
Over the next two weeks you will look at one of the most prevalent, and successful, interpretations of what open education means, namely open education resources (OER). This is the process whereby universities, institutions and individuals make their learning content freely available. These can be whole courses, parts of a course, lecture notes, video lectures and so on. The key characteristics are that these learning materials are free to use and have a copyright licence that encourages reuse.
We will be looking at OER and different types of licence in more detail later but for now it is sufficient to think of OER as freely available learning content from universities or other providers. Much of the research around open education has been derived from the OER movement.
A number of key questions have arisen, which can apply to most aspects of open education, including:
During this course you will engage with these questions for different aspects of open education.
Timing: 3–4 hours
Imagine you are advising a funding organisation that wishes to promote activity and research in the area of open education.
In this activity you are just expected to start thinking about these issues, and to use your own experience and intuition; you are not expected to research them in depth. You will build on this work during the next week.
After creating your list of priorities, consider the following questions, which will give you some ideas as we move into the second week of the course:
Use the box below to record your thoughts.
OpenLearn - Open education
Except for third party materials and otherwise, this content is made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 Licence, full copyright detail can be found in the acknowledgements section. Please see full copyright statement for details.