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SCORE Fellows

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Integrating the use of open content into the delivery of PG Certificates in Learning
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OER as a scholarly activity within staff development accredited courses
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Teaching Statistics in Psychology
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Investigating the use of OER among Early-Career University Lecturers
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Re-purposing Academic Practices
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Practical Sandpit Project
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Community building and user engagement: developing the potential of LORO
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Authorship and use of OER as academic practice for research-led teaching
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Sustainable relationships between universities and vocational OER users
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TOETOE Technology for Open Education - Training with Open E-resources
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Sharing Pedagogically-enhanced Interactive Digital Educational Resources (SPIDER)
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OER for research methods teaching in social science and education
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Sharing OERs for Statistical Literacy using Real World Data
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Mapping cross-sector reuse of OER in Health Sciences
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Review and Endorsement of OER by Graduate-Recruiting Employers
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Exploring collaborative use and re-use of OER rich media resources in art & design
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The use and impact of the TIGER inter-professional open education resource repository
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Developing Students as OER Content Scavengers
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OER to develop the Postgraduate Reseracher Development Programme.
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SCORE Higher: using OER to explore self-assessment for first year postgraduate resear
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OER to support the Postgraduate Researcher Development Programme
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i-mpact: Interactive resource for Media Professionals and Academics Collaborating in
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Promoting engagement with and re-use of OER in teaching and learning in HE
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TOUCANS (Testing the OER University Concept and Aspirations: a National Study)
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Investigating the potential of OER to develop flexible, needs driven, postgraduate re
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Exploring visual aspects of OERs and their relevance to practices of repurposing/reus
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OER Policy, Practice and Rights
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EVOL-OER: the evolution of OERs
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International version of Wavelet Toolbox Guided Learning Handbook
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E-assessments & OER's

Gabriel Reedy

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Project: 
Investigating the use of OER among Early-Career University Lecturers
Project start: 
January, 2011
Project end: 
December, 2011

Dr Gabriel Reedy is a Lecturer in Higher Education at King’s College, London. Prior to this, he was a Curriculum Innovation Fellow at The Open University, where his work engaged with issues of teaching and learning in higher education using new technologies. In 2006 he was a visiting scholar with the Faculty of Education at the University of Cambridge, where he conducted the fieldwork and analysis associated with his doctoral research. His postgraduate work at the University of Washington in Seattle, USA, focused on cognition and the learning sciences, and had a special emphasis on technology enhanced learning environments.   
 
Prior to his postgraduate work, Gabriel was a consultant and manager in the software industry, focusing on user training, elearning, and user experience issues. His experience includes work at Microsoft, Intel, and several smaller software and telecom companies, as well as consulting experience in healthcare and education. He has taught at the undergraduate university level in technical communications, and at the postgraduate level in educational technology and teacher training. He  has served as an associate lecturer at the Faculty of Education, University of Cambridge, and at the Faculty of Education, The Open University.
 
Gabriel has been appointed Education Lead for the Simulation and Interprofessional Learning (SaIL) Centre at King’s Health Partners (King’s, Guy’s, and St. Thomas’ Hospitals). Building on a multimillion pound grant for the construction and development of a purpose-built learning centre on the campus of Guy’s Hospital, the KHP SAIL Centre uses high-fidelity simulation technology as an integral part of medical, nursing, and healthcare education. In this role, Gabriel serves to advise, review, and evaluate educational programmes for the Centre, and to advise on research and enquiry into learning through simulation technology.
 
Gabriel has been awarded both an Early Career Fellowship by the International Society for the Learning Sciences (funded by the US National Science Foundation) and an Open Resources in Education (SCORE) Fellowship (funded by HEFCE).
 
Gabriel teaches on the Graduate Certificate in Academic Practice (GCAP), the Postgraduate Certificate in Academic Practice (PGCAP) and the MA in Clinical Pedagogy (MA Clin Ped) programmes. He is the programme Director for the Institute's research degrees (MPhil and PhD).

SCORE Fellows

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Teresa joined the OU in August 2006 as an Open Educational Resources Lecturer on OpenLearn and currently is a Project Officer for the EU best practice project ICOPER in the Knowledge Media Institute (KMi). Prior to her roles within the OU she was a Lecturer in GIS as well as an Educational Technology Leader in the Faculty of Science at Kingston University.

Her project focuses on the design of an OER for inclusion into a PG Cert type course. It will comprise of a general introduction to the creation and use of open content as well as acting as an “index” to the existing OpenLearn OER units related to this area. The OER unit will be bespoke for the HE academic practitioner community.

May, 2010
February, 2011
Integrating the use of open content into the delivery of PG Certificates in Learning
Teresa-Connolly
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Tom Browne is Education Research and Evaluation Advisor, in Education Enhancement, within Academic Services at the University of Exeter. From May 2009-April 2010 he was Project Manager and Principal Investigator of the HEFCE-funded and JISC-managed institutional OER project called Open Exeter. He is also part of the team who have recently been awarded a 12 month HEA Phase-2 OER project to embed OER practices within HEA-accredited courses.

Tom's career has traversed a variety of roles: He has been both an academic and in professional support, having been a lecturer in Geographical Information Systems at Sussex, and IT User Support and Educational Technologies Manager at Exeter. He has also been an Assistant Registrar for Educational Policy at Exeter. He has served on the JISC Learning and Teaching Committee and is a member of the JISC Learning and Teaching Practice Advisory Group and also the UCISA Academic Support Group. He has served as an individual and institutional HEA Accreditor and is an NTFS reviewer. He has published and presented widely on organisational and practitioner technology related learning and teaching issues.

This SCORE project is borne out of a recognition that without academic buy-in, an OER culture will not become embedded within the learning and teaching practice within HEIs.

From May 2009 to April 2010 I was the project manager and principal investigator for the Phase-1 HEFCE-funded and JISC-managed institutional OER project at the University of Exeter.   In November 2009, with colleagues from the OU, I ran a one-day workshop on OER at Exeter. It was salutary how little prior understanding was evident. Subsequently I conducted several experimental OER workshops to cohorts of early career staff on our HEA-accredited courses, focusing on the demand side. It proved to be an effective entrée into OER and confirmed my view that such workshops should be more substantially developed. Given that most HEIs have HEA-accredited courses, the potential for take-up and for creating a community of practice could be significant. Finally, in acknowledging the research focus of much of UK HEI, in order to achieve ‘buy-in’ OER needs to be positioned as fitting in with the scholarly endeavour of a research-inspired approach to learning and teaching.  More ambitiously, structured OER awareness can also be related to the Professional Standards Framework (PSF) as part of CPD for all staff. 

