47
European Schoolnet Learning Resource Exchange http://lreforschools.eun.org David Massart <[email protected]>

The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

A presentation of European Schoolnet's Learning Resource Exchange. What it is, how it works and is governed.

Citation preview

Page 1: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

European Schoolnet

Learning Resource Exchangehttp://lreforschools.eun.org

David Massart <[email protected]>

Page 2: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

Outline

• What is the LRE?• 200,000+ OERs that ‘travel well’• How does the LRE work?• LRE Subcommittee• Latest developments

Page 3: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

• Result of an effort started in 2002• By European Schoolnet (EUN) and its supporting

European Ministries of Education (MoEs) • With support of the European Commission

(CELEBRATE, CALIBRATE, MELT, ASPECT and eQNet) • Self-sustained since 2008• Covers all aspects linked to access to OERs:

Interoperability and standard, Legal, Quality, Infrastructure, Pedagogy, Retrieval

Page 4: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

Catalogue of Quality OERs for K-12 Education in Europe

Page 5: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

200,000+ Open Educational Resources

Page 7: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

200,000+ OERs that

Page 8: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

www.europeanschoolnet.org - www.eun.org

Trans-national Topics (MUST BE PRESENT)

The resource addresses curriculum topics that could be considered trans-national.

For example, teaching multiplication is usually covered in every national curriculum, but teaching the folklore of a very specific region is not. It can also be a resource well suited for use in multi-disciplinary or cross-curricular contexts.

http://lreforschools.eun.org/web/guest/resource-details?resourceId=280919

http://lreforschools.eun.org/web/guest/resource-details?resourceId=400452

8

Page 9: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

www.europeanschoolnet.org - www.eun.org

Knowledge of a specific language is not needed

(MUST BE PRESENT)

The resource can be used without having to translate accompanying

texts and/or the resource may be available in at least 3 European

languages.

For example, a resource might be a video where the narrative can be turned off, or it employs icons, images, animations, maps, etc. making its contents understandable for everyone.

http://lreforschools.eun.org/web/guest/resource-details?resourceId=400117

http://lreforschools.eun.org/web/guest/resource-details?resourceId=264342

9

Page 10: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

www.europeanschoolnet.org - www.eun.org

Stored as a file type that is usable with generally available software*

The resource can be used in any

environment (online and off-line) and

runs on multiple platforms (also

hand-held, IWB).

For example this can be an animation that plays in a web browser without the need for additional software.

http://lreforschools.eun.org/web/guest/resource-details?resourceId=264832

http://lreforschools.eun.org/web/guest/resource-details?resourceId=250809

10

Page 11: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

www.europeanschoolnet.org - www.eun.org

Methodological support for teachers is not needed

Subject teachers can easily

recognize how this resource meets

their curriculum requirements or how

this resource could be used in a

teaching scenario without further

instructions. This criteria should not

be used to assess the usability

(technical qualities) of a resource.

http://lreforschools.eun.org/web/guest/resource-details?resourceId=399084

http://lreforschools.eun.org/web/guest/resource-details?resourceId=401108

11

Page 12: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

www.europeanschoolnet.org - www.eun.org

Intuitive and easy to use

The resource is intuitive to use in the

sense that it has a user-friendly

interface and is easy to navigate for

both teachers and students without

having to read or translate complex

operating instructions.

Example are resources with simple button commands to create maps for use on computers, printouts or interactive white boards.

http://lreforschools.eun.org/web/guest/resource-details?resourceId=261871

http://lreforschools.eun.org/web/guest/resource-details?resourceId=280960

12

Page 13: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

www.europeanschoolnet.org - www.eun.org

Interactivity with or without feedback in a digital environment

This kind of resource invites or requires a significant

degree of user input or engagement, other than just

reading something on a page in an online or offline

environment.

The interactivity can be simple or complex. Simple forms can be feedback on correct or incorrect answers in a drill/practice scenario. Complex forms can be lab activities that produce different results depending on user actions or hints to help complete tasks successfully in an online environment. An interactive resource that does not provide feedback but still requires user input would be a geometric 3D shape that can be moved and turned.

http://lreforschools.eun.org/web/guest/resource-details?resourceId=248375

http://lreforschools.eun.org/web/guest/resource-details?resourceId=264849

13

Page 14: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

www.europeanschoolnet.org - www.eun.org

Clear license status (MUST BE PRESENT)

The user can easily find information about the license/rights (sometimes called Terms of Use, Copyright or Permissions) for this resource.

