30
Open education resources and computing Miles Berry 29 January 2015 @mberry | #oersch15

OER Schools Conference - Miles Berry

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Open education

resources and computing

Miles Berry

29 January 2015

@mberry | #oersch15

.

History at KS1

The lives of significant

individuals in the past who

have contributed to national

and international

achievements. Some should

be used to compare aspects

of life in different periods [for

example … William Caxton

and Tim Berners-Lee]

DfE, 2013

Caxton and Berners-Lee

Open Educational Resources?

© CERN

.

Free beer!

Just the other day a leading

private school in Cambridge,

announced they were

making 12 multimedia

textbooks available online for

all to use.

And of course the world’s

largest online collection of

free education content is

already available on Apple’s

iTunes U platform. Morgan, 2015

Free speech!

terms and conditions apply...

.

The wiki curriculum?

In an open-source world, why should we

accept that a curriculum is a single, static

document? A statement of priorities frozen

in time; a blunt instrument landing with a

thunk on teachers’ desks and updated

only centrally and only infrequently?... we

need to consider how we can take a wiki,

collaborative approach to developing new

curriculum materials; using technological

platforms to their full advantage in

creating something far more sophisticated

than anything previously available.

Gove, 2012

You are free to:

● copy, publish, distribute and transmit the Information;

● adapt the Information;

● exploit the Information commercially and non-commercially for

example, by combining it with other Information, or by including it in

your own product or application.

You must (where you do any of the above):

● acknowledge the source of the Information in your product or

application by including or linking to any attribution statement

specified by the Information Provider(s) and, where possible,

provide a link to this licence;

.

Computing in KS1

use technology purposefully

to create, organise, store,

manipulate and retrieve

digital content

use technology respectfully

DfE, 2013

.

Computing in KS2

understand the opportunities

computer networks offer for

collaboration

use search technologies

effectively ... be discerning in

evaluating digital content

use technology respectfully

and responsibly; recognise

acceptable/unacceptable

behaviourDfE, 2013

.

Computing in KS3

create, reuse, revise and

repurpose digital artefacts

for a given audience, with

attention to trustworthiness,

design and usability

understand a range of ways

to use technology

respectfully and responsibly;

recognise inappropriate

conduct, and know how to

report concerns DfE, 2013

Computing resources

.

It’s fine in Leicester!

2. Outputs and Intellectual Property created

by community school and voluntary

controlled school staff in Leicester City in

the course of their employment are owned

by Leicester City Council unless specific

agreements have been put in place.

3. The council provides permission for

educational resources created by

community and voluntary aided school

employees to be released under open

licence. The council encourages schools to

share materials under an open licence

wherever possible.

CC by LCC, 2014

.

Fast food?

All the preparation is done for you

by someone else

The instructions for use are simple

and laid out in steps

It is superficially attractive but turns

out to lack flavour

It does you little good; it tends to

pass through quickly

All the real nutrient is removed and

substitutes have been added

Better Mathematics, 1987

.

Slow food!

Quality matters

Time to enjoy both

production and consumption

Co-producers, not

consumers

Each individual’s contribution

matters

Recognition of family,

community, locality, society

image: CC by Windell Oskay

Scratch

.

Share and remix

4.2 The Scratch Team encourages everyone to foster

creativity by freely sharing code, art, music, and other

works. However, we also understand the need for

individuals and companies to protect their intellectual

property rights. You are responsible for making sure

you have the necessary rights, licenses, or permission

for any user-generated content you submit to Scratch.

4.3 All user-generated content you submit to Scratch

is licensed to and through Scratch under the Creative

Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 license. This

allows others to view and remix your content. This

license also allows the Scratch Team to display,

distribute, and reproduce your content on the Scratch

website. If you do not want to license your content

under this license, then do not share it on Scratch.

MIT LLK

(copy)rights and

responsibilities

Works created by students

There is nothing in the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act

1988 which relates specifically to ownership of copyright in

works created by students. Therefore, the normal rules of

ownership will apply as outlined in sections 9-11 of the Act.

A teacher/lecturer should not be able to claim joint

ownership on a student’s work unless they have made a

substantial contribution to that work (this may occasionally

occur with primary school children, where a teacher’s

involvement with a pupil’s work would usually be more

considerable than the interaction with an A-level student).

IPO, 2014

Creating a culture of collaboration

@mberry

[email protected]

milesberry.net

These slides: bit.ly/oersch15

Questions?