This quick taster design thinking workshop was a 15 minute introduction to open badges and portfolios in education based on the Deakin University OLT project Curate, Credential and Carry Forward Digital Learning Evidence emerging research with 30 minutes of team based portfolio badge design. This workshop was held at ePortfolios Australia on October 2 at La Trobe University in Melbourne.
Asian American Pacific Islander Month DDSD 2024.pptx
Badges, Curation, Credentials and Portfolios: ePortfolios Australia Workshop
1. CURATE, CREDENTIAL & CARRY
FORWARD DIGITAL LEARNING EVIDENCE
THE POTENTIAL OF OPEN BADGES IN
HIGHER EDUCATION facebook
https://www.facebook.com/digitalcredentialin
g
project site
http://boliver.ning.com
2. A Badge is…
"a validated indicator of accomplishment, skill, quality
or interest.” MacArthur Foundation
“a single credential demonstrating a skill, achievement,
quality or affiliation.” Mozilla
“a validated accomplishment obtained inside or outside
school.” AERA President
3. Badges in Plain English
A digital artefact that contains ‘baked-in’ meta
data to a structured yet flexible credentialing
system that warrants, endorses, rewards and
displays the achievement of specific and
verifiable experiences, skills and knowledge
through evidence.
Coleman & Wisser, 2014
4. Open Badges
Open Badges allow you to verify your skills, interests and
achievements through credible organizations.
An open standard means you can combine multiple badges
from different issuers to tell the complete story of your
achievements — both online and off.
Display your badges wherever you want them on the web,
and share them for employment, education or lifelong
learning.
http://www.openbadges.org/about/
9. How could Open Badges Transform ePortfolio Practices and
Technologies!Serge Ravet, Europortfolio, May 26
10.
11.
12. Design Challenge
Complements
Create a
badge/badge system
that
ePortfolios/
Artefacts/evid
ence
Reinforces
Supports
Enhances
Motivates/
Recognises
13. ePortfolio & Open Badges Maturity
Matrix
• https://docs.google.com/file/d/0Bxntz9IEOEz
wSFVMZ0tyejJqYkE/edit
Notas del editor
Here are a few definitions from some of the big players out there. You can see that there is some overlap in these definitions – validated comes up a few times, so does skill and accomplishment.
The idea of validation is an important one, and I’ll come back to it in more detail in a little while. There are plenty of opportunities for you to display right now accomplishments earned outside the traditional academic structure. Think about LinkedIn and recommendations, or your own resume that can be used to display soft skills. But these aren’t validated. There’s no way for you to show that you really are a people person, for example.
My own definition does not differ drastically from those before, but I added structural and flexible. I’ll talk about the challenges of a badging system in a moment, but one of which in my eyes is the need to maintain individual choice and agency in the pursuit of a badge while also making the creation, earning, and display a verifiable and replicable activity; i.e., an system.
Much of this spike is due to the work of a few related institutes and their initiatives. Last year the Mozilla Foundation proposed the development of a metadata standard for open badges called the Open Badge Infrastructure. I’ll say something more about that in a little while. Building on the infrastructure provided by Mozilla, the MacArthur Foundation funded a competition that was administered by the HASTAC organization through the Digital Media and Learning competition that sought proposals for organizations inside and outside the academy to develop systems that promote badging for lifelong learning. All this was accompanied by several articles in respected outlets such as the Chronicle, which quickly lent credence to this emerging trend.
The emergence of badges as a trending topic coincided with two other powerful trends, and whether or not badging is a respose to these trends or a coincidence is an interesting topic for debate. The first trend is the increasingly loud challenge to the academy by both those inside its halls, through the form of books like Academically Adrift and Disruptive Innovation) and from outside the academy with increasingly dire news about the job market, ballooning student loan debt, and the value of a higher ed degree.
The second coinciding trend is the new popularity of the Massive Open Online Course, or Mooc. Learning has always happened both inside and outside the traditional classroom space, but Moocs have changed that landscape by extending the traditional classroom to any one with an internet connection. It is still a very open question about how learning in a Mooc will be recognized and credentialed, whether college credit will be awarded, or a certificate of completion will be earned, but regardless, the question of alternative credentialing is a popular topic right now. Some folks see badging as the answer to assessing and valuing real-world skills and knowledge. Some see them as credentialing applicable marketplace skills. Others see them as democratizing learning and helping to break down the walls that surround the ivory tower, if not toppling the tower itself.