8. Focus
• Stimulating uptake of OER through policy
• Building on previous initiatives (eg. OPAL, Olnet)
• Through country reports and case studies
• Evaluate successful OER
communities
9. eMundusEuroProject
MENON
Network BE
Leicester U.
UK
U. La Rioja
ES
Fundação de Apoio a
Universidade de São
Paulo - BR
U Autonoma
Metropolitana
MX
Open Educational
Resources - OER
Foundation NZ
Athabasca U
- CA
Universitas
Siswa
Bangsa IN
Moscow U
Economics, Statistics
& Informatics- RU
15. The Internet economy has in five years done
what it took the auto industry 100 years to do
-- Don Listwin ( VP,Cisco Systems)
16.
17.
18.
19.
20. “Not only has abstract knowledge come
to the center of the world’s political
economy, but there is also a tendency to
produce and trade in symbolic
significations rather than concrete
products. Today knowledge rather than
traditional skill is the main productive
force.”
- Aronowitz & DiFazio
21. “The visible
world is no
longer a reality
and the unseen
world is no
longer a dream.”
- W.B. Yeats
Augustus John
27. 3 billion Internet connexions
World population: 7 billion
40% of the world’s population
http://www.soil-net.com/album/Places_Objects/slides/Globe%20Planet%20Earth%20NASA.jpg
Most access Internet with Mobile devices
2.3 billion have mobile broadband
28.
29.
30. Mobile learning
4.5 billion mobile subscriptions
1.5 billion mobile internet
users
1/3 only access internet
via mobile
90% of world population is covered by cellular
More time
spent on
Internet
with
Mobile
than with
desktops
44. “Global competition in telecommunications
is an overwhelming and irreversible tide. We
can neither go against, alter nor shut out
this tide. We will simply be bypassed and
rendered irrelevant.”
- Singapore government
Globe & Mail Aug 6, 1994
52. Why OER?
• DRM (digital rights management)
• Digital licenses
53. DRM (Digital Rights Management)
You CANNOT
• Copy & paste, annotate, highlight
• Text to speech
• Format change
• Move material
• Print out
• Move geographically
• Use after expiry date
• Resell
54. • DRM restricts our
freedom
• Can we not own &
control our own
property?
But our device is our
PROPERTY
Nielsen.com
58. Digital Licenses
•Copy & paste, annotate, highlight
• Text to speech or hyperlink
• Format change
• Move material to another computer
• Print out
• Move geographically
• Use after expiry date
• Resell
• Prohibited to show your content to others
• Must accept that you have NO rights
• Owners have NO liability even if product doesn’t work
• Owners can “invade” your computer without permission
• Collect & use personal data
• User has a “privilege” to use the product not own it
59. Open ETextbooks
•Copy & paste, annotate, highlight √
• Text to speech or hyperlink √
• Format change √
• Move material to other computer √
• Print out √
• Move geographically √
• No expiry date √
• Reuse/Remix/Mash √
•Retain privacy and digital rights √√
60. Access Rights?
Vendors can control how, when,
where, and with what specific
brands of technological
assistance audiences are able to
access content
61. • student owns nothing, can share
nothing, save nothing, sell nothing
• subscription ends – ALL ends
•publishers own student data, notes,
highlights
• students can’t transfer data
Commercial Learning Service
or Rent-a-book
62. US Version per month
+20 000 movies $ 7.99
+45 000 TV shows $ 7.99
+15 000 000 songs $ 9.99
TOTAL $25.97
ONE Biology text $20.25
-David Wiley
63. When you subscribe to
content through a digital
service, the publisher
achieves complete and
perfect control over you
and your use of their
content
-- David Wiley
Attack on Personal Property
72. Global OER Graduate
(School) Network
Goals
1 expand the OER research base
2 good quality PhD trajectories
3 universities around the world
4 global learning network
5 free and easy access to the generated
knowledge
77. 2008: CCK08
Stephen Downes, George Siemens
The First Massive Open Online Course (MOOC)
http://ltc.umanitoba.ca/wiki/Connectivism_2008
G. Siemens
77
78. 2007:
The Wiley Wiki
An Open Course
based in a wiki
Participants from
around the world
contributed to the
creation of the course
G. Siemens
78
79. 2007: Alec Couros
Social Media and Open Education
Open online course sessions with guest experts
from around the world G. Siemens
79
80. Why is CCK08 the First MOOC?
It combines open content (Wiley)
and open teaching (Couros)
But also…
http://ltc.umanitoba.ca/wiki/Connectivism_2008
80
84. Statement of Accomplishment
“ . . . You may not use as part of any tuition-
based or for-credit certification or program . .“
85. • “the real squeeze
exerted by MOOCs may
not be on the campus
F2F learning format,
but rather on the paid-
for online formats”
Haggard, S. (2013, September). Maturing of the
MOOC Vol. Research Paper number 130.
Retrieved from www.gov.uk/bis
86. 2014
MOOCs: Expectations & Reality
• FREE MOOCs only from wealthy institutions
• MOOCs are NOT “democratizing” education
• MOOC costs: $39K to $325K
• Online & hybrid learning is here to stay
• MOOCs catalyzed shift supporting Elearning
F. Hollands & D. Tirthali
89. • Learners who access OER and
acquire knowledge/skills cannot
have their learning assessed and
accredited
• OER Pathways
• +30 institutions/orgs on 5
continents
91. Mini-MOOC model?
• OER first lessons
• Assessment/accreditation for $50
• Award 1 credit? (3 credits = 1 semester
course)
• Recruit students to pay fee for final two
credits
92. •Present systems
• are unsustainable
• are not scalable
•NEED: cost-effective learning systems with quality
•MOOCs are part of any solution
• How many learners??
93. The view from an OERu partner
Traditional modelTraditional model OERu model
learners
Friesen & Murray
learners
97. • “Affordability in the
future may be the first
requirement not an
afterthought.” Whitesides (2011)
The race may not be to the
swift, but to the cheap
98. The restriction of the
commons by patents,
copyright, and databases is not
in the interests of society and
unduly hampers scientific
endeavour.
99. “On the part of rich countries
there is excessive zeal for
protecting knowledge
through an unduly rigid
assertion of the right to
intellectual property . . .”
- Pope Benedict XVI
100. “On the part of rich countries
there is excessive zeal for
protecting knowledge through
an unduly rigid assertion of the
right to intellectual property . .
.”
- Pope Benedict XVI
101.
102. "Let's put all this hype about change and
transformation in perspective. It's underhyped."
"There's something
coming after us, and I
imagine it is something
wonderful.” "
Danny Hillis, Wired
Change