cetl4healthne workshop - march_2012

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Using and creating sustainable learning and teaching resources Suzanne Hardy & Gillian Brown School of Medical Sciences Education Development, Newcastle University 7 March 2012 CETL4HealthNE workshop

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This is a presentation Suzanne and I gave on 7th March 2012 at Teesside University on behalf of CETL4HEATHNE.

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Page 1: Cetl4healthne workshop - March_2012

CETL4HealthNE workshop

Using and creating sustainable learning and teaching resources

Suzanne Hardy & Gillian Brown School of Medical Sciences Education Development, Newcastle University

7 March 2012

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CETL4HealthNE workshop7 March 2012

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CETL4HealthNE workshop7 March 2012

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CETL4HealthNE workshop

Icebreaker

7 March 2012

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CETL4HealthNE workshop

Overview

• What are sustainable elearning and teaching resources? Why should I care?

• Considerations: copyright and ownership, licensing, illusion of safety, mitigating risk, consent

• Adopting good practice: tools to help, search strategies, using existing content, digital professionalism, strategies for upskilling and confidence building

• Final thoughts: what are you going to takeaway from today?

7 March 2012

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CETL4HealthNE workshop

WHAT ARE SUSTAINABLE LEARNING AND TEACHING RESOURCES?

Using and creating sustainable learning and teaching resources

7 March 2012

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Background£5.7+£4+£4=

£13.7 millions

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Sharing openly is good

50%www.medev.ac.uk/ourwork/oer/value/

• Public money• Transparency and accountability• Equality of access• Increased utility• Increased applications & better retention• Students do use OER and it does save

time http://blogs.nottingham.ac.uk/learningtechnology/2011/02/08/it-turns-out-that-oer-does-save-time-and-students-do-use-them/

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Mitigating risk by adopting good practice to save time and money

OER is irrelevant(but a nice by-product )

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Considerations

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COPYRIGHT AND OWNERSHIPThings to consider

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Intellectual property rights (IPR)

• There are four main types of IP rights – Patents protect what makes things work (e.g. engine parts,

chemical formulas)– Trade marks are signs (like words and logos) that

distinguish goods and services in the marketplace– Designs protect the appearance of a product/logo,

from the shape of an aeroplane to a fashion item– Copyright is an automatic right which applies when

the work is expressed (fixed, written or recorded)• Copyright, Design and Patents Act, 1988 • Copyright arises automatically when an original idea (author uses

some judgment or skill) is expressed/created– www.ipo.gov.uk

CETL4HealthNE workshop7 March 2012

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Who owns copyright?

• The owner of the copyright is the person (or persons, if jointly owned) who created/expressed it, i.e. the author (writer, composer, artist, producer, publisher, etc.)– Original literary works such as novels or poems– Original dramatic works such as dance– Original musical works, i.e. the musical notes – Original artistic works such as graphic works (paintings, drawings

etc.), photographs and sculptures, including sound recordings, films and broadcasts

– Typographical arrangements of published editions

• An exception is an employee who creates a work in the course of their employment (employer owns)

• www.cla.co.uk

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What rights does a copyright owner have?

• A copyright owner has economic and moral rights• Economic rights cover copyright owner acts, including

rights to copy the work, distribute (e.g. making it available on-line), rent, lend, perform, show, or adapt it

• Owners can waive, assign, licence or sell the ownership of their economic rights

• Moral rights can be waived (but not licensed or assigned) and include the right to – Be identified as the author – Deny a work (that an author did not create) – Object to derogatory treatment of the work

• www.cla.co.ukCETL4HealthNE workshop7 March 2012

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Copyright infringement

• It is an infringement of copyright (in relation to a substantial part of a work) without the permission or authorisation of the copyright owner, to– Copy it and/or issue copies of it to the public– Rent or lend it to the public– Perform or show it in public– Communicate it to the public

• Secondary infringement may occur if someone, without permission, imports, possesses or deals with an infringing copy, or provides the means for making it

• Material found on the internet is subject to copyright• www.cla.co.uk

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Exceptions

• You may copy copyright works if– Copyright has expired (e.g. for literary, dramatic,

musical or artistic works = 70 years from when the last author dies)

– Your use of the work (which must be acknowledged) is fair dealing as defined under the 1988 Copyright Designs and Patents Act (UK)

– Your use of the work is covered under a licensing scheme that you and the copyright holder have subscribed to

