Saturday, February 6, 2016

Open Educational Resources



Open Educational Resources (OER) are an amazing advance in education.  These resources allow anyone with internet access to educational meterials whether it’s K-12 or higher education.  “The goal is that OER materials are freely copiable, freely remixable, and free of barriers to access, cultural sensitivities, sharing, and educational use” (Johnson, Adams Becker, Estrada & Freeman, 2014).  All lectures and learning materials are available at the touch a finger rather than in paper form, saving money on resources.  "In schools, digital textbooks have been the most widely used open educational resources, as projects have been launched to address he high cost and shortages of hardbound materials (Johnson, et al, 2014).”  The limitation that still exists is getting interact access to everyone, but this limitation is shrinking.  

There has been another limitation to sharing educational content.  Licensing.   The Creative Commons grants copyright permissions to content creators including large organizations, institutions and even individuals.   These copyrights are not quite the same as “all rights reserved” of copyrighted bound books.  These copyrights are more like “some rights reserved” allowing for more freedom to share the content in a variety of different ways (Creative Commons, n.d.).

On a personal note, I have mentioned in at least one other post, my children attend a school district that utilizes Chrome Books and Google Drive.  Although the elementary school utilizes more “paper” resources, by the time students get to high school, most if not all of the books and homework are on Google Drive.  I’ve seen my daughter do an entire report on her phone!  I absolutely love OER and the sharing that done through the cloud. 


References

Creative Commons (n.d.). Retrieved from https://creativecommons.org/about/.

Johnson, L., Adams Becker, S., Estrada, V., & Freeman, A. (2014). The NMC Horizon Report: 2014 K-12 Edition, Austin, Texas: The New Media Consortium.

1 comment:

  1. Licensing is a definitely a limitation. I agree with you. However, I think it is a justified limitation. I work in the business sector however my passion lies within the educational world so I see both sides. One thing I have noticed within education is that many people provide free material for the benefit of the greater good. This is fine for those who can afford to give away valuable information for free. But I don't think this should be the norm or what is expected. I believe if a person devotes a lot of time to produce research material that is valuable to society, then that person has a right to profit from publishing that information. The issue I have is that so many people think that just because the information will be for the greater good of society, then that person who published the information should give it away for free. I believe in the long run that will discourage people from performing valuable research. It is a difficult predicament for both teachers and publishers/researchers. I love OER but think it should not be automatically expected for researchers to give away information/ code/research to the educational market at no cost.

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