 

The following is proposed:

  1. I will build upon an existing community of practice of HEIs.   The South West Educational Developers Forum (SWEDF) is an ideal vehicle.  It is regionally based and is populated by academic developers. 
    1. Although Exeter was the only SWEDF HEI to have a Phase-1 institutional project, several other universities contributed to HEA-managed subject centre consortia and are currently part of Phase-2 JISC and HEA managed projects funded by HEFCE.
  2. In association with the HEA, I will act as a critical friend for the HEA-managed Phase-2 projects at Exeter and Falmouth, which will be releasing resources suitable for HEA-accredited programmes which meet UK PSF.
  3. The primary outcome will be raising the bar of effective practice within the participating institutions.
  4. The primary output will be a toolkit of staff development activities, available for repurposing to fit each HEI’s context.  This should include specific activities for individual and group work that address both the:
    1. demand side, which is a considerably underdeployed, though key aspect of OER
    2. supply side, which introduces e.g. IPR and quality issues.
  5. Case studies will be produced, drawing upon these activities.
  6. Exeter will be able to take the initiative in embedding such toolkits into its HEA-accredited courses and to evaluate their impact.
  7. It is essential that those engaging with OER understand the institutional setting within which they work.   Awareness-raising documentation will be developed to address those factors that mitigate against effective engagement with OERS.   A scaffold of questions will be developed, to be populated by each institution, indicating their policies regarding e.g. fair dealing, quality, rewards.  

 

My fellowship will run from 1/8/2010, for 12 months at 50% FTE. Such a period should allow for considered reflection and will maximize the opportunities over which trial courses within different HEIs can be explored and lessons learnt.

August, 2010
July, 2011
OER as a scholarly activity within staff development accredited courses
Tom-Browne
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Martin is a Senior Lecturer in Psychology at the Open University. He has taught statistics a lot and has seen many places and people struggle with it (and not just students). 

Martin's project is about "Teaching Statistics in Psychology", in which he will search and evaluate existing OERs for teaching statistics to psychology students: there are already very many. Because there are so many, one part of the project is the evaluation and classification of them, so an evaluation scheme is needed. Also, Martin's idea is that the resources should somehow be tailored to individual students, such that they learn from resources best suited to their "learning style". Learning Style is a rather controversial area in psychology, some arguing it does not exist, but it is the case that students declare that certain approaches work best for them. Martin is therefore interested in operationally valid psychometric measures of learning styles, that can work with the classification of OERS, to tailor resources to students. He is also, therefore, interested in the theory of evaluation and classification schemes for online resources.

June, 2010
March, 2011
Teaching Statistics in Psychology
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Dr Gabriel Reedy is a Lecturer in Higher Education at King’s College, London. Prior to this, he was a Curriculum Innovation Fellow at The Open University, where his work engaged with issues of teaching and learning in higher education using new technologies. In 2006 he was a visiting scholar with the Faculty of Education at the University of Cambridge, where he conducted the fieldwork and analysis associated with his doctoral research. His postgraduate work at the University of Washington in Seattle, USA, focused on cognition and the learning sciences, and had a special emphasis on technology enhanced learning environments.   
 
Prior to his postgraduate work, Gabriel was a consultant and manager in the software industry, focusing on user training, elearning, and user experience issues. His experience includes work at Microsoft, Intel, and several smaller software and telecom companies, as well as consulting experience in healthcare and education. He has taught at the undergraduate university level in technical communications, and at the postgraduate level in educational technology and teacher training. He  has served as an associate lecturer at the Faculty of Education, University of Cambridge, and at the Faculty of Education, The Open University.
 
Gabriel has been appointed Education Lead for the Simulation and Interprofessional Learning (SaIL) Centre at King’s Health Partners (King’s, Guy’s, and St. Thomas’ Hospitals). Building on a multimillion pound grant for the construction and development of a purpose-built learning centre on the campus of Guy’s Hospital, the KHP SAIL Centre uses high-fidelity simulation technology as an integral part of medical, nursing, and healthcare education. In this role, Gabriel serves to advise, review, and evaluate educational programmes for the Centre, and to advise on research and enquiry into learning through simulation technology.
 
Gabriel has been awarded both an Early Career Fellowship by the International Society for the Learning Sciences (funded by the US National Science Foundation) and an Open Resources in Education (SCORE) Fellowship (funded by HEFCE).
 
Gabriel teaches on the Graduate Certificate in Academic Practice (GCAP), the Postgraduate Certificate in Academic Practice (PGCAP) and the MA in Clinical Pedagogy (MA Clin Ped) programmes. He is the programme Director for the Institute's research degrees (MPhil and PhD).

January, 2011
December, 2011
Investigating the use of OER among Early-Career University Lecturers
gabriel-reedy
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Jane Gay is currently a Senior Lecturer (Academic Development Centre)(FT) at Kingston University.

Jane is a module leader on the PgCLTHE (Post Graduate Certificate in Learning and Teaching in Higher Education).  She liaises with partner institutions and supports their continuing professional development which prompted the Fellowship.

Jane co-ordinates and runs the training for Peer Assisted Learning Schemes across the University (30+ schemes) and is currently working with the Students Union on reviewing the Course Representative Scheme.

May, 2010
February, 2011
Re-purposing Academic Practices
jane-gay
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Paul Hatherly is a Teaching Fellow in the Faculty of Science, The Open University.

 

 

The Practical Sandpit

Practical experience is essential in science education, facilitating investigative, manipulative and cognitive skills and supporting the philosophy of the scientific method. Such provision is challenging for distance learners, a problem I addressed under the physics innovations CETL (piCETL) virtual experiments programme. Here, I developed photo-realistic representations of experiments - interactive screen experiments (ISEs) – which, by their nature inherently replicate and contain defects found in real experiments.

The issue of practical science in traditional universities is also pressing, with the provision of equipment, time and instructional methods at stake. With the possibilities and benefits of virtual experiments established for distance learners, I am investigating and developing the means by which ISEs can be used and created for the wider HE sector.

The deployment of ISEs as OERs has arisen through my participation in the JISC sponsored “Skills for Scientists” project where I created resources for the JorumOpen repository under Creative Commons licensing.

However, making resources “open” does not mean they will be used, and personal experience as a laboratory coordinator suggests that academic creativity in practical learning is vital.

It is therefore apparent that although “open” in terms of being accessed, virtual experiment OERs are “closed” in the sense of creative re-use.

