Developing a Course
in the Open
A case study, presented for
Thompson Rivers University
Paul D Hibbitts
@hibbittsdesign
Has the “open educational resources”
movement changed your teaching?
The Various Aspects of “Open”
Result
Price
Culture
Network
Process
Benefits/Risks of
Developing a Course in the Open
Honesty
Accountability
Collaboration
Criticism
Interest (e.g. enrollment)
and others?
Making Your Progress Visible
Channels
Structure
Content
Channels
Blog
Twitter
LinkedIn
Google+
Facebook
Instagram
Pinterest
What is your favorite method to map out your course structure?
Structure
Outlines
Post-it notes
Tree diagrams
Mind maps
Content
Readings
Discussion Topics
Activities/Exercises
Slides
Course Website
Time for Questions and Discussion
What we’ve covered so far
The various aspects of
“open”
Benefits/risks of developing a course in the open
Making your progress visible
Channels
Structure
Content
Coming up
Case studies
Example of open (re)development for a 13 week university course...
Simon Fraser University (SFU) Computer Science Department
CMPT 363 User Interface Design, Fall 2013
Top Lessons Learned
Developing a course in the open was a game changer (for me)
Forced me to better articulate learning objectives
Made me re-think course development less from content (shame on me...) and more from student activities
Twitter better for in-progress items, LinkedIn for final versions
Reaching intended student audience can be a challenge
Proved to myself that one naturally raises the bar when
anyone
can see your work!
Time for More
Questions and Discussion
What we’ve covered in this section
CMPT 363, a case study
Channels
Structure
Content
Coming up
IY 103 case study (Continuing Studies course)
Example of open development for a
3 week continuing studies course...
University of British Columbia (UBC) Continuing Studies
IY103 Designing Multi-device Learning Experiences, Spring 2014
Top Lessons Learned
Developing a course in the open is applicable to continuing studies courses (i.e. traditionally closed courses)
Solidified my change to activities first (i.e. “true” outcomes)
Public outlines are now my preferred documentation tool
From now on, open course development will be my (one and only?) default approach
Next Steps
Explore some of the tools used
http://www.mindmeister.com/
http://fargo.io
(last minute arrival!)
https://workflowy.com/
http://www.gliffy.com/
https://docs.google.com/
http://slides.com/
Learn more about Creative Commons Licenses
http://creativecommons.org/
Thank you! Any Questions?
Contact info
Web:
paulhibbitts.com
Email:
paul@paulhibbitts.com
Twitter:
@hibbittsdesign
LinkedIn:
linkedin.com/in/paulhibbitts
Current course undergoing open development
(CMPT 363 Fall 2014)
Course companion prototype
(not public anymore, to lessen student confusion...)
Live course companion
Detailed course map, built with WorkFlowy
Made with Slides.com