of resources provided on local network, but without a connection to the whole Internet… So many teachers keep complaining about their students’ use of the Internet that they end up banning devices. But what if we allowed devices and even encouraged them, as long as they’re not on the Internet? WiFi connections tend to be spotty, to this day, and some classes are cellular deadzones. A bit like Dogme 95, getting used to sans-Internet connectivity could help us “get creative”. What would we do if we were to do a tech-savvy course on the proverbial “desert island”, without Internet?

  2. Dec 2015
    1. Users publish coursework, build portfolios or tinker with personal projects, for example.

      Useful examples. Could imagine something like Wikity, FedWiki, or other forms of content federation to work through this in a much-needed upgrade from the “Personal Home Pages” of the early Web. Do see some connections to Sandstorm and the new WordPress interface (which, despite being targeted at WordPress.com users, also works on self-hosted WordPress installs). Some of it could also be about the longstanding dream of “keeping our content” in social media. Yes, as in the reverse from Facebook. Multiple solutions exist to do exports and backups. But it can be so much more than that and it’s so much more important in educational contexts.

    1. Open education is a means, a way of doing something; it isn’t something. That something is for individuals to arrive at however they want to get there–that’s the point of making it all “open.” I hope they share that awesomeness when they arrive at it, but they don’t have to.

      Process not product.

    1. open educational resources

      UCLA's Scholarly Communication Dept. includes work in OER. To what extent?

    2. The subject librarians work closely with faculty to help them identify open educational resources that they can use instead of requiring students to purchase textbooks.

      Bit of OER work integrated at MIT.

  3. Nov 2015
    1. Encouraging students to curate their own content

      Learners already create and curate a lot of “content”. Let’s encourage them to do more with it, even if they keep it somewhat closed. Much of it doesn’t have to be so high-minded, as even forum posts can do a lot to the learning process. “Open Education” isn’t merely about content and a lot of work in the 5Rs can be done in learning communities.

    2. if free textbooks or OER offer learners free access to good quality knowledge

      Big “if”. And it’s one of those cases where defining those terms (“access”, “knowledge”, “free”, “good quality”, even “learners”…) is important but risky. We don’t want sterile debates, but we need to acknowledge that we may not be talking about the same things.

    3. The real problem with textbooks, though, is that focusing on them is focusing on content. When learning, and open education, should focus more on process (a conversation on this from a year ago across my blog, Jim Groom’s, Mike Caulfield’s and David Wiley’s).
    4. “why textbooks?”
    1. Some practitioners of open education have been dismayed at the recent emphasis on "free textbooks", which implies that cost-cutting is the main goal of openness. But it should not be forgotten that for many teachers and students, open textbooks provide an introduction to broader open practices.

    1. Canada is unique in the world in that it is the only country whose national government has no authority in education;

      Though it may be taken for granted by actors in the sphere of learning in Canada, this factoid can have a large impact in terms of “Canadian Exceptionalism”.

    2. Aren't we putting OER out there assuming that others will adapt the material to their needs?

    1. Northern Virginia Community College’s Extended Learning Institute (ELI) and open courseware provider Lumen Learning announced a collaboration to publish 24 online college courses for two complete degree programs. All courses were developed for zero student cost using open educational resources (OER)
    1. technology's ability to help us more richly collaborate with our students and more effectively share the fruit of those collaborations with the wider publics that our universities serve

      nice conclusion :)

    2. By replacing a static textbook — or other stable learning material — with one that is openly licensed, faculty have the opportunity to create a new relationship between learners and the information they access in the course. Instead of thinking of knowledge as something students need to download into their brains, we start thinking of knowledge as something continuously created and revised.

      Really great point - OER changes what "knowledge" is and how it is "created".

    1. This article included an estimate from the system that further backs up the $530 – $640 figures. [Hanley’s] rough estimate: As of a few years ago, learners at the 23-campus, 460,200-student university system were spending $300 million a year on course materials — about $651 per student per school year.

      This graph is the kicker. It is NOT about textbook costs, it's about how much students can afford to spend. The amount hasn't changed, or has gone down, since '02!

    1. Resource Repository Network will create a resource graph of learning/training resources data from multiple sources and formats including live and dynamic data

      Sounds pretty close to Comète.

    2. Development of a common platform for learning resource delivery: developing a working version of the infrastructure that partners can use immediately to address their training needs. This includes data and information harvesting services, and data and information synchronization services in a common resource network marketplace.

      Significant opportunities for collaboration on educational resources.

    1. Open Education We believe that educational opportunities should be available to all learners. Creating an open education ecosystem involves making learning materials, data, and educational opportunities available without restrictions imposed by copyright laws, access barriers, or exclusive proprietary systems that lack interoperability and limit the free exchange of information.

