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POERUP – Policies for OER Uptake

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POERUP is carrying out research to understand how governments can stimulate the uptake of OER by policy means. We aim to convince decision-makers that in order to be successful with OER, they will have to formulate evidence-based policies based on looking beyond one’s own country, region or continent, beyond the educational sector they look after. POERUP aims to study the end-user–producer communities behind OER initiatives. By comparing in-depth European case-studies to selected non-European ones we will refine and elaborate recommendations to formulate a set of action points that can be applied to ensuring the realisation of successful, lively and sustainable OER communities. We want to provide education authorities, the research community and OER initiative management with trustworthy and balanced research results, in which feedback from all stakeholder groups has been incorporated and which can be used as standard literature. A specific objective is to help readers in charge of OER initiatives to find ways of incorporating successful features of other initiatives.
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POERUP: Policies for OER Uptake Paul Bacsich, Sero OCWC 2014 Ljubljana Slovenia 23-25 April 2014
Transcript
Page 1: POERUP – Policies for OER Uptake

POERUP:Policies for OER Uptake

Paul Bacsich, Sero

OCWC 2014LjubljanaSlovenia

23-25 April 2014

Page 2: POERUP – Policies for OER Uptake

POERUP Partners

1. Sero (coordinator)2. University of Leicester3. Open University

of the Netherlands4. University of Lorraine5. SCIENTER6. EDEN7. Athabasca University (Canada)

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Page 3: POERUP – Policies for OER Uptake

Context and rationale

• Over ten years of the OER movement• Hundreds of OER repositories worldwide• Lack of uptake by teachers and learners• Shift from development to community building

and articulation of OER practice

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Page 4: POERUP – Policies for OER Uptake

Focus of POERUP

• Stimulating the uptake of OER through policy• Building on previous initiatives (such as OPAL,

Olnet and SCORE)• Through country reports (target 24, now 30) • And case studies, evaluating successful OER

communities• Linked to ODS, IIEP, IPTS and non-EU initiatives

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Page 5: POERUP – Policies for OER Uptake

POERUP timescales revised

• Bid submitted March 2011• Preparatory and related studies: 2011• Project started: November 2011 • Project funded period ends: June 2014• Final reports due: end August 2014

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Page 6: POERUP – Policies for OER Uptake

This presentation

• Summarises our conclusions, with examples• Along with some thoughts about the process

and future projects• Within the context of the European

Commission’s Opening Up Education policy recommendations

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Page 7: POERUP – Policies for OER Uptake

POERUP Achievements

• Inventory of more than 400 OER initiatives worldwide (120 notable)

• 30 country reports – 3 more coming

• 7 case studies including Wikiwijs, ALISON (Ireland), OER U (global) and FutureLearn (UK mostly)

• 3 EU-level policy documents for universities, VET and schools

• In progress: 8 policy documents for UK (x3), Ireland, France, Netherlands, Poland – and Canada

KA3 ICT

Page 8: POERUP – Policies for OER Uptake

Country reports

Then we shall look at policy interventions

(no time to discuss initiatives or case studies in this talk)

Page 9: POERUP – Policies for OER Uptake

Country reports (done by POERUP)

• 30 in all, at least one from each continent• Europe: 15 out of 28 EU states; and Norway• Americas: US, Canada, Mexico, Argentina• Asia: Gulf States, Thailand• Africa: South Africa• Australia and New Zealand

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Page 10: POERUP – Policies for OER Uptake

Country reports – conclusions

• Many countries are doing very little OER stricto sensu

• Even fewer have policies about or even directly relevant to OER

• Yet across the world there are perhaps 500 OER initiatives currently active – or recently active

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Page 11: POERUP – Policies for OER Uptake

Country reports – issues

• Relied on other projects that were claiming to be doing OER reports, tried to avoid overlap

• Worked out well with OER Asia• Worked out less well with other projects• Did not take account of countries entering the

OER scene late or reports going out of date

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Page 12: POERUP – Policies for OER Uptake

Country reports – solutions

• Currently updating all our country reports• Also reporting on Ireland, Germany, and Brazil• Also doing rapid continental “helicopter” scans

across Africa, Hispanic America and Asia – Focussing just on initiatives and policies not context– And there will be a map, plus data supplied to

collaborators in “common format” – specific collaboration with eMundus

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Page 13: POERUP – Policies for OER Uptake

Policy interventions

To foster OER and activities that in turn will foster OER

Page 14: POERUP – Policies for OER Uptake

All our policy work since autumn 2013 has taken account of the EU initiative:

Opening up Educationhttp://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_IP-13-859_en.htm

Page 15: POERUP – Policies for OER Uptake

Innovation

The keybut only at scale

Page 16: POERUP – Policies for OER Uptake

Innovation – innovative institutions

• Since the era of building open universities there has been little visible activity in creating innovative institutions

Page 17: POERUP – Policies for OER Uptake

New-build institutions opening up education

Page 18: POERUP – Policies for OER Uptake

Innovation – recommendation• The European Commission should set up a competitive

innovation fund to set up one new “European” university each year for the next 5 years with a commitment to “low-system-cost” online education around a core of open content.• OUE: Support innovative teaching and learning environments,

including through the use of structural and investment funds (ESIFs)

• OUE: Establish a European Hub of Digitally Innovative Education institutions... complemented by a specific European Award of Digital Excellence

Page 19: POERUP – Policies for OER Uptake

Accreditation and quality

“Outside the rules”or

“Within the (new) rules”

Page 20: POERUP – Policies for OER Uptake

Accreditation of prior learning• The Commission should recommend to universities that they

should to improve and proceduralise their activity on APL (Accreditation of Prior Learning) including the ability to accredit knowledge and competences developed through online study and informal learning, including but not restricted to OER and MOOCs

• Large Member States should set up an Open Accreditor if their HE sector is diverse with small institutions– OUE: Ensure that transparency and recognition instruments for formal

education are adapted to new forms of learning including validation of skills acquired online

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Page 21: POERUP – Policies for OER Uptake

Thank you for listening

Paul BacsichFor the POERUP team

http://www.poerup.infohttp://poerup.referata.com/wiki/Main_Page

Email [email protected]


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