04 juin 2018

Introducing Badgr Pathways

Introducing Badgr Pathways
Concentric Sky, 2018/05/02

I think this was probably a necessary step in the development of a badge infrastructure. The idea of Pathways is that badges can be combined (some say 'stacked', as in 'stackable credentials') to add up to higher-level credentials. More...

Posté par pcassuto à 08:32 - - Permalien [#]


The Impact of Free Primary Education Inputs On Educational Outcomes in Kenya (2003 To 2013)

The Impact of Free Primary Education Inputs On Educational Outcomes in Kenya (2003 To 2013)
Dorothy Akinyi Owuor, European Journal of Educational Sciences, 2018/05/02
For any measure of educational outcomes there is a ready-made body of literature suggesting that increasing spending to support free primary education (FPE) will not increase outcomes. I have my doubts about this research and always keep my eyes open for counterexamples. More...

Posté par pcassuto à 08:32 - - Permalien [#]

Personal Data has Entered the GDPR Era

Personal Data has Entered the GDPR Era
CLUSIF, 2018/05/02

Good diagram (one page PDF) outlining the General Data Protection Regulation being implemented in Europe. It's complex but rewards a closer look. More...

Posté par pcassuto à 08:31 - - Permalien [#]

Exploring the Open Knowledge Landscape

Exploring the Open Knowledge Landscape
Lorna M Campbell, Open World, 2018/05/02
There's a lot going on in this post from Lorna Campbell consisting of the transcript and slides from her keynote at the FLOSS UK Spring Conference in Edinburgh. It's a pretty good overview of open education and open educational resources (OER). More...

Posté par pcassuto à 08:30 - - Permalien [#]

Conceptualising OEP: A review of theoretical and empirical literature in Open Educational Practices

Conceptualising OEP: A review of theoretical and empirical literature in Open Educational Practices
Catherine Cronin, Iain MacLaren, Open Praxis, 2018/05/01

This is a taxonomy more than anything but also "aims to provide a useful synthesis of OEP literature for education researchers and practitioners." The authors assert "one or more of the following bodies of work were cited in all subsequent academic literature in the area of OEP:

  1. OLCOS (Open eLearning Content Observatory Services) project (2006-2007)
  2. OPAL (Open Education Quality) initiative (2010-2011)
  3. UKOER programme (2009-2012)
  4. CILT (Centre for Innovation in Learning and Teaching) research, UCT (2009-present)."

This suggests to me that their focus was a bit narrow (surely discussion of open educational practices existed outside reference to these initiatives - like this one, for example, or this one, or this one, or even this one, or for that matter our discussions about MOOCs from 2008 and forward. More...

Posté par pcassuto à 08:30 - - Permalien [#]


The Wisdon and/or Madness of Crowds

The Wisdon and/or Madness of Crowds
Nicky Case, 2018/05/01
This is a really nice visualization of some of the (very) basic concepts of learning in self-organizing networks. It takes a social perspective (as opposed to, say, a machine learning perspective) and offers an intuitive and accessible way to comprehend learning networks. More...

Posté par pcassuto à 08:29 - - Permalien [#]

George Mason’s President Says Some Donor Agreements Fell ‘Short’ of Academic Standards

George Mason’s President Says Some Donor Agreements Fell ‘Short’ of Academic Standards
Nell Gluckman, Chronicle of Higher Education, 2018/05/01

According to this article, "agreements show that the Koch Foundation and other donors had room to influence the selection and work of the professors whose positions they spent millions to support." More...

Posté par pcassuto à 08:28 - - Permalien [#]

Are Etextbooks Affordable Now?

Are Etextbooks Affordable Now?
Lindsay McKenzie, Inside Higher Ed, 2018/05/01
For most people in the world, the answer to this question is still "no". I have always worked on the principle of a two-times-order-of-magnitude reduction in cost as the standard for digitization. The textbook that used to cost $60 should now cost $0.60. More...

Posté par pcassuto à 08:26 - - Permalien [#]

Moocs are a solution in search of a problem

Moocs are a solution in search of a problem
Chris Fellingham, Times Higher Education, 2018/05/01
According to Chris Fellingham, MOOCs " arose from the boredom of Stanford University computer science professors fed up with teaching the same lectures each year. Out of idle curiosity, they wanted to see what would happen if they dumped their courses, lectures and all, online for anyone to take." According to this story, OOCs then searched for a problem to solve - providinbg new skills to university graduates, say, or offering new kinds of certificates. More...

Posté par pcassuto à 08:26 - - Permalien [#]

OEP (Open Educational Pragmatism?)

OEP (Open Educational Pragmatism?)
Doug Belshaw, Thought Shrapnel, 2018/05/01
This is more from the OER 2018 conference in Holland last week. Doug Belshaw discusses his conversations with Michael Shaw from Tes Resources. Shaw described how warm the OER community had been. "He found the hosts and participants 'incredibly welcoming' and the debates 'more open than [he’d] expected on how commercial organisations could play a part' in the ecosystem." That's nice, but maybe a little too cozy. More...

Posté par pcassuto à 08:25 - - Permalien [#]