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Remixing Open Educational Resources for Your Classroom

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Slides for an online workshop as a part of the 4T Virtual Conference

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Page 1: Remixing Open Educational Resources for Your Classroom
Page 2: Remixing Open Educational Resources for Your Classroom

Poll

Are you a:

A - Preservice teacher

B - Elementary teacher

C - Secondary teacher

D - Administrator/coach/tech facilitator

E - Other

Page 3: Remixing Open Educational Resources for Your Classroom

Poll

What’s your general technology comfort level?

A – Newbie – I use email and the web, not much else.

B – Beginner – I’m good with Office tools.

C – Intermediate – I’ve used some apps like wikis or Google Docs.

D – Advanced – I’m moderately comfortable with things like wikis, Google Docs, and other Web 2.0.

E – Expert - I do all things Web 2.0 and write HTML.

Page 4: Remixing Open Educational Resources for Your Classroom

Agenda

Overview of open educational resources and remixing (15 minutes)

You choose a lesson or topic to remix Remix, play, ask questions, have fun

Page 5: Remixing Open Educational Resources for Your Classroom

What I believe and why I got involved in OER

Differentiating instruction is essential to improving education.

Textbooks are not a good tool for this. Technology coupled with high quality content is. Teachers and students need high quality

resources that they can use legally to build and share interactive lessons, podcasts, multimedia presentations, etc.

Sharing is good and is a part of new literacies.

Page 6: Remixing Open Educational Resources for Your Classroom

What is OER?

Digital, free, and OPEN for anyone to use, adapt, and redistribute

Tools, content, and implementation resources

For teachers, students, and lifelong learners

Page 7: Remixing Open Educational Resources for Your Classroom

How is OER relevant to education?

Suitable for “remixing” for differentiation Examples

Increases equity FREE Modelling 21st century skills as a source of

content for teachers and students to build from legally

Wise use of public funds

Page 8: Remixing Open Educational Resources for Your Classroom

What is remixing?

Piecing together others’ works into something useful to you

Final product can be any format you want Web page Wiki Presentation Ebook Movie Something else

Page 9: Remixing Open Educational Resources for Your Classroom
Page 10: Remixing Open Educational Resources for Your Classroom

Click the link in chat and watch the first part of this video

www.vimeo.com/42225818

Page 11: Remixing Open Educational Resources for Your Classroom

Traditional copyright -

all rights reserved

Public domain - unrestricted

use

Page 12: Remixing Open Educational Resources for Your Classroom

Traditional copyright -

all rights reserved

Public domain - unrestricted

use

Copyright with open licenses -

some rights reserved

Page 13: Remixing Open Educational Resources for Your Classroom

Attribution (BY) ▪ Non-commercial (NC) ▪

No derivatives (ND) ▪ Copyleft - Share-Alike (SA)

Recommended for education:

CC BY

Page 14: Remixing Open Educational Resources for Your Classroom

Creative Commons: CC BY – You can use however you want; just cite

the source.

CC BY SA – You can use however you want, but you must cite the source AND license your work under a sharing license.

CC BY NC – You can use only if it is noncommercial (you can’t charge $); cite the source.

CC BY ND – You can use the work but you can’t change it or put it into a bigger work; also cite the source.

Page 15: Remixing Open Educational Resources for Your Classroom

Others:

GFDL – Share-alike license used by Wikipedia and others.

Public domain – not copyrighted; you can use however you like.

Custom licenses (e.g. morguefile and Teacher’s Domain)

Page 16: Remixing Open Educational Resources for Your Classroom

Citing Sources

ALWAYS cite sources; attribution required by CC

Can be under the image or at the end in credits Screen names are ok (optional) Include source URL

Page 17: Remixing Open Educational Resources for Your Classroom

More Formal Citation Formats

MLA

Author’s name, the name of the work, publication/site, the date of creation, and the medium of publication

Bronayur. “Hershey, PA sign.” Wikipedia, Jan. 9, 2007. JPG file.

APA

Name of the organization, followed by the date. In brackets, provide a brief explanation of what type of data is there and in what form it appears. Finally, provide the project name and retrieval information.

Hershey, PA sign. (Jan. 9, 2007). [Photo of Hershey, PA sign, JPG]. Wikipedia. Retrieved from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Hershey_Pennsylvania_1.JPG

Page 18: Remixing Open Educational Resources for Your Classroom

Where to find the best OER

http://content.k12opened.com

Multimedia tab will be particularly relevant for today.

Page 19: Remixing Open Educational Resources for Your Classroom
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Page 21: Remixing Open Educational Resources for Your Classroom

Topics for Your Remix Project

Can work individually or in small groups Anything you want to work on

If you know what you want to do, type the topic and final format into the chat

If you don’t know, look at others’ ideas and/or my suggestions

Go to Google Doc and your name and what you plan to work on

Page 22: Remixing Open Educational Resources for Your Classroom

Get to work!

Optional workspace - If you’d like a place to work on this, you can use this wiki:http://oerremix.wikispaces.com

Come back to Elluminate page if you have any questions – chat or audio

Break out rooms (optional) I’ll also check in periodically on audio Group check-in at 2:00

Have fun!

Page 23: Remixing Open Educational Resources for Your Classroom

Conclusion

Questions, comments, and sharing of experiences and resources

Thank you for coming!

Page 24: Remixing Open Educational Resources for Your Classroom

Thank you.

Karen Fasimpaur

[email protected]

First screen image credits:

Linux computer lab – Michael SurranLinux penguin - Larry Ewing <[email protected]> with the GIMPBooks - TizzieGlobe – NASACloud background - Anca Mosoiu