The main element of my proposal is the development and evaluation of an internet-based “sandpit” for creating virtual practical resources from basic modules. This approach will make virtual experiments truly open in that instructors can create and tailor resources according to their own practise and students’ needs.

 

October, 2010
September, 2011
Practical Sandpit Project
paul-hatherly
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Anna is a Lecturer in Spanish at the Department of Languages, The Open University. From April 2009 to July 2010, she led the JISC-funded LORO project to set up and populate the languages teaching and learning materials repository now hosted by the Department of Languages.

Community building and user engagement: developing the potential of LORO to promote quality in the teaching and learning of languages

Focussing on community building and user engagement around the sharing of languages teaching resources through LORO (http://loro.open.ac.uk), this project aims to carry out the following activities:  

  1. Continue dissemination activities within the OU languages community to engage potential users and raise awareness of how OER can change teaching and learning practices for the benefit of teachers and learners;
  2. Engage active users and creators into further dissemination activities in other institutions to strengthen and widen the community of language professionals aware of and/or using OER;
  3. Explore links with other languages institutions both within the UK and abroad to promote the use of OER in language teaching and learning, and widen the community of creators and users of languages OER;
  4. Evaluate the effectiveness of LORO and the extent of the culture change in teaching practices amongst the community of language teachers at the OU.
November, 2010
November, 2011
Community building and user engagement: developing the potential of LORO
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The OpenSpires project http://openspires.oucs.ox.ac.uk released hundreds of hours of Oxford University’s digital learning content as Open Content Resources (OER) in appropriate ways via appropriate online platforms. The project has had global impact, as the resources are from world-class speakers and researchers. Oxford academic colleagues are supported in changing practice by becoming 'open content literate' to make informed choices regarding the materials they release and choose to reuse.

OpenSpires focused on supporting strategic institutional learning and encouraging cultural change. Follow on projects have continued and expanded this work. Our current OER projects are: Triton, Ripple, Listening for Impact and OER Impact Study. The outcomes will promote the sharing of effective practice that may inform and influence policy in other research-intensive institutions in the UK HE sector and beyond.
 

In institutions where teaching is research-led academic colleagues are regularly engaged in processes of knowledge creation. This new knowledge quickly becomes the content of their teaching. Oxford University has established processes to enable academic colleagues to capture their research presentations as podcasts and licence those as OER with a rapid turn-around and minimal extra effort. We have aimed to make this creation of OER part of the day-to-day activity of staff who research and teach. This SCORE project will explore the relationship between OER and the research-teaching nexus by looking closely at how academic staff at research intensive universities are supported in their practice. Working with colleagues in central services and academic libraries at this project will look at the synergies between OER and Open Access Publishing in institutions where OER provides another dissemination mechanism for research, impact and public engagement.

Melissa Highton is head of the Learning Technologies Group, OUCS at University of Oxford. She has institutional responsibility for e-learning strategy, the VLE and IT skills and training. She is a Fellow of Kellogg College and works closely with the E-learning Research Group in the Department of Education. She is the senior manager responsible for Oxford’s current OER initiatives and the development of open-source learning technologies.
 

September, 2010
September, 2011
Authorship and use of OER as academic practice for research-led teaching
Melissa-Highton
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The Open University in the South West is collaborating with regional voluntary sector network www.southwestforum.org.uk to develop vocational Open Educational Resources (OERs) for the voluntary sector.

We are cultivating a community of practice for shared curriculum development in which the user community, policy makers and academics all participate in improving, updating & creating new resources via OpenLearn. The resources we are beginning with are for trustees, and our first stage is to explore existing education & training resources, particularly in relation to the National Occupational Standards published by www.skills-thirdsector.org.uk.

This collaboration forms part of Higher Education's relationship with a sector that currently employs 778,000 people, an increase of 6.5% over the last year. As the Government's 'Big Society' policy aims to further promote the voluntary sector by giving them a greater role in public services, this initiative aims to provide innovative education that equips people to perform these new roles.

The OU is represented in this collaboration by Project Officer Lois Thorn, Assistant Regional Director Meriel Lee & SCORE Fellow Tony Coughlan.

October, 2010
September, 2011
Sustainable relationships between universities and vocational OER users
tony-coughlan
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Alannah Fitzgerald works for the English Language Centre at Durham University.

Being somewhat nomadic, she has gained considerable experience and understanding from learning, teaching and researching across different academic cultures, including HE institutions in the United Kingdom, Canada, Korea, and New Zealand (her country of origin). She is part of the open education and open-source software movements. Increasingly, she is working in the area of OER for academic practice in HE institutions and with NGOs to devise educational interventions for under-resourced communities. Her doctoral work is in the areas of educational technology, open educational resources and corpus linguistics. In conjunction with the Greenstone Digital Library Lab at Waikato University in New Zealand she is developing the TOETOE project to provide open e-resources for training language teachers and learners to develop and share learning content derived from large web-based corpora like those developed by Shaoqun Wu with the open-source FLAX project.

 

Technology for Open Education – Training with Open E-resources

(November 2010 – October 2011)

Open E-resources for training in the area of English for Academic Purposes (EAP) will provide the context for investigation with the TOETOE project. The open collections will reflect tools and content from the open-source and open-access movements for the development of open educational resources (OER) in language teacher training. These OER collections will provide dedicated learning support in the following areas:

Dynamic Collection

  1. Identifying and aggregating OER located in web-based repositories that are EAP-relevant and which can be dynamically updated via RSS feeds. This collection will act as a key resource in OER for the EAP community.

Static Collections 

  1. Materials and curriculum development guidelines for the EAP teaching community working within an OER framework, including: discovery, use, reuse and repurposing of existing digital materials. This will also include guidelines that promote an understanding of the different licensing standards for the use, promotion and sharing of OER.
  2.  Learning support for incorporating open web-based language concordancers (for example, the Flexible Language Acquistion Project (FLAX) built on the award winning open-source digital library software, Greenstone, and the British National Corpus) for data-driven language learning.
  3.  EAP discipline-specific collections identifying typical rhetorical functions and formulaic language sequences derived from academic journal articles published using Open Access standards.

