Archive

Posts Tagged ‘evaluation’

Feedback your thoughts on the C-change OER

April 22nd, 2010
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The C-change website now has a form allowing you to feed back your thoughts on our OER.

This is available from the menu above – from the ‘Have you used an OER” tab or directly at:

http://c-changeproject.org.uk/?page_id=382

The input that you give us will be fed directly back to the C-change team and will help us plan and implement further developments of OER materials for GEES.

To find our material simply go to:

http://open.jorum.ac.uk/ and search for GEESOER.

or click here

Final versions of Partner Advice Docs & Draft versions of Generic Docs started

April 14th, 2010
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We have now finalised the last versions of our Partner Advice Documents:

  1. c-change_supporting_info_3a – Final (98Kb) – originally – C-change Back-Page Guidance
  2. c-change_deposit_jorumOPEN_4 – Final (48Kb) – originally the C-change JorumOPEN deposit Guidelines

Development will continue of these guidelines, however they have now been made far more generic and aimed at all the wider GEES community.  The newer versions are still available on the documents page at:  http://c-changeproject.org.uk/?page_id=3

The C-change project is also working with the other STEM OER projects on some more generic guidelines for producing OER for the sciences.

Best Practice Guidelines for depositing resources into JorumOPEN

April 8th, 2010
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JorumOPEN is based on a set of minimal metadata.  On the whole this is a good thing….or at least we can see that this idea started with good intentions!

But with so few fields to fill out, we really need to take great care on how we fill them.  It would be just too easy to end up with a lot of data squashed into just a few fields and a lack of standards making the data almost unusable.

The best example of this is most probably the ‘author’ field:

For a start, this field is taking three types of possible ‘author’.  First the name of the people who created it, but then also the name of the ‘owner’ , which is likely to be different and then finally the name of the insititute or univeristy who employed the author, who may or may not be the ‘owner’ of it.

Then there is the question of how to enter the ‘name’ into one field which has to include both ‘surname’ and ‘first name’. Remembering that it needs to be in such a way that when the data is sorted, it uses the surname rather than the first name.

This all asks for a high level of standardisation and we have started down that route by starting a set of draft guidelines, which can be downloaded from the Documents page at:

http://c-changeproject.org.uk/?page_id=3 and is called:  Depositing into JorumOPEN eib 4

As ever, we would appreciate any thoughts or feedback you had into this document

eib

C-change posts JorumOPEN Feedback to Jorum Community Bay

March 31st, 2010

C-change in GEES is totally committed to using JorumOPEN for the delivery of all its OER materials and has always considered it to be the primary interface for  our community to find and download C-change OER materials.

We therefore have high hopes for how JorumOPEN will work for the Geography, Earth & Environmental Sciences community, but feel that there are still some areas where we would like to see some improvements in the user interface and workflow, before we can unreservedly recommend it to our community.

After talking with JorumOPEN, they recommended that we post our experiences and thoughts to their forum on Community Bay.

We have done this and the thread can be found here:

http://community.jorum.ac.uk/mod/forum/discuss.php?d=98#p142

We would really appreciate any further thoughts that you had – posted on the thread there or if you prefer do go ahead and leave a comment here.

cheers

eib

Launch Event Announced

January 29th, 2010
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The GEES Subject Centre is delighted to announce that:
‘C-Change in GEES – Open Education Resources (OERs) for climate change and sustainability – practicalities & pedagogy’ is to be held on Thursday the 29th of April 2010 at the Macdonald Hotel Manchester from 9.30am to 4pm.

This event will mark the launch of the C-Change in GEES project and has two main aims:

  1. To disseminate the resources and learning outcomes from the GEES Subject Centre project ‘C-change in GEES: Open licensing of climate change and sustainability resources in the Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences.
  2. To promote the ‘Pedagogy of Climate Change’ book, published by the GEES Subject Centre and edited by Simon Haslett, Derek France and Sharon Gedye. Due to be launched at the event.