      DOE office of ed tech

    1. “Instead of having one prescribed way to do things that comes from a textbook, kids can do things where they’re truly interested,” says Lori Secrist. “When they’re truly interested, they’re engaged. And when they’re engaged, they learn.”
    1. some kind of curated library

      Which is where OER catalogues (tied to the Semantic Web) may shine. Sure, they can require a lot of work. But this is precisely why they matter.

    2. creation of an OER culture among faculty

      Pretty much what we’re trying to enable. Culture change is organic, but there are ways to empower those actors who are pushing things in an appropriate direction, in terms of Open Education.

    1. One key barrier to this shift is the time and energy it takes to find new course materials and ensure they are high-quality.

      Either an obstacle to Open Textbook adoption or an opportunity for OER.

  4. Oct 2015
    1. The Coming of OERRelated to the enthusiasm for digital instructional resources,four-fifths (81percent) of the survey participants agreethat “Open Source textbooks/Open Education Resource(OER) content “will be an important source for instructional resources in five yea
    1. At William & Mary, one way Swem Library is leading the way is by bringing open educational resources (OER) to the campus.  
    1. long time curating these tomes

      Part of the argument for OER might come from more efficient ways to curate this type of material. Creating textbooks is some people’s main goal, but there’s a whole lot to be said about Open Coursepacks in Linked Open Data.

    1. Technology is the only way to dramatically expand access to knowledge. Why should students be limited to a textbook that was printed two years ago, and maybe designed 10 years ago, when they could have access to the world's best and most up-to-date textbook?

      Can serve well as an OER quote.

    1. He gave the example of digital textbooks which can be updated as an example of how online technology could be better than traditional methods.

      Great argument for OERs, no? And Open Annotations, for that matter.

  5. Sep 2015
    1. To clarify not only to survey respondents, but also to raise awareness to the public, the report provides the definition of OER based on the Hewlett Foundation’s definition: “Teaching, learning, and research resources that reside in the public domain or have been released under an intellectual property license that permits their free use and re-purposing by others. Open educational resources include full courses, course materials, modules, textbooks, streaming videos, tests, software, and any other tools, materials, or techniques used to support access to knowledge.”

      Definition of OER by Hewlett Foundation

    1. Expanding the learning landscape: what effects can open educational resources have on new learning spaces?

      Nice opportunity to like Open Education to Library work. Librarians are the heroines and heroes of the #InformationAge.

  6. Aug 2015
  7. Jul 2015
    1. OER - related data need to b e accessible and readable across multiple platforms.

      Interoperability for OER content valued.

    2. Implementable standards

      It will be key to emphasize hypothes.is's alignment in this belief.

    3. A services model, which yields revenue by providing professional development and lesson planning services for OER such as Expeditionary Learning

      Ok, so this is how these guys work.

    4. Even New 5 In the 2011 Babson survey, 59% of Chief Academic Officers at the higher ed level said they “agreed” or “strongly agr eed” with the statement that OER “would be much more useful if there was a single clearinghouse.” This pain point was also cited by K - 12 teachers and OER ecosystem participants in the 2012 BCG work. 11 OER: MAINST REAM ADOPTION AND EDUCATIONAL EFFECTIVENESS York City is printing thousands of copies of Expeditionary Learning’s curriculum for use around the district.

      Interesting!

    5. Expeditionary Learning

      Possible partner?

      http://elschools.org/about-us

    6. Until a common system is widespread, though, t his dearth of standards makes OER difficult to integrate into the learning management and student data systems used by schools and educators

      Understanding of importance of standards across various platforms/providers, albeit in a slightly different circumstance.

    7. Many other states only use educational materials when they come bundled with assessment items and pr ofessional development services ,

      Interesting. Could h be the "value-add" here that OERs need to compete with mainstream publishers?

    8. CK - 12

      possible partner

    9. Utah’s Open High School

      possible partner

    10. gain academic credit

      How is this currently being evaluated within OER ecosystems? Could annotation play a role?

    11. Carnegie Mellon University’s Cognitive Tutor program has helped students complete Open Learning Initiative

      possible partner

    12. OER university 4 is a growing partnership of like - minded institutions

      possible partners

    13. resource challenges faced by public sc hool system s , as well as the appetite and interest in technology - driven solutions, present a unique opportunity

      Indeed.

    14. civic participation
    15. “Open” refers to free access in addition to the legal rights to reuse, revi se, remix, and redistribute a resource
    16. equal access to knowledge

      and equal right to create knowledge

    17. standards adoption

      What kind of standards are we talking about here?