The TOETOE project collections in OER will provide dedicated learning support in EAP syllabus and programme development for EAP practitioners which can be shared across the sector. A gap in EAP-specific teacher qualifications currently exists whereby many EAP teachers have received insufficient formal training in the core competencies of professional EAP practice. Instead, many EAP teachers come to the higher education sector having been trained in General English language teaching only with the Cambridge ESOL Teaching Awards being standard entry-level qualifications. These qualifications are based on curricula which are heavily textbook reliant, placing a burden on EAP teachers to develop EAP programmes using authentic academic texts and assessments that address a range of students’ needs across different academic disciplines. The British Association of Lecturers in English for Academic Purposes, UK (BALEAP) is trying to address this deficit in formal EAP training and has devised the ‘Competency Framework for Teachers of English for Academic Purposes’.

January, 2011
January, 2012
TOETOE Technology for Open Education - Training with Open E-resources
Open Educational Resources in AEP
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Terese Bird is Learning Technologist and Assistant Keeper of the Media Zoo, having joined the Beyond Distance Research Alliance in July 2009 to work on the DUCKLING (Delivering University Curricula: Knowledge, Learning, and INnovation Gains) project. Terese came up with a method of transforming VLE-learning materials to e-book reader-ready learning materials as part of this work, as well as working to implement podcasts, voice boards, and Second Life into existing courses. Terese spearheaded the Learning Futures Festival Online 2010, Beyond Distance's first international academic conference to be held entirely online. Terese also worked to launch the Graduate School Media Zoo in November 2009, the Media Zoo for University of Leicester postgraduate students. Terese teaches on the associated workshops for both Media Zoos, attracting over 150 postgraduates and staff in the first year alone, and teaching topics such as Blogging for Researchers and Networking with Social Media.

In September 2010, Terese was awarded Highly Commended in the Association for Learning Technology Learning Technologist of the Year Individual Award. In November 2010, Terese was named a SCORE fellow to research the use of iTunes U as a distribution channel for open learning material amongst UK universities.

Terese has worked in Higher Education in the UK and overseas since 1995, and in previous appointments did action research into and implemetation of such technologies as automatic lecture capture, audience response systems, and student-created websites and multi-media.  Terese graduated from University of Illinois at Chicago with a Bachelor of Science degree in Mathematics and Computer Science.

November, 2010
October, 2011
Sharing Pedagogically-enhanced Interactive Digital Educational Resources (SPIDER)
The Impact on Learning on iTunesU Open Educational Resources
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Ester Ehiyazaryan is a lecturer in eLearning and Professional Development at University Centre Doncaster (UCD). She has considerable experience of educational research in the contexts of post compulsory and higher education, which she has gained through her doctoral work on the use of interactive media for enhancing creativity and subsequently through working with the Centres for Excellence in Teaching and Learning at Sheffield Hallam University. She currently teaches on a range of undergraduate programmes in education as well as the Masters in Education Innovation and Enterprise at UCD. Her research and scholarship interests are in the use of educational technology for developing innovative teaching and learning practices.

 

Embedding Open Educational Resources in Research Methods Teaching in Education, Social Science and Criminology

(March 2011-February 2012)

 

This action research project seeks to raise awareness of the value of OER within University Centre Doncaster as well as to support the embedding of open educational resources in research methods teaching within the School of Humanities Education and Social Science. The project aims to attract active second and third person involvement from colleagues and the broader institution. Participants in the study from the areas of Criminology, Sociology and Education contribute to collaboratively evaluating existing OER, as well as developing thinking and practice in embedding these resources in academic practice. Participants will also be involved in internal and external dissemination of the work.

 

Outcomes from the project:

1.    A collection of research methods OER which works on a ‘local’ level to scaffold engagement, evaluation and reuse of the resources in academic practice.

2.    An evaluation of the OER in the context of the three disciplines based on evaluative tools such as The Conversational Framework and the Learning Object Attribute Metric (Windle et al.).

3.    Documentation illustrating the embedding of these resources in a subject specific context using recognisable frameworks, such as LD_Lite (Littlejohn and Pegler, 2007) or the Learning Design Support Environment (LDSE) (Laurillard et al., 2011).

4.    Encouraging collaborative practice and institutional dialogue on the reuse and inclusion of OER in academic practice, on the levels of internal strategy and policy.

 

The research methods collection is available on Cloudworks and is open to commentary and recommendations: http://cloudworks.ac.uk/cloud/view/5548

A reflective blog on the progress of the project is available here:

http://tinyurl.com/ucdoer

 

 

 

March, 2011
February, 2012
OER for research methods teaching in social science and education
ester-ehiyazaryan
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The 2010 RSS campaign - getstats - and the ESRC have identified a pressing need to promote the use and understanding of statistical data and quantitative methods (QM).  The ESRC recognise a QM skills deficit in UK Social Science, despite excellent research data infrastructure such as ESDS and the UK Census of Polulation Programme.  Attempts to improve data and statistical literacy at undergraduate level have focused on developing good practice at institutional level and have revealed pockets of excellence in UK social science departments.

The aims of this project are to share teaching resources and expertise in those institutions already working to upskill students in QM; and to focus on resources that address global issues by using real-world data.  The resulting OERs will be accompanied by 'stories' or narratives of exemplar usage, engaging social science learners with QM.  The focus will be away from economics and psychology which are the best served in QM in social sciences.

Jackie Carter has been exploring data use in social sciences since she started at the University of Manchester (in 1996) after undertaking a PhD in Geostatistics.  She has a background in learning and teaching - having taught maths at secondary schools previously - and has worked on multiple projects to enhance the use of data in the classroom.  Her background in this - and visualisation of data - has brought her into contact with many teachers who are working with data with their students.  In 2009 and 2010 she gave a series of presentations on Real World; Real Data; Real Stories and is currently publishing work in this area.

 

April, 2011
June, 2012
Sharing OERs for Statistical Literacy using Real World Data
Jackie-Carter
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Richard is an Associate Professor of Health E-learning at the University of Nottingham, School of Nursing, Midwifery and Physiotherapy, and is Co-Academic Lead for the research and development group known as Health E-Learning and Media (HELM) (formerly SONET – sonnet.nottingham.ac.uk). Richard has been involved in e-learning for over a decade in the development and delivery of a number of online and blended learning resources, in supporting others in their development and in research and evaluation around the effectiveness of e-learning. Richard has been involved in a number of national and internationally funded projects in the field of e-learning within health in partnership with a number of other higher education institutions, NHS and health delivery organisations, charities and health support groups. 

Richard’s research and development interests focus around the design of pedagogically-led learning resources and their effectiveness. They include: community of practice approaches to e-learning resource development and participatory research methods, student generated content, e-learning as a health intervention and reuse.

