Engineering:Open educational practices in Australia

From HandWiki

Open Educational Practices in Australia refers to the development, implementation and use of Open educational resources (OER), open access (research and data), open learning design, open policies, and Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) to open up education in Australia.[1][2]

History

In Australia, Open Educational Practices (OEP) started around 1998, when some of the first open access initiatives were introduced and supported by the Australian government.[3] In 2002, the open access movement had a substantial boost due to a programme funded by the Australian government called “Backing Australia’s Ability”.[4] This programme was aimed broadly at promoting excellence in research, science and technology, but several initiatives attached to this programme played important roles in the progress of open access in Australia. They assisted in: raising awareness about open access; building research information infrastructure, including university repositories of open data, thesis and other digital objects; establishing metadata standards to improve access and discoverability of research information; and developing related guidelines.[4][2]

Transformation of OEP Realised in Australia

Although the opportunities and benefits of OEP have been realised by the Australian government through investments in open access and by the VET and schools sectors, it was only in 2010 — almost 10 years after the movement emerged in other parts of the world (i.e., the MIT OpenCourseWare Consortium in 2001) — that it started getting more popular in higher education.[2]

It was during this period that the Office for Learning and Teaching funded a two-year research project, which resulted in the report "Adoption, Use and Management of Open Educational Resources in Australia Higher Education".[5]

One of the main deliverables of this project was the “Feasibility Protocol for OER and OEP” (Bossu, Brown, & Bull, 2014b), which is a set of guiding principles that prompts questions and raises issues to be considered by educational institutions wishing to experiment with OER and OEP. The protocol attempts to assist higher education leaders to make informed decisions about the adoption of OER and OEP at several levels within the institution, from management to individuals, including academics and students.[6] The Feasibility Protocol addresses four topics: the opportunities that OER and OEP could bring to institutions and broader society; the challenges associated with OER and OEP adoption; considerations surrounding the institutions’ strategic directions for an effective adoption of OER and OEP; and policy recommendations for higher education institutions in Australia.[6][2]

Another contribution of the two-year research project in helping the sector realise the opportunities of OER for higher education in Australia was the organisation of the first National Symposium on OER, held in August 2012 in Sydney. A range of stakeholders representing 21 national and international institutions (including higher educational institutions, VET and government bodies) attended the symposium. The symposium was a key dissemination strategy for this project, and a chance for the stakeholders to meet and discuss issues related to open education, opportunities for collaboration, and ways to together overcome some of these concerns.[5][2]

Scope of Transformation of OEP in Australia

The scope of the transformation of OEP in Australia is best understood by looking at the main initiatives, programmes and activities categorised into five themes: collaboration; resources and infrastructure; open policies; learning and teaching; and research.[2]

Collaboration

Collaboration amongst institutions and countries is recognised as one of the opportunities of the transformative potential of open education.[7] An example of this collaboration is the OERu, which is a consortium of currently 39 international educational institution partners, spread across five continents. In Australia, six universities are part of this network: University of Canberra, University of Southern Queensland, University of Wollongong, Charles Sturt University, Curtin University and the University of Tasmania. The OERu’s vision is to make education accessible to everyone. Co-ordinated by the OER Foundation, it is an independent, not-for-profit network that offers free online courses for students worldwide. It also provides affordable ways for learners to gain academic credit towards qualifications from recognised institutions.[8][2]

Resources and infrastructure

Several Australian universities have invested in resource production and in the development and improvement of technological infrastructure. Examples of resource production are initiatives such as MOOCs. Following the international trend, a number of Australian universities have joined the major MOOC providers, including edX, Coursera and the British FutureLearn, while others have developed their own MOOCs.[9] Currently, more than 100 Australian MOOCs are on offer.[10][2]

These are mostly free online courses and are likely to approach learning and teaching more traditionally (xMOOCs) instead of being truly open and adopting open pedagogies and open learning ecosystems (including cMOOCs).[11][12] In Australia, only a few MOOCs have been developed with some open aspects. For instance, the content might be openly licensed, but the learning management system (LMS) where the courses are hosted is a proprietary system and requires learners to register. Some institutions are still investing in this space, but the initial hype about MOOCs seems to have faded to some extent in Australia.[9][2]

Open policies

Encouraged by recent OEP initiatives taking place nationally and internationally, some Australian universities have realised that they need to review and, as needed, further develop their related policies in order to enable innovation and maintain a competitive edge. According to Scott,[13] intellectual property policies are currently under review at several Australian universities. Other universities have encouraged the adoption of OEP through supporting documentation, such as university strategic plans and teaching performance reviews. An example of such a development is the Technology Enhanced Learning and Teaching White Paper 2014–2018, developed by the Tasmanian Institute of Learning and Teaching at the University of Tasmania.[14]

Learning and teaching

Although it could be assumed that the examples above might all impact learning and teaching, there are some programmes specifically targeting learning and teaching for OEP. Most universities experimenting with OEP in Australia have some form of academic development activities to build internal capacity. These activities are in the form of workshops, webinars, one-on-one consultancies and online resources produced by the institutions or adopted/adapted from elsewhere. One example is the “Curriculum Design for Open Education,” which is an open and online professional development micro-course focused on developing the capacity of academics to adopt OEP as the basis for innovative, engaging and agile curricula.[2]

