1. Open learning
Experiences from the MarMOOC project
Prof. dr. Frederik Questier
Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Presented at Universidad de las Ciencias Informáticas, Cuba, May 2019
Project No. 573583-EPP-1-2016-1-ES-EPPKA2-CBHE-SP (2016-2558/001-001)
5. Yuan, Li, and Stephen Powell. MOOCs and Open Education: Implications for Higher Education White Paper.
University of Bolton: CETIS, 2013. CC-BY 3.0 Update:http://blogs.cetis.org.uk/cetisli/2015/05/11/moocs-and-open-education-timeline-updated/
MOOC history
6. Openness in MOOC?
➢
Open access
➢
Open learning
➢
Open process
➢
Open educational resources
➢
Open licenses
➢
Open standards
➢
Open source software
➢
Open pedagogy
7. Open pedagogy?
cMOOC
➢
Connectivisme – Constructivisme
➢
Knowledge creation by
participants
➢
Group work
➢
Distributed interactions, blogs
➢
Interdisciplinarity
➢
Self-evaluation
xMOOC
➢
Instructionism
➢
Knowledge transfer by teacher
➢
Videos
➢
Forum
➢
Disciplinarity
➢
Online tests
8. 11
"The most fundamental
way of helping other
people,
is to teach people
how to do things better
or how to better their
lives.
For people
who use computers,
this means sharing
the recipes
you use on your
computer,
in other words
the programs you run."
11. 14
The software Freedoms
require access to the source code
→
“Open Source Software” (OSS)
Free Open Source Software (FOSS)
Free Libre Open Source Software (FLOSS)
Spanish: “Software Libre”
12. Software categories
➢
Anti-features are features that users don’t want, including:
➢
Copy-protection
➢
DRM = Digital Rights/Restrictions Management
➢
Data lock-in because of secret file formats
➢
Time-limit / Planned obsolescence
➢
Artificial limitations (e.g. limited RAM, HD and max 3 concurrent programs in MS Windows Vista Home)
➢
Advertisements
➢
Tracking / Spyware
29. Open educational resources
(OER)
digitised materials
offered freely and openly
for educators, students and self-learners
to use and reuse
for teaching, learning and research
30. Believing that OER can
widen access to quality education,
particularly when shared by many countries
and higher education institutions,
UNESCO champions OER
as a means of promoting access, equity and quality
in the spirit of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
31. Good teachers know how
to create learning materials
Great teachers know how
to mix and reuse
52. 64
S. Ternier et al., Interoperability for Searching Learning Object
Repositories: The ProLearn Query Language, D-Lib Magazine, 2008,
Volume 14 Number 1/2, doi:10.1045/january2008-ceri
56. 68
Restrictions in e-learning policies
examples
➢
4.1.3. Students and Members of academic
staff have access to designated courses in
which they are involved.
➢
4.2.3. Student access to courses will
continue by default for six (6) weeks after
the completion of the relevant semester.
58. Additional copyright credits
➢
MOOC poster by Mathieu Plourde, licensed under CC BY 2.0
➢
MarMOOC logo and photos of meetings and training sessions
➢
Opencast by Sally CC-BY-NC-SA
➢
OER Global Logo by Jonathas Mello, licensed under CC BY 3.0
➢
CC_License_Freedom_Scale_Chart by Romain CC-BY-SA
➢
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:OpenIDvs.Pseudo-AuthenticationusingOAuth.svg CC0
➢
Social Icons by Iconshock http://www.iconshock.com/social-icons/
59. This presentation was made with 100% Free Software
No animals were harmed
Questier.com
Frederik AT Questier.com
www.linkedin.com/in/fquestie
www.diigo.com/user/frederikquestier
www.slideshare.net/Frederik_Questier
Q
uestions?
¡Gracias!