Open education and research at the University of Canberra

Presentation by Leigh Blackall and James Neill, University of Canberra, at the Annual Conference of Knowledge Commercialisation Australasia, November 11, 2010.

Key points

  1. Universities have vast amounts of unrealised intellectual capital - most of it has very little commercial viability - but much of it has potentially significant scientific, educational, and social value which, if openly shared, could bring significant local, national and international benefits.
  2. Does a protectionist stance, for commercial purposes alone, return enough to compensate for these lost opportunities? At any rate, how does a university become aware of projects with commercial potential?
  3. We think the proposed IP policy for the University of Canberra gives us a more reliable trigger, while ensuring maximum opportunity gains for the majority of IP at the university.

Notes

Leigh and James. Drawing by James Neill.

Open academia

Five pillars of open academia

James Neill presented about open academia

  1. Open academia = Principles of openness (philosophy) plus acts of sharingness (practice)
  2. Collaborative process of developing and sharing in a knowledge commons
  3. A university's job is to openly develop and share knowledge to fuel an adaptive sustainable society
  4. Five pillars: Open access, open license, open formats, open software, open governance
  5. Invert current situation where the default is openness, and closed is the exception
  6. In practice: openness is vital to authentic scholarship
  7. Comment: Could we make more reference to using popular online media for network learning engagement and research dissemination?

Examples

  1. Open information initiatives: Federal Gov Australia[1] , NZ Gov Framework, European Commission, US Federal Research Public Access Act
  2. Open journals [2] and textbooks [3]
  3. Otago Polytechnic Return on Investment[4] - "It is estimated to cost $4000 to train one person how to use social media for open educational practices. At Otago Polytechnic, such a person goes on to return over $8000 worth of savings and gains to their organisation in the first year."

OpenUC proposal

Leigh Blackall presented about The OpenUC Proposal, that was under development 2010-2011.

On Knowledge Commercialisation Australasia's Annual Conference

Problems/Questions/Issues

Refine to the best 3:

References

Cite this presentation as:
Blackall, L. & Neill, J. T. (2010). Open education and research at the University of Canberra. Presentation at the Knowledge Commercialisation Australasia Annual Conference, Canberra, November 11.

  1. Gov2.0 update: IP Principles Released. AGIMO. 7 October 2010
  2. Oliver Marc Hartwich. Let the Internet Replace Journals. The Australian, November 25, 2009
  3. Student-authored open text books
  4. Otago Polytechnic Return on Investment
  5. "Secrets of Success" - Presentation from Columbia University, day 2.
  6. Our presentation, IP Australia's presentation, and GSK's presentation for example

See also

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