Most recently Richard was the Nottingham coordinator for the HEFCE funded Centre for Excellence in Teaching and Learning for Reusable Learning Objects (RLO-CETL www.rlo-cetl.ac.uk). Through this initiative and others he contributed to the development and delivery of approximately 200 learning resources that were released under a Creative Commons Licence, and it was this work that led directly to his interest and involvement in the OER field.

Richard’s SCORE fellowship project focuses on developing a deeper understanding of OER reuse patterns, their extent and impact within health. This will involve empirical investigation of reuse and reuse patterns from established OER projects. A flexible, person-focused approach will be developed in order to discover and follow reuse networks and investigate the questions outlined above. The project will be grounded within health sciences; the magnitude, complexity, cross agency and vocational nature of the subject provide a rich field in which to study reuse.

The initial part of the study will involve the identification of re-users of health science resources from tracking within our existing OER projects and also from partnerships with other health OER providers (eg JORUM, OPENLEARN, PHorus, UNOW and NHS Evidence). Re-users will be contacted via questionnaire. Although this will provide information on the breadth and range of health–related reuse, the main aim is to identify a diverse subset of reuse instances and networks suitable for following in far more depth. These will form the basis of a series of rich case studies representing the reuse patterns listed and others that may emerge, 

 

Recent publications:

R.J. Windle, D. McCormick, J. Dandrea and H. Wharrad (2011) The characteristics of reusable learning objects that enhance learning: a case-study in health-science education. British Journal of Educational Technology. 42, 811-823.

R.J. Windle, H. Wharrad, D. McCormick, H. Laverty and M. Taylor (2010) Sharing and reuse in OER; experiences gained from open reusable learning objects in health. Journal of Interactive Media in Education (http://jime.open.ac.uk/jime/article/view/2010-4)

R.J. Windle, H.L. Laverty, B. Hallawell, L. Herman and H. Wharrad (2010) SHOULD: learning disability nursing students teach their peers. Learning Disability and Practice.

R.J. Windle RJ, H. Wharrad (2010)Reusable Learning Objects in Health Care Education. In A. Bromage, L. Coulder, & F. Gordon (Eds). Interprofessional E-Learning and Collaborative Work: Practices and Technologies. Pp. 244-259. PA, USA, IGI-Global Publishing 

H. Wharrad H, and R.J. Windle Case studies of creating reusable inter-professional e-learning objects. . In A. Bromage and F. Gordon (Eds) Interprofessional e-learning and Collaborative Work Practices and Technologies. Pp. 260-274. PA, USA, IGI-Global Publishing

March, 2011
February, 2012
Mapping cross-sector reuse of OER in Health Sciences
richard-windle
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Antonio Martínez-Arboleda is currently a Principal Teaching Fellow in the School of Modern Languages and Cultures at the University of Leeds. He works on Autonomous Learning, Student Motivation, Spanish for Business, Spanish Politics and Spanish Language and has developed numerous learning activities in which synergies between academic content and professional skills are maximised. Since 2010 he has been heavily involved in the HumBox, first as an Institutional Partner and later as an active OERs user. http://www.humbox.ac.uk/

The aims of his SCORE Fellowship Project are to explore and develop a feasible model for employer engagement in OERs and to add extra value to existing and future OERs, hence reinforcing our existing Communities of Practice and encouraging high-quality open content publication and re-use.

In particular, the project will look at ways of facilitating the review and endorsement of OERs by graduate-recruiting employers in the HumBox, where a vast range of Arts and Humanities OERs of all levels of granularity have been uploaded and shared by an increasing number of practitioners.

In connection with this project, Antonio is interested in proposing a more dynamic, case-based and multilateral approach to employability in the area of Arts in UK HE. In this respect, the review and endorsement of OERs by employers can play a crucial role in this transformation.

This project will build on the work which is already being done in the area of employers’ engagement in OERs and will consider the different review and endorsement tools introduced by key OERs repositories

 

May, 2011
June, 2012
Review and Endorsement of OER by Graduate-Recruiting Employers
Antonio-Martinez-Arboleda
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Chris Follows is currently the Arts Learning and Teaching Online (ALTO) college coordinator at the University of the Arts London; the UAL ALTO project is part of the second phase of the UK OER programme.

Chris studied BA Fine Art painting at Wimbledon College of Art, graduating in 2000 and has worked at the University of the Arts London for over 7 years. Chris’s practice includes painting, digital media, web, video and animation.

In 2007 Chris began to video document students and staff working together in their studios and talking about their practice. In 2008 Chris developed http://process.arts.ac.uk during a 40-day UAL fellowship with an aim of creating a new user driven online collaborative resource that explores process in arts practice.

Designing OER arts practice: The aims of his SCORE Fellowship Project are to explore existing methods of arts practice which exploit the creation of new meanings through the appropriation and reworking of existing content, ideas, materials and processes and how this tradition can support and encourage the development and reuse of OER rich media content. Chris will investigate and evaluate the most effective and efficient ways of utilising OER in arts HEIs by identifying best processes and practices for creating learning resources/objects to support the learning and teaching. Observe and contrast current practice in the OER community. Examine the effective use of source files and edit notes in relation to producing better ‘editable’ learning resources/objects. Investigate better methods of linking recourses with learning design by improving and exploring resource derivative information. Examine the effectiveness of inter-college and HEI collaborations. Develop an Arts-UKOER ‘Remix and Redistribute’ community of practice. 

 

July, 2011
June, 2012
Exploring collaborative use and re-use of OER rich media resources in art & design
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I have been the Academic Lead for De Montfort University for the TIGER (Transforming Interprofessional Groups through Educational Resources) project September 2011-August 2011. This project has been gathering, transforming and placing interprofessional health and social care resources into an open repository. On release of the Repository, proactive work is needed to ensure that health care staff in  practice are made aware of the repository, materials are accessed, repurposed and the Repository expands and is not static.

During my SCORE Fellowship I will evaluate the use and impact of the TIGER interprofessional open education resource repository by health care professionals in the UK.

MY SCORE Fellowship will

  • Produce data on the use of the TIGER Repository i.e. hits, uploads and downloads, how original OERs have been used and further developed.
  • Identify and support of ten UK wide, practice IPE (interprofesisonal education ) champions in the use of the interprofessional repository with their staff.
  • Provide an evaluation paper analysing OER use amongst heath care professionals in UK through the IPE OER champions.
  • Provide an action plan, based on data from the evaluation report, will inform further development and future direction of the Repository.
  • Publish an interim and final report to SCORE detailing the activity of the OER champions and the use of the Repository during the study period.

