uhmlg spring 2010

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Opening access to educational resources for use and reuse. OOER MEDEV! A progress report Suzanne Hardy Senior Advisor (Information) March 2010 UHMLG Spring Forum, Woburn House, London www.medev.ac.uk

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A presentation given to the Spring meeting of the University of Medical Librarians in Spring 2010.

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Page 1: UHMLG Spring 2010

Opening access to educational resources for use and reuse. OOER MEDEV! A progress report

Suzanne Hardy

Senior Advisor (Information)

March 2010

UHMLG Spring Forum, Woburn House, London

www.medev.ac.uk

Page 2: UHMLG Spring 2010

The HEFCE/JISC/HEA OER programme (14/08) - Background

• Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE) announced an initial £5.7 million of funding for pilot projects that will open up existing high-quality education resources from UK higher education institutions to the world

• Higher Education Academy and JISC working in partnership to deliver 12-month pilot projects - formally launched in April 2009

www.medev.ac.uk

Page 3: UHMLG Spring 2010

The HEFCE/JISC/HEA OER programme (14/08)

• Aims to make a wide range of learning resources created by academics freely available, easily discovered and routinely re-used by both educators and learners.

• Expected that funded projects demonstrate long term commitment to release of OER resources. Projects working towards sustainability of long term open resources release via the adoption of appropriate business models to support this

• Recommendations may include modifications to institutional policies and processes, with the aim of making open resources release an expected part of the educational resources creation cycle

www.medev.ac.uk

Page 4: UHMLG Spring 2010

The HEFCE/JISC/HEA OER programme (14/08)

• OER could include full courses, course materials, complete modules, notes, videos, assessments, tests, simulations, worked examples, software, and any other tools or materials or techniques used to support access to knowledge. These resources will be released under an intellectual property license that permits open use and adaptation (e.g. Creative Commons)

www.medev.ac.uk

Page 5: UHMLG Spring 2010

Creative Commons: example

www.medev.ac.uk

Page 6: UHMLG Spring 2010

The HEFCE/JISC/HEA OER programme (14/08)

• Pilot projects to release existing learning resources under a suitable license for open use and repurposing under 3 strands of activity:1. Institutional

2. Individual

3. Subject

www.medev.ac.uk

Page 7: UHMLG Spring 2010

The HEFCE/JISC/HEA OER programme (14/08)

• Not about creating new content• Exposing existing content to wider audiences• Exploring the drivers, challenges and barriers and

making recommendations• Projects mandated to deposit into Jorum Open• Evaluation of pilot programme, including synthesis of

project outcomes, to be carried out by Glasgow Caledonian University

www.medev.ac.uk

Page 8: UHMLG Spring 2010

www.medev.ac.uk

Page 9: UHMLG Spring 2010

JorumOpen

• JorumOpen - for content whose creators and owners who are willing and are able to share their content on a worldwide basis under the terms of a Creative Commons (CC)

• www.jorum.ac.uk• Limited metadata requirements, many more optional

fields: http://www.jorum.ac.uk/docs/pdf/japv1p0.pdf • Use #ukoer as tag in web2.0 e.g. blogs, Twitter and

del.icio.us

www.medev.ac.uk

Page 10: UHMLG Spring 2010

www.medev.ac.uk

NB Draft Jorum v.1 application profile (Stevenson 2005) has over 100 elements, mostly optional

Page 11: UHMLG Spring 2010

OOER

• Organising Open Educational Resources

• Bid can be downloaded from www.medev.ac.uk/oer

• Focusses on issues relating to consent, securing ER from staff delivering programmes who are non-HEI employed, and complements other projects in the programme

• Results of mapping and readiness categorisation together with development of simple toolkits (to help HEIs, Subjects and Individuals) will inform identification of ER to be included

• Uploading OER will test toolkits

www.medev.ac.uk

Page 12: UHMLG Spring 2010

OOER Project: Workpackage flow diagram for uploading a resource – what does the project look like?

Y

Start

Start

Identify ontent typeIdentify ontent type

Image/video/audio?