    18. , revis

      Annotation could nicely surface the palimpsest of this process. Rather than re-writing a text, a reacher could comment on it, thus demonstrating their concerns about it as a pedagogical moment.

    19. educational lockbox,

      The lockbox suggests a problem of access--we need free, open resources to break in. But lockbox also signals the static nature of knowledge in the traditional textbook format. Annotation could bring open engagement to these open resources.

    1. State data showed more than 20 million downloads of material from the site as of early June, with a third of downloads initiated from outside New York as districts like Berkeley, California, adopt it.

      EngageNY

    1. international classification standards to the extent possible

      What does this mean?

    2. revise, remix

      While one component of this revise and remix piece is editing and linking actual texts, another might be in annotating texts.

      Annotation is a form of revision that preserves both original content and the new vision. And annotation similarly might be seen as a kind of remixing by adding layers of further information and knowledge on top of existing content.

    1. And the Open Education Movement is not just about cost savings and easy access; it’s about participation and co-creation.

      Interesting. Aside from the ability to remix resources, how are OER providers/platforms allowing "participation and co-creation"? Seems like annotation could be a major part of that process, especially as regards student interaction with teachers/course content.

  8. Jun 2015
    1. Robin DeRosa is professor of English and chair of Interdisciplinary Studies at Plymouth State University, and she is also a consultant for the OER Ambassador Pilot at the University of New Hampshire. Recently named as an editor of Hybrid Pedagogy (a digital journal of learning, teaching, and technology), in August 2015 she'll be be a Hybrid Pedagogy Fellow at the Digital Pedagogy Lab at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Her essay "Selling the Story: From Salem Village to Witch City" was published by the open uneducational resource The Revelator in 2011.

      Insert note here...

    1. Jennifer Purrenhage from the Department of Natural Resources and the Environment, has this to say about her team librarian, Jennifer Carroll: “She has jumped on several seeds I mentioned early on, and has sent me materials to consider for my courses — materials that I did not know existed, and are great candidates.

      UNH OER pilot

    1. Where can I find a list of free and openly licensed OER course(s) developed by VCCS faculty?

      List of Tidewater courses

    1. NESCO/COL a nd UNESCO Chairs in OE

      Whoa, these guys are involved!?

    2. equal access

      I'm thinking through what "equal engagement" might be. Access is s starting point. What about the tools to do something with the access granted?

    1. By calling attention to itself as a textual presence (rather than a vehicle of linguistic reference), the typography turns the lines back into themselves, leading one to identify the “black riders” with their immediate typographical unfolding.

      Just because they are bolded?

    1. and student engagement

      As far as that goes, using an open web annotation application like hypothes.is seems like a great match for OER textbooks.

    2. , an OpenStax College resource. This textbook has been created with several goals in mind: accessibility, customization,

      Of course, the concept of the "frontier" remained an important idea in American history, motivating other forms of expansion and empire.

      Image Description

    1. This is actually the biggest conceptual hurdle that most people moving from print based publishing to digital publishing have to contend with. It is often very disconcerting for those who have designed for the rigid formats of print to make the transition to the fluid world of digital. And they are often disappointed because they have to give up their pixel (or point in the print world) control and surrender to the fluid layouts of digital that put the user, not the publisher, in control of the appearance of the content.

      Difficulty with formatting

    1. The closing exhortation was to resources, meaning money but also more than money. Open Modernisms has been very fortunate in the first instance with real money, with a legion of 5 funded student RAs at Fairleigh Dickinson, sponsorship from Douglas College, investment from the MVP, and making it all possible an Open Textbook Grant. But money can’t buy you love, nor can it buy you an anthology jam… The students buy in with their own labour to help prepare and proof the text using the Open Modernisms workflow, whether it will be extended into a critical edition or used as it stands. The idea is to use coffee and pizza to open that dialogue and keep the jam running on love of the job, because if students are creating their own savings on textbooks, it really is a free lunch.

      student "publishing" model?

  9. May 2015
    1. These are opportunity costs, or the benefits you are giving up to spend your time instead reading this text. Another way to look at is as the value of foregone alternatives.

      alkjdafjd alk ads lkasddfj

    1. Open source technology, open access publication, open education have all had their successes, but none of these movements could fairly be described as having transformed practice.

      Practice/process hasn't changed - 2009

  10. Apr 2015
    1. Recent surveys and data, interviews with educators and industry officials, and K-12 companies' development of new products underscore the enduring, widespread demand for textbooks and other paper-based materials in the nation's schools.

      What efforts have been made to help students better interact with digital content?

    1. The blurring line between books and the Internet: Hugh McGuire at

      Use for quality of OER talk. No more books, but processes.

  11. May 2014