– The copyright owner has given you permission• www.copyrightservice.co.uk

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Obtaining clearance to use copyright material

• For permission to copy, contact the copyright owner in writing and specify– The material you wish use (title, author name etc.)– The exact content to be duplicated (i.e. page numbers)– The number of copies you wish to make– How the copies will be used (i.e. for an event, course work)– Who the copies will be distributed to (i.e. students)

• For most published works this will be the publisher • Permission is needed for each and every purpose • Fees may be charged to copy the item, or for

administering the request to copy the item• www.cla.co.uk

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Fair dealing

• Your use of the work (which must be acknowledged) is fair dealing as defined under the 1988 Copyright Designs and Patents Act (UK) – Research and private study– Instruction or examination– Criticism or review– News reporting– Incidental inclusion– Accessibility for someone with, e.g. a visual impairment

• There is no simple formula or % that can be applied, fair dealing doesn’t permit internet sharing –instead use licenced materials, or ask for permission

• www.copyrightservice.co.uk

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Using licenced works

• A licence (a set of rules) describes how copyright items may be used by others

• Licensing schemes (such as Creative Commons) that both authors (owners) and users can access for free – If both sides observe the rules then both parties are

instantly protected – Owners licence others to use their content– Users obey the terms of the licence– Creative Commons provides different licences that can be

combined together– Policies can be developed to guide owners what licences to

use

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Policies, disclaimers and risk

• In order to safeguard yourself against litigation for copyright or data protection (consent) violation– Have a policy/disclaimer– Clearly publish your policy and keep it up to date– Train your staff in the use of the policy– Follow your policy (do what you say you will do)

• You may also want a disclaimer ‘this resource has been provided… use it at your own risk. If you have any concerns about material in this resource…’

• Actively manage your risks• Take out liability insurance

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©7 March 2012

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POLICYThings to consider

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PERMISSION AND LICENSINGAdopting good practice

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Get written permissionTakes time and money

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OER: a definition

“digitised materials offered freely and openly for educators, students and self-learners to use and reuse for teaching, learning and research”Hylén, Jan (2007). Giving Knowledge for Free: The Emergence of Open Educational Resources. Paris, France: OECD Publishing. p. 30 See also: http://open.umich.edu/oertoolkit/oer_intro/definition/distinction2.html

7 March 2012

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http://creativecommons.org/ 7 March 2012

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Creative Commons: creativecommons.org/about/licenses/7 March 2012

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CETL4HealthNE workshop

CONSENTAdopting good practice

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Consent not copyright/IPR

• Defined by the principles in the Data Protection Act 1998 and Human Rights Act 1998

• Recognises the need for more sophisticated management of consent for recordings of people (stills, videos, audios, etc.)– Teachers (academics, clinicians, practice/work based learning

tutors, etc.)– Students and ‘product placement’ (branded items) – Role players/actors/performers/hired help (including recording crew)– Patients/patient families/care workers/support staff/members of

public in healthcare settings (sensitive personal data) – GMC review of the guidelines for consent/patient recordings

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Considerations

• People• Patients (children and vulnerable adults)• Dead people/patients (children and vulnerable

adults)• Existing recordings (already exist)• New recordings (that you are planning to

make)

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GMC guidance

• Making and using visual and audio recordings of patients 2001– Referred to clinical care and research, did not refer

to teaching• Making and using visual and audio recordings

of patients 2011 – Does refer to teaching

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CETL4HealthNE workshopCON

SEN

T

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Consent everything-even where ownership and patient/non-patient rights appear clear, and store consent with resource

Engendering trust

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TOOLS TO HELPAdopting good practice

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www.jiscdigitalmedia.ac.uk/clinical-recordings/

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USE EXISTING MATERIAL WHENEVER POSSIBLE

Adopting good practice

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Things to do today: good practice with resources for learning and teaching(OER is irrelevant)3

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1Using the Xpert to find resources, including images, sounds and

videoswww.nottingham.ac.uk/xpert/

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2Using Flickr advanced search for photos, diagrams

and videowww.flickr.com/search/advanced/

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3Using Google Images advanced searchwww.google.co.uk/

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www.elearningrepository.nhs.uk/

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www.jorum.ac.uk/

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crea

tivec

omm

ons.

org/

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www.mededportal.org/

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www.merlot.org/

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CREDIT WHERE CREDIT’S DUEAdopting good practice

