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Dealing in Disruption Some rights reserved by barbourian eBooks, universities and publishers in a digital age

Dealing in Disruption - OA policy in an African context

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Presentation at the University of Namibia SCAP workshop June 2012

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Page 1: Dealing in Disruption - OA policy in an African context

Dealing in Disruption

Some rights reserved by barbourianeBooks, universities and publishers in a digital

age

Page 2: Dealing in Disruption - OA policy in an African context

We all know that we face a radically changing

environment

AttributionShare Alike Some rights reserved by Bichuas (E. Carton)

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Disruption Attribution Some rights reserved by sjcockell

…in which the web is changing everything

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The defining feature of print books – they have covers, marking a beginning and an end

Some rights reserved by shutterhacks

Page 5: Dealing in Disruption - OA policy in an African context

A scarcity model – the important thing is

containing expensive-to-produce knowledge

for publication

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http://www.flickr.com/photos/daveyll/332723930

Filters matter in

this context

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Filtering OUT…

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In this world, publication is a

critical component of

knowledge production

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Knowledge was the result of winnowing, as was what made it through the

editorial process. Knowledge was that which was settled... While knowledge

was of course contextual and related to its sources, its expression was in

discrete units that try to encapsulate everything the reader needs to know…

David Weinberger http://projectinfolit.org/st/weinberger.asp

Page 10: Dealing in Disruption - OA policy in an African context

Individual End-to-end

Packaged

StaticLinear

© ClosedAuthoritative

Hierarchical

Print media

Top-down

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20th century - consolidation of global media industries

Worldmapper: Books publishedhttp://www.worldmapper.org/display.php?selected=343

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In South Africa

Homogenisation of content, market dominance by large multinationals.

Local publishing concentrated in large undergraduate classes.

Overall, a shortage of locally relevant content.

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Can we celebrate digital media as a route to new,

more expansive opportunities?

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The trajectory of change

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Availability of e-textbooks and customisation options

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The horseless carriage – the

e-reader

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…has its advantages…

http://www.jonmccormack.com/blog/?p=835

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A more collaborative, interactive model emerges

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Apple iPad interactive textbooks

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But there are serious barriers to our

access to these and other powerful educational tools

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Territorial rights Attribution Some rights reserved by

music2work2

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“This title is not

available in your

location, Africa”

Page 23: Dealing in Disruption - OA policy in an African context

AttributionShare Alike Some rights reserved by Bichuas (E. Carton)

Page 24: Dealing in Disruption - OA policy in an African context

Dysfunctional business

models are encouraging

piracy

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E-books need a seamless, worldwide,

customer-focused market

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And in the universities?

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Research is increasingly networked and collaborative

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AttributionNoncommercialNo Derivative Works Some rights reserved by f2point8

Working with a deluge of data

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Collaborative

Granular

Hyperlinked

Interactive

Disaggregated

Social Integrated

OpenInteroperable

Digital knowledge

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Now knowledge occurs on a capacious network characterized by links. It’s thus taking on a shape that reflects its new medium. Deeply linked, incomplete,

inconsistent, in multiple-voices, unsettled, bottom up as well as top

down, multiple curated. Knowledge now looks like a network (of the Internet sort

specifically) because it is a network.

David Weinberger http://projectinfolit.org/st/weinberger.aspSee Weinberger, D (2012) Too Big to Know. New York, Basic Books

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Publishing/communication in

this environment is continuous, no longer the final,

fixed output

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The lines between research output

and teaching materials are

becoming more fluid

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Students are online, accessing course materials

in multiple media

Attribution Some rights reserved by ProfAlliRich

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They will need to learn how to find,

sift and select information

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More than 90% of UCT students have at least one course delivered on the LMS,

Vula.

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There will be increasing

demands for integrated textbook

materials, flexibly licensed

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http://www.flickr.com/photos/mararie/3313582639/ CC-BY-SA

OA and OER are now becoming widely adopted worldwide and is supported by

international, regional and national policies

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UNESCO supports OER national policy development

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UNESCO is convening regional policy workshops

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Open Aire in the EU

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The UK hires Jimmy Wales to advise on OA policy

WiLLGT09

Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported WiLLGT09

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‘The goal of attaining meaningful post school education will be supported by the development and sharing of well designed high quality learning resources that build on the expertise and experience of top quality scholars and educators. ‘

The SA Green Paper on Post-School Education and Training

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These resources should be made freely available as Open Education Resources (OER) for use with appropriate adaptation. This would be in line with a growing international movement …supported heavily by organisations such as UNESCO and the Commonwealth of Learning. http://www.dhet.gov.za/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=yhGLBBQZBzM=&tabid=36&mid=1071

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Licensing frameworks will be needed and institutional IP policies that include open licensing , in the light of the Green Paper

provision for’ an overarching policy framework on IP and copyright in higher

education’.

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Empowerment through collaboratio

n – new partnership

s will be needed

Attribution Some rights reserved by Anthony_Joel

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What is developing…

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“The combination of free access to world-class textbooks and the flexibility to

modify the material exactly to our needs makes Flat World Knowledge ideal for

pairing with the OCW Scholar courses,” remarked MIT OpenCourseWare

Executive Director Cecilia d’Oliveira.

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What partnerships are waiting to develop in

South Africa?

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Paper delivered at e-Textbooks – Tools of Change for the Digital Migrant Teaching the Digital

Native

Van Schaik Bookstores Conference 10 May 2012

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Eve Gray Scholarly Communication in

Africa ProgrammeUniversity of Cape Town

http://www.gray-area.co.za

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