 

September, 2011
June, 2011
The use and impact of the TIGER inter-professional open education resource repository
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To date ‘big’[1] OER has been about opening up course materials and content to the general public: facilitating learning beyond the classroom. Alongside this individuals have begun creating their own ‘little’ content and making it openly available. Recently there has been a discussion of how this might ‘flip’ the classroom ‘lectures’ can take place outside of the classroom, with the activities that are often assigned as homework taking place within the class[2]. This proposal will investigate a third possibility, encouraging students to scavenge for open content to be used within their own classroom. This has the potential to enhance their evaluation and use of OER more generally, as well as potentially encouraging the creation and mashing up of new content.

A previous, C-SAP funded project[3] by the proposed fellow used focus groups to explore the pedagogic and cultural issues in using YouTube videos in teaching an introductory sociology class. This project explored the issues around using openly available material embedded within class. An unexpected outcome of this was the extent of student use of online videos in their self directed study. Students suggested their own video resources via email, some of which were incorporated into classroom sessions – to the delight of the students who made the suggestion, and to the benefit of the whole cohort.

This project will continue this work, looking at the implications of embedding the scavenging and evaluation of OER multimedia content (big and little) within the curriculum of an introductory anthropology class. This class will have approximately 80 students across three groups, and will be comprised of mainly international and mature domestic students, providing a diverse student body. In the first week a period of class time will be given over to showing students all the potential sources of online OER video material and the skills and criteria for evaluating them. In each subsequent week the students will be encouraged to search for and suggest resources that they think will be of use for the following week’s topic. These resources will be collated, commented on and rated within the course VLE and included within the sessions.

 

August, 2011
February, 2011
Developing Students as OER Content Scavengers
nick-pearce
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The aim of this fellowship is to build and evaluate an open online module on laboratory skills and techniques at an appropriate level for undergraduate life science students. The module will be formed by using and repurposing existing open educational resources, available from our Virtual Analytical Laboratory (VAL) and other sources such as Jorum. There are already a number of OERs available on VAL but these are individual entities and do not provide a holistic educational package.

My background is in intestinal physiology and medical research, and in recent years I have become interested in the use of multimedia resources for bioscience education. This is from the perspective of developing my own resources and animations, to researching the effectiveness of resources on learning and teaching. I am involved in UKOER projects and am interested in understanding how to make OER discoverable on the internet using search engine optimisation (SEO) techniques.

In this fellowship I will explore the challenges of developing an open module, including resources, delivery and assessment. The project will evaluate the impact of open practices and OER on staff and students. I will explore how external collaborators can become involved in open practices, and the benefits to all concerned.

Work relating to this SCORE fellowship includes:

  • Consortium partner on HEA Bioscience “Interactive Laboratory and Fieldwork Manual” (JISC/HEA OER Programme Pilot Phase, 2009 - 2010)
  • Project lead on SCOOTER Project (JISC/HEA OER Programme Phase Two, 2010 – 2011).

 

June, 2011
May, 2012
OER to develop the Postgraduate Reseracher Development Programme.
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My project aims to use OER to explore self-assessment for new postgraduate researchers (PGR). PGR come to our institutions from varied backgrounds, with different educational and work experience.  Facing a training programme can be daunting and overwhelming, with too much to choose from; or, conversely, viewed as patronising and potentially unhelpful or distracting. 

Current skills audits provided by HEIs and UK-wide institutions such as Vitae comprise of a skills list with a series of tick boxes or numerical self-grading of competency. These audits are based on assumed rather than actual competence in a skill and do not consider whether the student has an understanding of what that skill actually is. My SCORE Fellowship will develop sample materials, available as OERs, to enable PGRs to understand the skills they need to gain, to self-assess their skills at the start of candidature and to help them to identify those areas in which they need further development. The materials will illustrate the value of training, demonstrating how key skills are developed.

My sample materials will be presented, evaluated and disseminated via open repositories, helping PGR students to get the most from skills training and benefiting from the input of colleagues from across the sector. 


Eleanor Quince is Postgraduate and Employability Tutor for the Faculty of Humanities, University of Southampton.

Eleanor has worked with postgraduate researchers in the arts and humanities since 2004. Graduating with a PhD in the small and highly specialised area of eighteenth century furniture design, Eleanor welcomed the RCUK transferable skills training initiatives which enabled doctoral researchers to move beyond the confines of their academic field. In 2004/5 she designed a programme of skills training for Humanities PGR at the University of Southampton. Over the years she has developed and expanded this programme alongside other aspects of postgraduate education, including student-led conferences, seminar-series, student journals and support groups. In 2007/8 she was successful in gaining internal funding to create a series of Learning Objects, turning face-to-face PGR training into online PGR training; accessible to students researching abroad, living at a distance or studying part-time. Although postgraduate researcher development has become her main focus, Eleanor continues to research and publish on the eighteenth century, with particular emphasis on design and cultural artefacts.

 

September, 2011
April, 2012
SCORE Higher: using OER to explore self-assessment for first year postgraduate resear
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“Skills Portal” (http://tinyurl.com/68co3rh) is a classified collection of OER resources covering: study skills, information/digital literacy, research skills, and numeracy. Use of the resources is increasing, particularly where academic or library staff recommends individual resources. We need to find ways of introducing these resources into the curriculum if they are to become integral to teaching, rather than optional stand-alone resources.

The Researcher Development Programme (RPD) offers a programme of workshops to doctoral students and early career researchers. An on-line diagnostic tool “Action Planner” has been developed to help individuals identify their training needs. Many students are part-time or located away from campus. One intention is to develop OER materials that deliver the learning outcomes of face-to-face workshops; to enhance or replace workshops. A further aim is to find ways of integrating Skills Portal with Action Planner and evaluate the outcomes.

My academic training in genetics and biosciences along with teaching in at the University of East London led to an interest in study skills and e-learning. I’ve been using technology since the early days of the web as it offers exciting new ways for students to interact with information. Good resources are often expensive to create and maintain; sharing and reuse is an obvious way forward. I introduced a VLE and on-line assessment for the Medical Sciences Division, University of Oxford. As the Head of Learning and Research Support and Development, University of Surrey, I am responsible for Academic Liaison Librarians, Learning Development, Researcher Development and Additional Learning Support teams.