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www.harvardgenerator.com/

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www.harvardgenerator.com/

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openattribute.com/

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Drop down gives HTML or plain text options to copy into your resource

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MITIGATING RISKAdopting good practice

7 March 2012

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Policies, disclaimers and risk• In order to safeguard yourself against litigation for

copyright or data protection (consent) violation– Have a policy/disclaimer– Clearly publish your policy and keep it up to date– Train your staff in the use of the policy– Follow your policy (do what you say you will do)

• You may also want a disclaimer ‘this resource has been provided… use it at your own risk. If you have any concerns about any material appearing in this resource…’

• Actively manage your risks• Take out liability insurance

CETL4HealthNE workshop7 March 2012

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Attribution and disclaimer

• This ppt file is made available under a Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike version 3.0 unported licence.

• Please include the following phrase ‘Suzanne Hardy CETL4HealthNE workshop, December 2011, ‘

• Users are free to link to, reuse and remix this material under the terms of the licence which stipulates that any derivatives must bear the same terms. Anyone with any concerns about the way in which any material appearing here has been linked to, used or remixed from elsewhere, please contact [email protected] who will make reasonable endeavour to take down the original files within 10 working days.

7 March 2012 CETL4HealthNE workshop

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CETL4HealthNE workshop

Reflection7 March 2012

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DIGITAL LITERACY? FLUENCY? PROFESSIONALISM?

Adopting good practice

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Digital professionalism• To be a digital

professional every member of staff who contributes to curriculum delivery, in both NHS and academic settings should be able to identify, model and understand professional behaviour in the digital environment.

CC-BY Official US Navy Imagerywww.flickr.com/photos/usnavy/5509486066/

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“many medical students seem unaware of or unconcerned with the possible ramifications of sharing personal information in publicly available online profiles even though such information could affect their professional lives”

Ferdig et al, 2008

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“most learners are still strongly led by tutors and course practices: tutor skills and confidence with technology are therefore critical to learners' development”

Beetham et al, 2009

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• Information/resources increasingly easy to find• Blurring of personal and professional identities online• Increasing need to manage issues of disclosure• Changing public expectations• Misunderstandings of digital spaces• Consequence

• Permanence• Lack of understanding of ownership

and licensing in online environments7 March 2012

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CETL4HealthNE workshop

• Information/resources increasingly easy to find• Blurring of personal and professional identities online• Increasing need to manage issues of disclosure• Changing public expectations• Misunderstandings of digital spaces• Consequence

• Permanence• Lack of understanding of ownership

and licencing in online environmentsBy Michael Deschenes (Own work) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

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CETL4HealthNE workshop

– An ‘unconference’: By teachers, for teachers– Focussed on sharing ideas: Practical, helpful,

inspiring– Everyone participates– Everyone learns– 2- or 7-minute presentations– Anyone can speak– No obligation to pay attention

www.camlibtm.info/about/ 7 March 2012

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http://23thingswarwick.blogspot.com/p/programme-outline.html/ 7 March 2012

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WHAT NEXT?Final thoughts

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Next

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CETL4HealthNE workshop7 March 2012PublishOER

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consent commons

Consent Commons ameliorates uncertainty about the status of educational resources depicting people, and protects institutions from legal risk by developing robust and sophisticated policies and promoting best practice in managing information.

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CETL4HealthNE workshop

Mitigating risk by adopting good practice to save time and money

OER is irrelevant(but a nice by-product )

7 March 2012

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CETL4HealthNE workshop

www.medev.ac.uk/ourwork/oer/

[email protected]/hea_medevtwitter.com/glittrgirlskype: glitt3rgirl

7 March 2012

[email protected]/hea_medevtwitter.com/gillybean42skype: gillybeanwork

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Attribution and disclaimer

• This ppt file is made available under a Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike version 3.0 unported licence.

• Please include the following phrase ‘Suzanne Hardy & Gillian Brown, CETL4HealthNE workshop, March 2012,’

• Users are free to link to, reuse and remix this material under the terms of the licence which stipulates that any derivatives must bear the same terms. Anyone with any concerns about the way in which any material appearing here has been linked to, used or remixed from elsewhere, please contact [email protected] or [email protected] who will make reasonable endeavour to take down the original files within 10 working days.

7 March 2012 CETL4HealthNE workshop