These statements explain if users or educators are allowed to make copies, or remix or redistribute a resource, or use images from the site in a blog without contacting the photographer, or if they can put this resource in a VLE like Moodle, etc.

This license/rights information should be understandable for a typical user.

http://lreforschools.eun.org/web/guest/resource-details?resourceId=265528

http://lreforschools.eun.org/web/guest/resource-details?resourceId=399091

14

Page 15: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

Catalogue Service for Learning Environments

Page 16: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

LRE Widgethttp://lrewidget.eun.org/

Page 17: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

LRE Portalhttp://lreforschools.eun.org/

Page 18: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

http://www.klascement.net/lre/zoeken/?extra_url=&previous=&q=&filter_group%5B%5D=all&extra%5Bdatabase%5D=LRE&extra%5Buser%5D=&cmdFilter=filter_activated

Page 19: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

http://www.stemit.be/focus/europees

Page 20: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

http://dum.rvp.cz/index.html

Page 21: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

http://www.skolverket.se/skolutveckling/itiskolan/digitala-larresurser/sok-med-spindeln

Page 22: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

http://www.ggflondemand.com/faces/home/home.jsf

Page 23: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

Metadata & Metadata Acquisition

Page 24: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

LRE Metadata Application Profile (1)http://lreforschools.eun.org/web/guest/metadata

Page 25: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

LRE Metadata Application Profile (2)http://lreforschools.eun.org/web/guest/metadata

Page 26: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

LRE Protocols

Page 27: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

Inside the Dark Cloud

Once collected (or generated), metadata is1. Controlled2. Corrected / Completed3. Identified4. Transformed into an LRE format (CMR)5. Translated6. Indexed

Page 28: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

Metadata Control (Negotiation)

Page 29: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

Metadata Control (Negotiation)

Page 30: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

Metadata Control (Negotiation)

Page 31: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

Metadata Control (In Action)

Page 32: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

Metadata Correction / Completion

Page 33: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

LRE Metadata Format (CMR)

Page 34: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

Metadata Lifecycle & Identity

Page 35: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

LRE Subcommittee• LRE governing body• Meets twice a year• Founding members and Associate members have one

vote each and elect a Chair• Technical Advisory Board – chaired by EUN• Decisions on operation of LRE and annual workplan

decided by Founding and Associate members• Changes to statutes of LRE Governing Committee and

LRE membership rules require majority decision by Founding members (MoE)

Page 36: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

Types of LRE Members

• LRE Founding members – EUN MoEs• LRE Associate members

– Territorial, regional, municipal authorities– Commercial and public sector content providers– Tools’ providers

• LRE Subscription members (limited to 1 year)– Smaller organizations exploring LRE added value

Page 37: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

LRE Subcommittee Members• Belgium• Czech Rep.• Finland• Italy• Lithuania

• The Netherlands (chair)• Norway• Portugal• Sweden• Switzerland

Currently discussing with SMEs, MoEs, Projects

Page 38: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

Beyond Metadata

Page 39: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

Beyond Metadata: Social Data

Page 40: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

LRE Social Data Manager

Page 41: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

Location of LRE Portal Visitors (2012)

Page 42: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

Beyond Metadata: Artifact Data

Page 43: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

LRE Proxy (under development)

• This proxy is very similar to URL shorteners such as goo.gl or tinyurl.com • LRE “short” URLs are used in the LRE metadata to replace resource locations• Each time users consult the LRE catalog to access OERs, they contact the LRE Proxy that captures data before redirecting the users to the actual resources

Page 44: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

OER Analytics• Associated with metadata, interaction data enables

– Improved curation, searching, ranking, and recommending of OERs

– Better data on which OERs are most likely to be used and where

• Valuable source of analytics of OERs’ audience preferences

• Helps to identify quality resources by crowdsourcing• Makes it possible to measure

– Impacts of marketing campaigns for the uptake of OERs– Shifts in educational policies on OERs globally

• D. Massart and E. Shulman. Interaction Data Exchange. D-Lib Magazine, May/June 2013. (forthcoming)

Page 45: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

SENnethttp://sennet.eun.org

Page 46: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)
Page 47: The Learning Resource Exchange (LRE)

For Further Information

WEB:

http://lreforschools.eun.org EMAIL:

[email protected]