Tools and Practices for Developing Open Educational Resources (OER
1. Tools and practices for developing open
educational resources
Hans Põldoja, Tallinn University
2. Hans Põldoja!
!
Lecturer of educational technology
Tallinn University, Institute of Informatics
!
Doctoral student
Aalto University, School of Arts, Design and Architecture
!
hans.poldoja@tlu.ee
http://www.hanspoldoja.net
4. What are OER’s?
Open Educational Resources (OER) are digital materials
that can be re-used for teaching, learning, research and
more, made available free through open licenses, which
allow uses of the materials that would not be easily
permitted under copyright alone.
(Wikipedia, 2012)
10. License conditions
b Attribution — You must attribute the work in the manner
specified by the author or licensor
a
Share Alike — If you alter, transform, or build upon this
work, you may distribute the resulting work only under
the same or similar license to this one
n Noncommercial — You may not use this work for
commercial purposes
d No Derivative Works — You may not alter, transform, or
build upon this work
11. Rights
s Share — to copy, distribute and transmit the work
r Remix — to adapt the work
19. Marking licenses
• If no license information is included with the work, then
users must assume that all rights are reserved
• Title of the license, icon and link are added to openly
licensed content
59. References
• Creative Commons (n.d.). About The Licenses. Loetud aadressil http://
creativecommons.org/licenses/
• Wikipedia (2012). Open educational resources. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Open_educational_resources
• Väljataga, T. (2014). Learnmix intervening into current teaching and learning
practices. http://learnmix.tlu.ee/WP/en/2014/05/16/learnmix-sekkumas-opetamis-
ja-oppimispraktikatesse/
60. Used images
• Jonathas Mello, Global OER logo: http://www.unesco.org/new/en/
communication-and-information/access-to-knowledge/open-educational-resources/
global-oer-logo/