Category Archives: News

Jon Festinger: Five Lessons Learned from Using UBC’s Open Publishing Platforms.

BCcampus recently interviewed Jon Festinger, an adjunct professor at UBC’s Faculty of Law, about his experience making his Video Game Law course open. Amongst the top lessons he learned were that students felt comfortable with open web experiences and that his course materials and research attracted not just other academics, but people from the financial and business sectors. Additionally he found that he became a better instructor by making his course open. “By making your work open, you tend to work harder. You work hard at the pedagogy and become a better teacher because your work is out there for the whole world to see. And, the stakes are raised higher.”

Link: http://bccampus.ca/2014/04/16/jon-festinger-5-lessons-learned-from-using-ubcs-open-publishing-platforms/

Open Educational Resources (OER) – A Video Primer

Rory McGreal, the UNESCO/Commonwealth of Learning Chair in Open Educational Resources, shares his expertise in a series of 10 short, informative videos that address the what, why, where, and how of open educational resources. In addition to information on how to find and make use of OER for more time- and cost-effective course development, he also addresses issues of copyright, fair dealing, and licensing for freely available materials.

Link: http://contactnorth.ca/tips-tools/open-educational-resources/videos

A Faculty Perspective on Open Textbooks

Dr. Rajiv Jhangiani, a professor of psychology at Kwantlen Polytechnic University and chair of the Provincial Psychology Articulation Committee, explores reasons why most faculty are not yet adopting open textbooks. These reasons include that open textbook may not be available for many disciplines and courses; some faculty are skeptical of open textbook quality and hold them to a higher standard than traditional textbooks; there is a need for additional learning materials, such as associated test banks; and finally that the choice of textbook is sometimes not an individual’s decision. Jhangiani summarizes the advantages of open resources and highlights that “there is some evidence to suggest that when an open textbook is carefully adapted to suit a particular program, student performance and retention is actually enhanced.” He concludes, “Ultimately, I believe that it is institutional culture that will need to shift. A university’s strategic priorities need to include moving towards open education. From the president’s office down, open education initiatives need to be supported for these to develop and mature. This includes time releases for faculty adapting/adopting open textbooks, institutional recognition of this work, practical and regularly offered professional development workshops, and the consideration of the development of open educational resources in the files of those on the tenure-track.”

Linkhttp://jhangiani.wordpress.com/2014/04/23/a-faculty-perspective-on-open-textbooks/

Alberta Announces Open Educational Resources Initiative

The Alberta Ministry of Innovation and Advanced Education has provided $2 million to launch an Open Educational Resources Initiative. The Initiative is a long-term strategy to help reduce, over time, the costs students face for a post-secondary education. By reviewing and recommending how to integrate open educational resources at post-secondary institutions, this initiative will encourage flexibility and access for Alberta learners. Open education resources include textbooks, modules, multi-media educational materials, and lesson plans. These materials are offered freely and openly without an accompanying need to pay copyright realities or licence fees. The initiative will be guided by a committee of experts including faculty, students, senior academic officers and other experts who deal with open educational resources. It will be will be co-chaired by Jason Dewling, vice-president academic and research from Olds College and Rory McGreal, a professor at Athabasca University.

Link: http://alberta.ca/release.cfm?xID=361759413B5A0-D9D0-0BAB-223D46A8642B6F47

Blogs and Wikis in Formal Higher Education: Examples of Open Education

Tony Bates follows up on an article about the University of Mary Washington’s A Domain of One’s Own program, which goes beyond campus blog hosting to offering students and faculty their own web domain and hosting service where they can install and manage their own applications such as WordPress, thus allowing them to truly own their web presence. Bates notes that the University of British Columbia (UBC) runs both UBC Blogs, which has over 22,785 members, and the UBC Wiki. He recommends that people “browse the UBC Blogs and Wiki sites in particular to see how social media are being integrated fully with credit-based online learning at UBC.” He also concludes that “linking blogs and wikis to particular courses and controlling access through the use of passwords enables a degree of quality control. Usually it is UBC students who are in control. This is a development of open education that deserves more attention”.

Link: http://www.tonybates.ca/2014/04/04/blogs-and-wikis-in-formal-higher-education-examples-of-open-education/

Memorandum of Understanding on Open Educational Resources

The Premiers of British Columbia, Alberta, and Saskatchewan have released a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) on Open Education Resources (OER), which will see the three provinces collaborate on the development of common OER within their respective advanced education sectors. The MOU defines Open Educational Resources as “teaching, learning and research materials in any medium, digital or otherwise, that reside in the public domain or have been released under an open license that permits no-cost access, use, adaptation and redistribution by others with no or limited restrictions.”

Link: http://www.gov.sk.ca/adx/aspx/adxGetMedia.aspx?mediaId=f3d342c4-ab61-44a4-9f96-71ceb7810a5d&PN=Shared

New BC Open Ed Chat Archive Available

The February 2014 BC Open Open Ed Chat archived recording is now available. It featured Jon Festinger discussing his Video Game Law course and his perspective on “open” as well as the contributors behind the Math Exam/Education Resource Wiki, which features close to 1,000 practice questions for math exams sorted by 97 categories.

Link: http://bcopened.org/bc-open-open-ed-chats/archives/

Announcing Mozilla BadgeKit

Mozilla recently announced the release of BadgeKit, a set of foundational tools to support the badging process for organizations developing badges for their communities. Mozilla reports that more than 2,000 organizations are currently issuing badges that align with the Mozilla Open Badges standard. The Mozilla BadgeKit will support key stages in the badging experience including creating, designing, assessing, and issuing; include remixable templates and milestone badges allowing for easy customization; and build openness, interoperability, agency, choice, and connectedness into the core and help shape emerging badge systems.