This event provides an excellent opportunity to both learn more about the production and use of OER materials for the GEES and also to further explore the pedagogy’s of climate change, identify the areas for development in our knowledge and understanding and look forward to what can be achieved in the future.

For further details of the event please visit:
http://gees.ac.uk/events/2010/geesoer/geesoer.htm

for any more information please do get back to anyone in the C-change team.

Usefull Session with JISC TechDis Today

January 12th, 2010
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Very useful online session today with Simon Ball from TechDis.  Full of useful and sensible material for our partners about making our OER resources as universally open to everyone as possible.

The six videos used in the presentation are openly available from the following URLs

  1. Introduction: Inclusive Learning 09:34  http://www.InstantPresenter.com/techdisonline/EC53DD8184
  2. Reasonable Adjustment 08:14  http://www.InstantPresenter.com/techdisonline/EC53DD8388
  3. Organisational Added Value 10:08 http://www.InstantPresenter.com/techdisonline/EC53DD8080
  4. Standards, Guidelines and User Testing 10:26  http://www.InstantPresenter.com/techdisonline/EC53DD8086
  5. Communicating with users 04:32  http://www.InstantPresenter.com/techdisonline/EC53DD8089
  6. Sources of Support and Guidance 20:07  http://www.InstantPresenter.com/techdisonline/EC53DD8382

Happy viewing!

Institutional IPR Policy Survey

November 24th, 2009
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A while ago I was talking with Tim Denning at Keele University about the lack of clarity in the approach many Universities have to IPR in the widest context.  Tim is working on MedDev, another project in the OER Programme and they intend to grab this bull by the horns and undertake a survey of their partners to try and find out a bit more about university institutional IPR policy.

It would be great to extend this survey as wide as possible so I would encourage all of you to get in touch with Tim or Adrian on oer@keele.ac.uk and I am sure they will be delighted to send you the details of how to fill out the survey.

These surveys always take a little time to fill out, but it should be worth the effort as they promise to share the results with all those who have filled it out and I think it will make very interesting reading.


International Evaluation

November 6th, 2009
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At the end of last month I presented a poster on C-change (designed by Ed and Sharon) at the annual meeting of the Geological Society of America in Portland, Oregon. The poster was presented along with 19 others in the session on “From Virtual Globes to Geoblogs: Digital Innovations in Geoscience Research, Education, and Outreach”. There were 379 posters available for view in the exhibit hall within 26 different sessions, so delegates had a lot of things to see! From 4pm – 6pm (when presenters are required to be at their posters) 10 people stopped to look at the C-Change poster and a total of 14 handouts were taken. The poster was usefully positioned next to the queue for free beer and I followed a few people along the line in order to hear their opinions on the project.

Everyone I spoke too was very interested in the project and felt that the materials could be useful. The fact that the materials were from the UK did not matter. About half of those I spoke to had used the MIT Open Courseware materials and one person mentioned that there wasn’t much there on energy, so the C-Change resources would prove useful.

Although this was a geology conference, several people noted that they taught introductory level environmental science / studies and that the materials would be very useful for that. Other suggestions for use included K-12 teacher professional development and public understanding (e.g. through promotion of the materials in museums).

Potential themes to investigate for evaluation

August 5th, 2009

1. capturing of information that has already occurred: prior to successful bid proposal- consultation with community; contact over the next few months with partner institutional IPR/legal people- light touch interviews investigating how the process worked for them, what the sticking points were, what helped, what hindered.
2. for the GEES team: what issues could be seen from the beginning- i.e. any ‘told you so’s'? Yes, already: short term nature of milestones, especially e.g. consortium agreement. SC groupings previously suggested that combined HEA led work on developing agreements, with help from a consultant, would be most efficient way to work. Since GEES SC got agreements in, deadline has been extended, and consultant brought in (!) for other SCs. What is it about the GEES SC consortium that enabled successful meeting of deadline?