April, 2011
March, 2012
OER to support the Postgraduate Researcher Development Programme
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Sarah’s research into Open Educational Resources within the field of media practice began when she was awarded an ADM HEA subject centre fellowship in 2008 to undertake a small-scale OER project. i-mpact was completed to a Beta testing stage at institutional level, housing and distributing un-manipulated film and video footage, the raw materials for filmmaking and visual storytelling for use in teaching exercises, assignment work and for peer review. The Score Fellowship will enable Sarah to take the project to its cross-institutional stage; investigating aspects of cultural resistance, adoption and change in the context of a shifting higher education landscape.

Sarah is principal lecturer in broadcast media at the University of Brighton, where she has led the subject area for the past five years. This includes a suite of well-regarded course offerings in the media production field, cutting-edge studios and digital facilities and the University of Brighton student radio station. Sarah has grounded these developments at the interface between the academic world and the professional media industries, emulating industry conditions in all teaching and assessment approaches. 

Sarah is also an audio-visual arts practitioner, undertaking practice-based explorations into new forms of fictional and dramatic storytelling in visual and sonic media. She is particularly interested in multi-linear and multi-channel aesthetics, her own multi-screen interactive cinema installation ‘Crossed Lines’ has been exhibited internationally, as has her surround sound and hypersonic installation ‘auditoryum’ (a collaboration with Marley Cole).  She was awarded her PhD in interactive storytelling in 2009 and continues to publish journal articles in these areas.

 

September, 2011
June, 2012
i-mpact: Interactive resource for Media Professionals and Academics Collaborating in
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Joanna is a researcher attached to the Learning Technologies Group at the University of Oxford. Joanna has worked in Higher Education in the UK and overseas since 2004. She has contributed to many research & development projects funded by EC, TLRP-TEL, and JISC including, most recently, ESRC/EPSRC funded LDSE project, and JISC-commissioned OER impact study. Joanna’s SCORE project is a direct continuation of her previous work. The aim is to investigate situated practice of engagement with, and re-use of, OER in the context of Higher Education in the UK. The study explores different practices that are currently emerging in this area, from the perspective of both their providers and beneficiaries. The goal is to obtain a clearer understanding of what accounts for a successful practice to promote sustained engagement with, and re-use of, OER in teaching and learning in different institutional contexts and from a demand-side perspective. This, in turn, will allow for deriving a set of guidelines for interested institutions to adopt.

September, 2011
June, 2011
Promoting engagement with and re-use of OER in teaching and learning in HE
joanna-wild
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Gabi is a member of the Beyond Distance Research Alliance at the University of Leicester, which brings together teachers and researchers interested in innovation in teaching and learning. Gabi’s career has spanned a range of sectors and activities, from adult literacy work in South Africa, to EFL curriculum development in the Arab Gulf, to tutoring on the online MA TESOL programme at the University of Leicester. Her recent roles at Leicester include acting as Coordinator of the OTTER project (www.le.ac.uk/otter), which enabled the release of OERs at Leicester, and Knowledge Transfer Fellow on the OSTRICH project (www.le.ac.uk/ostrich), in which knowledge about OER creation was shared with the Universities of Bath and Derby. Gabi is also currently involved in facilitating Leicester’s “Carpe Diem” workshops for academics on curriculum design.

TOUCANS focuses on the viability of the OER university (OERu) concept in England based on the input, perceptions and evidence from a sample of key stakeholders. The OERu (www.wikieducator.org/oeru) is a virtual collaborative partnership between universities aimed at providing opportunities for the estimated 100 million adults in the world who are eligible for Higher Education, but cannot afford to access it. At the point of starting the project, universities from Australia, Canada, India, New Zealand, South Africa and the United States have signed up as “anchor partners”, but none from the UK. TOUCANS aims to find out what the perceived obstacles are, as well as the potential benefits for UK institutions, and to provide some recommendations for universities that are considering participating.

 

September, 2011
June, 2012
TOUCANS (Testing the OER University Concept and Aspirations: a National Study)
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My project addresses the problem of postgraduate research methods training. The principle informing this project is that Researchers are more receptive to information when they recognize they need it. This suggests both methods and skills training are delivered more successfully if they are needs-driven and flexible so that they can be accessed by researchers when they are required and perceived to be useful. This project will focus on the resources and activities of ‘methods@manchester’, an initiative at the University of Manchester which aims to create a ‘community of practice’ that can enhance research methods training for staff and postgraduates and promote interdisciplinary and innovative methodological developments.

I will consider the following questions:

  1. Does the use of OER’s as opposed to ‘in-house’ resources add value to needs-based research methods training for PGR’s?
  2. Can OER’s contribute to the flexibility and accessibility of research methods training resources and so encourage PGR engagement with them?
  3. How can the quality of OER in research methods be identified and/or assured?
  4. Can OER’s be mapped on to the researcher development framework in order to help PGR’s identify their own development needs and access appropriate resources to address them?

I have worked part-time for academic year 2010-11 as a deputy director of methods@manchester with special responsibility for engaging postgraduates. I have also acted as a collections reviewer on a JISC funded project to improve access to OER collections of social science research methods material being conducted by the Higher Education Academy subject centre for Sociology, Anthropology and Politics (C-SAP). In my ‘day job’ I am a social anthropologist and part-time lecturer in Social Anthropology at the University of Manchester and I have worked for several years as ‘anthropology coordinator at C-SAP.

 

 

September, 2011
June, 2012
Investigating the potential of OER to develop flexible, needs driven, postgraduate re
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The project has two mutually reinforcing strands. The first strand engages with issues relevant to the visual aspects of open educational resources and looks at the ways in which existing UKOER projects have addressed (or not) issues around the use of images, with images understood encompassing a broad range of still photos, moving pictures, symbolic diagrams, maps, animations (both static and dynamic). The exploration of images/visual elements of OERs is then extended by incorporating a discussion accessibility issues which are specific to Open Educational Resources. OERs are embedded within the ethos of open education and open access, which emphasise the need to widen access and remove educational barriers, including any barriers related to accessibility. At the same time, we know little about factors which might motivate OER creators and re-users to embed accessibility within their teaching materials. Thus the second strand examines approaches to accessibility taken by project holders in the context of UK OER programme and treats issues related to repurposing visual elements of OERs as a particular manifestation of accessibility issues.

 
My interest in OER-related issues stems from my involvement in the previous two phases of the UKOER programme. I continue to be involved and have recently been appointed as project manager for the UKOER3 project “Digital Futures in Teacher Education” taking place at Sheffield Hallam University which explores issues of digital literacy and creativity in the context of teacher training.