Image/video/audio?

Patient data?

Patient data?

Y Y

Text?Text?

N

N

N

Refer to WP3

workflow

Refer to WP3

workflow

Refer to WP2

workflow

Refer to WP2

workflow

Refer to WP5

workflow

Refer to WP5

workflow

Is the IPR

status clear?

Is the IPR

status clear?

Y

NRefer to WP6

workflow

Refer to WP6

workflow

Collect basic metadata about

resource

Collect basic metadata about

resource

Page 13: UHMLG Spring 2010

Collect basic metadata about

resource

Collect basic metadata about

resource

Map against readiness scale

Map against readiness scale

Is it a quality

resource?

Is it a quality

resource?

Refer to WP7

workflow

Refer to WP7

workflow

Refer to WP4

workflow

Refer to WP4

workflow

N

Y

Is the resource ready to upload?

Is the resource ready to upload?

Make any technical

adjustments necessary

Make any technical

adjustments necessary

N

Choose APIs and add appropriate

metadata

Choose APIs and add appropriate

metadata

Y

OOER Project: Workpackage flow diagram for uploading a resource – what does the project look like?

Page 14: UHMLG Spring 2010

Choose APIs and add appropriate

metadata

Choose APIs and add appropriate

metadata

Refer to WP9

workflow

Refer to WP9

workflow

Upload resourceUpload resource

Refer to WP8

workflow

Refer to WP8

workflow

Syndicate metadata

Syndicate metadata

EndEnd

OOER Project: Workpackage flow diagram for uploading a resource – what does the project look like?

Page 15: UHMLG Spring 2010

www.medev.ac.uk

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www.medev.ac.uk

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www.medev.ac.uk

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www.medev.ac.uk

Readiness categorisation pyramid (in development)

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Openness scale – in development

www.medev.ac.uk

e.g. WAG, Bobby etc

Page 20: UHMLG Spring 2010

Upload? Share? Publish? Deposit?

• As easy as possible to end user• API toolkit

– Put– In– Many– Places– Syndicates resource info

www.medev.ac.uk

Page 21: UHMLG Spring 2010

PIMPS example

www.medev.ac.uk

Page 22: UHMLG Spring 2010

www.medev.ac.uk

OOER

• Toolkits available so far (all feedback gratefully received!):– IPR and copyright– Patient consent– Institutional policy and procedure– See www.medev.ac.uk/oer

• Ready soon:– Quality and pedagogy– Resource discovery and reuse– Metadata and API– Impact on existing projects – senior manager briefing paper

Page 23: UHMLG Spring 2010

So what?

www.medev.ac.uk

Page 24: UHMLG Spring 2010

www.medev.ac.uk

Page 25: UHMLG Spring 2010

Draft OOER value statement:Teaching resource quality

• The quality of educational resources, as a whole, will be driven upwards due to competition, feedback and peer review.

www.medev.ac.uk

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Draft OOER value statement:Financial

• Time saved in not duplicating resources or parts of resources, with novel resources having a foundation to build upon (Yuan, 2009).

• Time saved in using an IPR and Patient Consent cleared repository of OER (Fleming & Massey, 2007).

• Promotion of an institution’s teaching portfolio and recruitment of new students (Yuan, 2009).

• There is potential for new funding and revenue generation opportunities (Fleming & Massey, 2007).

• Opportunity to build upon institutional repuation at the national/global level, dependent on project scale, enhancing the institutional reputation and providing publicity as a promoter of educational altruism (McGill et al. 2008).

www.medev.ac.uk

Page 27: UHMLG Spring 2010

Draft OOER value statement:Diversity

• OER may increase diversity in student applications to undergraduate programmes. E.g. OU

• OER may aid in widening participation (OECD, 2007).

www.medev.ac.uk

Page 28: UHMLG Spring 2010

Draft OOER value statement:Institutional

• OER development will allow comparison of institutional policies and will lead to development of UK wide best practices (IPR, Patient Consent) more quickly and efficiently (Fleming & Massey, 2007).