Synthesis and Evaluation Elluminate Session:notes

July 15th, 2009
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Mike and Yolie ‘attended’ the first online Elluminate session, which introduced the evaluation and synthesis part of the OER programme and raised some interesting questions for future discussion. The E&S team will synthesize the discussion at a later date, but what follows is a brief summary of the discussion from our point of view, with appropriate links to other blogs/wikis/Powerpoints etc..

The link for accompanying Powerpoints, and a live recording of this Elluminate session can be found here: http://www.caledonianacademy.net/spaces/oer/index.php?n=Main.Presentations

The JISC OER ‘Synthesis and Evaluation Function’ aims to build a shared framework for the evaluation and synthesis of the OER piulot programme- so does what it says on the tin! There is a project wiki: http://www.caledonianacademy.net/spaces/oer/index.php?n=Main.HomePage, which will hold information for programme participants, and, hopefully, allow continuing dialouge with the S&E consultants. The three OER strands (individual, subject and institutional) have specific consultants working on each: the Subject Strand has Helen Beetham as contact, and Mike and I are already in discussion with her with a (very early) draft/notes on possible evaluation strategies (document to follow). The current draft evaluation and synthesis framework can be found here: http://www.caledonianacademy.net/spaces/oer/index.php?n=Main.GenericFramework.

The first Elluminate discussion session covered the following topics: marketing and branding; possible benefits and support for staff; pedagogy of OER; managing databases and metadata (this will be the topic for the next Elluminate session, on the second Tuesday of August, 2pm); reuse of OER and accompanying quality issues; general E&S queries. Due to the nature of Elluminate as a forum, the discussion was bitty and a little confused, but some interesting questions could be extracted, which may be worth highlighting here for further consideration by the team and partners.

Firstly, however, here is a brief intro into the E&S framework development:

How should we develop our evaluation strategy?

To allow our evaluation strategy to map to the generic E&S framework, we need to identify our project’s key outcomes, especially in relation to the following: findings, impact, benefits and lessons learned.

We need to begin to define ‘measures of openness’ (not quite sure what this means at this stage!).

The E&S team will try to help us identify appropriate factors, methods, timings and measures that will help us achieve the above: but this relies on us being proactive in seeking advice.

Once we have these methods/timings/measures agreed, it is up to us as a project to apply these through our evaluation processes.

The rationale for working in this way is that such a structure allows for the development of a common language for collation of data, challenges, solutions and outputs, encourages the sharing of questions/issues and allows the identification of key areas of interest and useful approaches for the future.

Problems/issues/questions might fit in to three categories:

1. those that can be answered by JISC/HEA Programme Managers (and tend to apply to all projects)- and an answer/solution is available.

2. those that can be answered by programme support (the OU team) and need expert advice from those already working on OER

3. those that are issues for evaluation- that is, questions that don’t have a clear answer, but the programme is investigating. Thies issues/questions can also be seperated in to:

  • organisational and IPR
  • social and cultural
  • technical

Issues that were raised by Elluminate participants during discussion:

Marketing and Branding

  • Our University’s reputation is at stake with this project, how do we approach marketing and branding? Reputational benefits may depend on identifying authorship.
  • Do we need to look at business models?
  • What is the difference between ‘branding’ and author/institutional acknowledgement?
  • Should this just sit in the accompanying metadata?
  • Is anyone thinking of using licensing that doesn’t mandate attribution?
  • If an OER is branded, the branding should not impede re-use.
  • Could we just use a UKOER logo (in addition to UKOER tag)? How about logo alongside originator (project partner logo?) details?
  • Will a lack of branding/acknowledgement prevent reassurance of already reticent academic staff?
  • Creative Commons licences wouldn’t mandate retention of UKOER logo