 

October, 2011
March, 2012
Exploring visual aspects of OERs and their relevance to practices of repurposing/reus
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This SCORE project “OER policy, practice and rights builds on experience from previous projects1 by adding capacity and value for the sector, complementing work undertaken elsewhere, based on the conclusions that:
  • If educational resources can be copied digitally then the author should assume that they are ‘open’;
  • Risk management is about balancing the possibility against the probability of being sued;
  • There is no such thing as ‘anonymising’ patient or other personal information;
  • Good practice exists already and is made up of: adopting appropriate policies and developing processes for embedding policies via role modeling, staff development, negotiation, etc.

There are three key areas of investigation/research:

  • Policy and practice – implications for institutions, short and long term effects of OER;
  • Making guidance accessible: communicating complex issues of copyright, policy and consent to the sector;
  • Relationships with publishers and entering into benefits-led national agreements for third party materials to appear in OER (complementing PublishOER funded by JISC in OER3 2011-12).
Outcomes include accessing established networks of senior university managers to disseminate information about OER; tools and documentation disseminating the lessons learned, and creation of new thinking around the needs of the sector when promoting OER as an educational approach. Social media will be used to disseminate findings, in addition to more formal channels (such as the SCORE website).

Megan is based in the School of Medical Sciences Education Development at Newcastle University, and works part of her time with the Higher Education Academy.



1 Organising Open Educational Resources (OOER), Pathways for Open Resource Sharing through Convergence in Healthcare Education (PORSCHE) and Accredited Clinical Teaching Open Resources (ACTOR).
 

 

October, 2011
July, 2012
OER Policy, Practice and Rights
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Project

UK funding has largely been allocated to projects that focused on the creation of OER repositories and promotion of a sharing culture among academics in HEIs to release their resources as OERs. There is a lack of understanding of how the OERs accumulated in the repositories are being modified and reused over time. Existing OER projects tend to use statistical tools to track quantitative evidence in terms of number of downloads of resources, time spent on the site and geographical location of visitors. These projects also use comment and rating systems to gather additional feedback from users. However this evidence is not sufficient to understand how these resources are reused or how they evolve after subsequent reuses.
There is limited previous research into the detail of OER reuse. EVOL-OER aims to develop a deeper understanding of the reuse of open educational resources (OERs) by academics in Higher Education Institutions (HEIs). The project will use qualitative methods to address drivers, barriers and strategies adopted by HEI academics for the reuse and adaptation of OERs and will study how the reused resources evolve over time.
 

Dr Ming Nie's background

Dr Ming Nie works as a Research Associate in Learning Technology at the Beyond Distance Research Alliance, University of Leicester, UK. She has worked on a range of research projects investigating the impact of technologies including podcasting, voice boards, Second Life, e-book readers and open educational resources on the teaching and learning practices in Higher Education.
October, 2011
March, 2012
EVOL-OER: the evolution of OERs
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The International Wavelet Toolbox Guided Learning Handbook (IWTGLH) builds upon an existing project that has only been available within Coventry University. The original Wavelet Toolbox Guided Learning Handbook (WTGLH) was designed to provide training in use of part of the Matlab mathematical software environment that specifically relates to wavelet signal processing. Students often find it difficult to relate theoretical teaching on a subject to operation of a commercial software package in that area. Students have enjoyed the use of the handbook. However, it became clear that use of the WTGLH on just one module at Coventry University was going to limit its usefulness.

 
Hence the International WTGLH has the purpose of bringing instructional material in this area to a wider English-speaking international audience. This would obviously include other Universities and also industrial Continuing Professional Development situations. This requires a generalisation of material, an updating to relate to newer software versions and tutorial examples with fully-worked mathematics. I will also be studying an OER policy issue relating to a more general problem: the mismatch between theoretical course materials and constantly changing commercial software environments like Matlab.
 

My career started at THORN EMI where I became a design engineer working on data communication equipment and services. A significant technology in data communications is digital signal processing. The wavelet transform has contributed to signal processing technology for various reasons, one of which being more easy representation of time-changing signals. A version of the wavelet transform appears within the MP3 algorithm used for data compression in mobile phones.

September, 2011
June, 2012
International version of Wavelet Toolbox Guided Learning Handbook
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Dr Stylianos Hatzipanagos is Head of e-Learning in King’s Learning Institute, King’s College London. He has a first degree in Physics, MScs in Physics Education (Reading) and in Information Technology (Artificial intelligence, LSBU) and his doctoral research at the Institute of Educational Technology (OU) was on design and evaluation of interactive learning environments. He is also a fellow of the Centre for Distance Education (CDE) of the University of London and an OU associate lecturer (TU100: My Digital Life).
 

Stylianos’ research portfolio includes: formative assessment and technology-enhanced assessment, computer mediated communication and computer supported collaborative work, social software and social networking in higher education. He has recently edited two books on social media and digital identities. He has developed and led successful research funding applications and participated in research projects at a national and European level. 

 

SCORE Fellowship Project

Topic or area to be investigated

E-assesment and OERs: I am interested in e-assessment and its formative attributes and how they can be embedded/designed in OERs. The formative aspect of e-assessment tools and resources is rather under-developed and under-researched in the context of HE. This is largely a prominent characteristic of OERs, where assessment is commonly absent yet desired by many users (McAndrew et al, 2009).
 
Problem or hypothesis to be tested (if applicable to the proposal)
How can e-assesment components and tools can be embedded effectively in OERs and whether the OER movement can offer any innovative approaches in designing/embedding e-assessment activities in online learning materials.
 
Teaching or learning methods and techniques to be used in the project
 
This fellowship will:
  • evaluate a significant set of OERs from national and intenational repositories in a multidisciplinary context to establish approaches to e-assesment.
  • evaluate the quality of these e-assessment approaches and how how they embed dialogue with the learner, whether feedback is included and how they allow ‘closing the loop’ (Sadler 1989).
  • investigate and establish appropriate format and set-up of e-assessment in OERs.
  • produce recommendations on good practice in designing assesment tools in OER resources.
 
The outcomes will be a typology of OER e-assesment practices and tools in different disciplines and how they contribute to student learning. Against the background of an increasing use of electronic assessment in higher education, a range of assessment models will be identified, within a range of disciplinary areas. Different disciplines use different approaches to assessment, however a comparison of approaches can lead to a cross-fertilisation of good practice across the different disciplines under scrutiny. Samuelowitz and Bain’s (2002) differentiation of learning-centred and teaching centred disciplines will allow me to have a broad classification of disciplines encountered and overcome the potential disadvantage of following a multidisciplinary approach.

 

 

June, 2011
June, 2012
E-assessments & OER's