• OER portfolio and institutional brand image will be linked in the future (thus OER cost will become a ‘necessary overhead’) (Smith, 2009).

• Used as evidence of efficiency and value for money as required by funding bodies and taxpayers (Fleming & Massey, 2007).

• Potential students may view a portfolio of OER from a host institution and use, in part, to decide if institutional teaching approaches are compatible with their own learning style.

• An OER repository can be a means to an effective individual staff teaching portfolio of learning resources/activities.

• Increase in collaboration between institutions, including inter-discipline exchange (Yuan, 2009).

• Increased institutional publicity and reputation (OECD, 2007).• If an OER culture is inevitable, such as directed by future funding body

requirements, early adoption is preferable.

www.medev.ac.uk

Page 29: UHMLG Spring 2010

Draft OOER value statement:Student recruitment, satisfaction and retention

• Address specific student learning resource needs more rapidly by finding appropriate resources available from other institutions uploads to an OER repository.

• Students could access resources that have a different approach (visual, audio, text, etc.) in their teaching method and add them to their own personal learning environment to complement host institution resources.

• Potential students may view a portfolio of OER from a host institution and use, in part, to decide if institutional teaching approaches are compatible with their own learning style.

www.medev.ac.uk

Page 30: UHMLG Spring 2010

Draft OOER value statement:Sustainability

• Over 75% of staff surveyed in the WM-Share project were engaged in departmental sharing prior to the project (WM-Share, 2006). This highlights the strong culture for sharing that currently exists within academia and emphasises the likelihood for continued sharing of OER after project completion once the tools are put in place.

• The paper by McGill et al. (2008) highlights the significant impact that OER can have on the sustained long-term sharing of resources for both the Communities of Practice (CoP) and subject-based areas.

www.medev.ac.uk

Page 31: UHMLG Spring 2010

Draft OOER value statement:References

• Li Yuan, Sheila MacNeil and Wilbert Kraan. Open Educational Resources – Opportunities and Challenges for Higher Education. JISC CETIS. 2009

• Catherine Fleming and Moira Massey. Jorum Open Educational Resources (OER) Report. 2007.

• Marshall S. Smith. Opening Education. Science. 89 ; 323. 2009.• Giving Knowledge for Free: the Emergence of Open

Educational Resources. OECD. 2007.• WM-Share Final Report. WM-Share. 2006.• Lou McGill, Sarah Currier, Charles Duncan, Peter Douglas.

Good Intentions: improving the evidence base in support of sharing and learning materials. McGill et al. 2008

www.medev.ac.uk

Page 32: UHMLG Spring 2010

Demonstrating impact

• GMC patient consent guidance (revised)• eVIP – embedded IPR process• Policy development e.g. Southampton, RVC• Already working with over 50% of UK schools of

medicine, dentistry and veterinary medicine• In discussions with the NHS eLearning Repository

www.medev.ac.uk

Page 33: UHMLG Spring 2010

www.medev.ac.uk

Page 34: UHMLG Spring 2010

Related projects: PHORUShttp://phorus.health.heacademy.ac.uk/

www.medev.ac.uk

Page 35: UHMLG Spring 2010

Related projects: Simsharehttp://www.ukcle.ac.uk/simshare/index.html

www.medev.ac.uk

Page 36: UHMLG Spring 2010

Related projects: Bioscience OERhttp://tinyurl.com/oerbio

www.medev.ac.uk

Page 37: UHMLG Spring 2010

Further information

• www.hefce.ac.uk/news/hefce/2008/os.htm• www.jisc.ac.uk/whatwedo/programmes/elearning/oer

www.heacademy.ac.uk/ourwork/teachingandlearning/oer

• www.medev.ac.uk/oer • www.health.heacademy.ac.uk• phorus.health.heacademy.ac.uk• www.ukcle.ac.uk/simshare/index.html• tinyurl.com/oerbio

www.medev.ac.uk

Page 38: UHMLG Spring 2010

www.medev.ac.uk

Call: 0191 246 4550Email: [email protected]