Benefits and support for staff

  • Links investigating benefits for staff (individuals and institutions): http://ie-repository.jisc.ac.uk/265/ (Good Intentions Report); CETIS OER Briefing Paper
  • Who are the stakeholders and how can we support them, and evaluate their experience? Academic, teaching staff, technical staff, learners
  • Do we need to consider evaluation of end-user communities? Who are they/likely to be? What do they need?
  • How do we investigate benefits of OER whilst, at the same time, encouraging engagement?
  • What motivates enthusiasts? Ask E&S to investigate participants with OpenLearn at the OU- a very enthusiastic and aware group.
  • Do we need to look at how discipline cultures work across institutions? How do different disciplines share research, for example? Might this have some effect on how a discipline engages with OER?
  • Colleagues at Caledonian University can cite ‘reuse of resources they have authored’ in their application for promotion on the basis of learning and teaching.
  • Is anyone doing a formal survey on academics’ preferences for release of material under creative commons?

Pedagogy

  • Fragmentation of resources makes it difficult for the background pedagogy (good or bad) to be transmitted wholesale to the user
  • do we even want to put such caveats (e.g. ‘must be used in this pedagogic context’) against material?
  • Ope Spires thinks that should not wrap material up with unnecessary contextual material
  • Making resources easier to use overcomes barriers
  • For the purposes of this programme, cannot evaluate learning and teaching quality (above and beyond initial accredited material) in terms of reuse, but maybe we can explore changes in practice and perceptions around quality?
  • If we are not looking at pedagogic value, then surely this brings the programme’s sustainability credibility in to question?
  • the JISC Mosaic Report has a good overview of this issue

Managing Metadata and Databases

  • Need advice on subject schemas vs. subject tags?
  • Tracking: how do we track across both OpenJorum and other repositories?
  • Can track visits using Google Analytics.
  • Should not just track the ‘what’ but also the ‘why’
  • Another suggestion is to use javascript to record downloads- you can add a click event handler to document links, and use this to track using e.g. google analytics. An example can be found here.
  • p.s. from Yolie- I’m happy with metadata discussions, but can’t guarantee that I’ve necessarily got the right words or ‘ideas’ down with respect to e.g. tracking. Far too technical for me!

Reuse and Quality

  • Evaluating reuse of OERs may well be out of scope of programme: programme is focussed on creation/repurposing and release of OERs rather than on their reuse
  • However, reuse will influence quality of OER, and a couple of the institutional projects will be looking at reuse, so should keep an eye on these.
  • However, we may well get hints at reuse, the hows and wherefores- so make sure manage to pick these up as and when they appear.
  • Should ‘intention to reuse’ be seen as part of the release? Open release implies re-use and so is part of the change of mind-set
  • The programme is starting on the road of ‘building an OER culture into course design and delivery’
  • SC credibility for OER project is affected if the actual resources are not valuable for reuse. Is difficult to evaluate the potential for the OERs in context until someone else has tried to embedd them. How do we maximise component reuse?
  • For Biosciences, each project partner is finding a ‘client’ as a user for their OER, to act as a critical friend, rather than simply rely on the repository and reactions/use of the latter.
  • Is there a difference between quality in terms of original resource (accredited programmes, therefore quality assured) vs. quality within new context (reuse)? (we think yes to this)
  • We have no control over context of reuse?

Other Queries

  • Institutional programme blogs can be found at http://www.netvibves.com/hwilliamson#oer-institutional_projects
  • If anyone is interested in the Oxford project on Audio Visual enterprise level infrastructure, you can find more information at http://steeple.oucs.ox.ac.uk
  • Could projects use Elluminate with their partners? (programme leaders investigating licensing for this)
  • In terms of evaluation framework, could we have a ‘phase 1′ and a ‘phase 2′, so that we can get the project and partners started (evaluting as we go), without necessarily knowing all the questions we want to ask overall?
  • Projects must gather evidence throughout lifecycle, but mapping this to the framework may well take a couple of attempts. The E&S team will help with this.

As the project continues, we will pick out particular issues raised here (and at other meetings) and ask partners for their thoughts.