Composing free and open online educational resources 2011

Resource type: this resource is a course.

This is a new online course under development. Feel free to edit it.
We are planning to start it in January 15. Postponed!

Introduction

Free and open educational resources have become one of the most discussed topics in the field of education. Projects such as MIT Open courseware, Open Access, Wikipedia, Wikibooks and Wikimedia Commons have challenged traditional methods of delivering education resources and also the methods of creating them.

The free software movements idea of developing free, libre and open source software, as well as the Creative Commons search for alternatives to traditional copyright, have had an everlasting effect on the ways we think about education and educational resources.

The course readings and the assignments in this course will familiarize participants with the main concepts related to open education resources and to the historical and philosophical ideas behind them. The participants will also do their own projects where they will learn to create and participate in projects producing free and open educational resources.

Course / Class News

The news of the course are posted to the course blog by the facilitators:

Teacher in primary school in northern Laos.

This course is targeted for teachers and teacher-students who do not have prior knowledge or skills related to free and open education resources.

Being a student or teacher-student, however, is not a requirement for participation. Motivation and interest on the topic are the basic requirements.

Language Policy

Because the idea of this project is that the participants can help each other in their course work we need a single common language when working with the assignments (see below). This language is English. However, you can use other languages when you create your own educational resources in the project work for this course (more information about projects below).

Participants

You may preliminary register / announce your interest to take part in the course starting in January. Please, add your name to the page:

The estimated workload for the participants is 4-6 hours of study work per week. Students are expected to spend this time to read, watch and listen online materials and to complete the assignments according to the schedule.

Objectives

During the course participants will become familiar with the idea of co-creation of learning resources. After the course participants will have the skills to find, create and share free and open education resources online. People will be familiar with the concepts of:

As part of the course assignment participants will be expected to create a free and open education resource. During the projects participants will learn to take digital images, to record audio and video and to use these media as educational resources.

Class Meetings

The 1910 graduating class of Roseland Christian School.

This class meets mainly asynchronously online in the blogs of the participants and in a mailing list. The participants are recommended to hang-out in the #lemill IRC channel (Freenode) for synchronous chat (a web client is available).

Assignments

Evaluation and Feedback

At the end of the course the facilitators (Teemu and Hans) will provide PASS, FAIL or COMPLEMENTARY WORK REQUIRED statements for each participant. The participants are expected to evaluate and give constructive feedback to each other through comments on other blogs and synthesis of other's ideas on their own blog.

Schedule

A Logo for Open Educational Resources.

Week 1: Introduction

- Short history of free and open educational resources -

Example open education projects:

Assignments:


LeMill.net - Web community for teachers.

Week 2: Introduction to LeMill and Wikiversity

- LeMill or Wikiversity in your own study project of creating open educational resource -

Assignments:

Links and resources


A replica of Isaac Newton's telescope of 1672.

Week 3: Philosophical Background

- Some threads of thoughts behind the open educational resource movement -

From Wikipedia:

Assignments:


Week 4: Copyright and Alternatives

- From free software to free content resources -

From Wikipedia:

From the Web:

Assignments:


Week 5: Wikipedia and Wikimedia

- Free haven of free, libre and open content online -

Assignments:


Week 6: Taking and Sharing Pictures

Photographers in New York City.

- A picture says a thousand words -

How to shoot better photos?

How to edit your digital photos?

Web sites for sharing photos under open licenses:

Assignments:


Week 7: Sharing Audio

- And music can fill your heart with Love -

Assignments:


Week 8: Sharing Videos

Assignments:



Week 9: Evaluation and Feedback


- Tell the others what do you think about their work -

Assignments:


Week 10: Presentations and Feedback

- How we can make it better next time -

Assignments:


Acknowledgments

See also

External links

This article is issued from Wikiversity - version of the Wednesday, February 29, 2012. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.