Reflecting on anomalies in OER
Is 'Open' broken, and if so, can education fix it?
Wayne Mackintosh
UNESCO Chair in OER
Open Education Resource Foundation
OER Foundation
FOSS
OER
OEP
The OER opportunity
There is no form of educational delivery more cost-effective, scalable and sustainable than open education
A brief history of OER in HE
1969 | Open University founded |
1980s | Free and open source software |
2002 | UNESCO coins the concept of OER |
2007 | Cape Town Open Education Declaration Wiley's 4R permissions |
2009 | OER Foundation established |
2012 | UNESCO Paris OER Declaration |
2012 | Apereo Foundation established |
2017 | Ljubljana Declaration From awareness to action |
2019 | UNESCO OER Recommendation |
2021 | UNESCO Recommendation on Open Science |
History image by Alan Cleaver published under Creative Commons Attribution license
The OER implementation challenge
Crossing the chasm
Taichung Airport light trails by 攝影家9號 published under Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs 2.0 Generic license
noun
something that deviates from what is standard, normal, or expected
OxfordLanguages
Square peg, round hole, by Simon Law, Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike
Red pea in pod, by Magnascan published under Pixabay license
Many governments reporting actions to support OER policies at the national and/or institutional level, but with scarce published research evidence demonstrating meaningful implementation of OER practices resulting from these policies.
60 UNESCO Member states report actions to support OER policy
Butcher N and Mohini Baijnath (2023) Researching the effectiveness of OER Policies. - Only two countries met the selection criteria for the study.
Red pea in pod, by Magnascan published under Pixabay license
The reliance of most OER projects on donor funding for sustainability in the absence of government funded support despite the unparalleled opportunities for publicly funded education systems to lower costs and enhance equitable access to educational resources.
64% of faculty are aware of OER, but only 15% of required course materials are OER.
2023 Bay View Analytics
Red pea in pod, by Magnascan published under Pixabay license
A notable presence of mainstream OER initiatives whose replicability is limited by proprietary software dependencies.
Red pea in pod, by Magnascan published under Pixabay license
7000 spoken languages, but 90% of OER content is published in English
Conservation light bulb by Alexas Fotos dedicated to the Public Domain under Creative Commons CC0
Digital enabler for OER
Open technology
“Open education is not limited to just open educational resources. It also draws upon open technologies that facilitate collaborative, flexible learning and the open sharing of teaching practices that empower educators to benefit from the best ideas of their colleagues”
(The Cape Town Open Education Declaration, 2007).
Seagull sky flight by maleifl dedicated to the public domain under Creative Commons CC0
OER4Covid
N=711 from 85 countries
Many participants exhibit limited proficiency in digital literacy
The challenge of donor overload in the Pacific
Inadequate (or expensive) digital infrastructure for online delivery
Open education ecosystem
Hands and puzzle pieces by PublicDomainPictures publish under Pixabay license
OER
Content
FOSS
Technology
Digital OEP
Skills
To establish a low-cost, component-based production and delivery ecosystem for OER-enabled online courses.
Scalable for tens of thousands of learners that any institution could replicate utilizing exclusively FOSS tools
Collaborative development and local branded instances
Tech Blog: tech.oeru.org
FOSS digital learning ecosystem
Component-based system
Our FOSSDLE project vision
Seagull sky flight by maleifl dedicated to the public domain under Creative Commons CC0
Empower every SID to
remix and host their own Open Educational Resources (OER) professional development programs
build digital skills capacity using shared open infrastructure
provide mentorship opportunities to gain practical experience
ensure quality education and knowledge sharing
Self-sufficiency and resilience for SIDS to cooperatively deploy OER-enabled online courses
Software and inclusivity
No learner should be denied access to learning for having to:
Purchase a proprietary software license or
Sacrifice their freedoms in software choice
Tux / GNU logos licensed under the Free Art License
Ubuntu wall paper by Abyss Alpha Coders free for personal non-commercial use
Kiribati demonstrator
Kiribati ocean by Vladimir Lysenko, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license
Anee Teiaua
Senior Lecture
Kiribari globe, Wikimedia Commons, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license
Population: 121,388
32 Atolls (20 inhabited) and one raised coral island
Total land area of 811 km2 dispersed of 3.4 million km2
Working together
"If you want to go fast, go alone, if you want to go far, go together"
African proverb
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