Universities and their library departments are increasingly creating OER publishing platforms and services for academics to create and publish their own open resources. Examples include the La Trobe eBureau[15] and several PressBooks-based publishing services.[16][17][18][19]

Research

Research in OEP has been conducted as part of some of the projects and initiatives in Australia. Postgraduate students in several institutions have also undertaken research, and could very well be the Australian OEP advocates and researchers of the future.[2]

See also

Sources

Definition of Free Cultural Works logo notext.svg This article incorporates text from a free content work. Licensed under CC-BY-SA IGO 3.0 License statement: Open Educational Resources: Policy, Costs and Transformation, 28-37, Bossu, Carina, UNESCO. UNESCO. To learn how to add open license text to HandWiki articles, please see this how-to page. For information on reusing text from HandWiki, please see the terms of use.

References

  1. Butcher, N., & Hoosen, S. (2014). A guide to quality in post-traditional online higher education. In J. Daniel & S. Uvalic ́-Trumbic ́ (Eds.). Dallas: Academic Partnerships. Retrieved from http://www.academicpartnerships.com/ sites/default/ les/Guide-OnlineHigherEd.PDF
  2. 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 Bossu, Carina (2016). Miao, Fengchun. ed. Open educational resources: policy, costs, transformation. Paris, UNESCO. pp. 28–37. ISBN 978-92-3-100158-1. http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0024/002443/244365e.pdf. 
  3. Picasso, V., & Phelan, L. (2014). The evolution of open access to research and data in Australian higher education. RUSC. Universities and Knowledge Society Journal, 11(3), 122–133. doi:10.7238/rusc.v11i3.2076
  4. 4.0 4.1 Shipp, J. (2006). Open access in Australia. In N. Jacobs (Ed.), Open access: key strategic, technical and economic aspects (pp. 169–174). London: Chandos Publishing.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Bossu, C., Brown, M., & Bull, D. (2014a). Adoption, use and management of Open Educational Resources to enhance teaching and learning in Australia. Sydney: Australian Government O ce for Learning and Teaching. Retrieved from http://www.olt.gov.au/system/ les/resources/CG10_1687_Bossu_ Report_2014.pdf
  6. 6.0 6.1 Bossu, C., Brown, M., & Bull, D. (2014b). Feasibility protocol for OER and OEP: A decision making tool for higher education. Sydney: Australian Government O ce for Learning and Teaching. Retrieved from http://www.olt.gov.au/ system/ les/resources/CG10_1687_Bossu_Feasibility%20Protocol_2014. pdf
  7. Commonwealth of Learning. (2011). Guidelines for Open Educational Resources (OER) in higher education. Vancouver: UNESCO/Commonwealth of Learning. Retrieved from http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0021/002136/213605e. pdf
  8. McGreal, R., Mackintosh, W., & Taylor, J. (2013). Open Educational Resources university: An assessment and credit for students initiatives. In R. McGreal, W. Kinuthia, & S. Marshall (Eds.), Open educational resources: Innovation, research and practice (pp. 47–59). Vancouver: Commonwealth of Learning and Athabasca University.
  9. 9.0 9.1 Norton, A., & Cherastidtham, I. (2014). Mapping Australian higher education, 2014–15. Grattan Institute.
  10. "Australia". https://www.mooc-list.com/countrys/australia. 
  11. James, R., & Bossu, C. (2014). Conversations from south of the equator: Challenges and opportunities in OER across broader Oceania. RUSC. Universities and Knowledge Society Journal, 11(3), 78–90. doi:10.7238/rusc. v11i3.2220
  12. Smyth, R., Bossu, C., & Stagg, A. (2015). Toward an Open Empowered Learning Model of pedagogy in higher education. In M. Keppell, S. Reushle, & A. Antonio (Eds.), Open learning and formal credentialing in higher education: Curriculum models and institutional policies. Hershey: IGI Global.
  13. Scott, B. (2014). Supporting OER engagement at Australian universities: An overview of the intellectual property rights, copyright and policy considerations for OER. Retrieved from http://www.olt.gov.au/system/ les/resources/CG10_1687_ Bossu_OER%20engagement_2014.pdf
  14. Brown, N., Kregor, G., Williams, G., Padgett, L., Bossu, C., Warren, V., & Osborne, J. (2013). Technology-enhanced learning and teaching White Paper 2014–2018. Tasmanian Institute of Learning and Teaching (Trans.). Hobart: University of Tasmania.
  15. "La Trobe eBureau" (in en-US). https://library.latrobe.edu.au/ebureau/. 
  16. "University of Southern Queensland – Free and Open Textbooks" (in en-US). https://usq.pressbooks.pub/. 
  17. "Open Textbooks @ UQ – Find and create open access books" (in en-GB). https://uq.pressbooks.pub/. 
  18. "CDU Open Book Publishing – Pressbooks Publishing Platform" (in en-US). https://cduebooks.pressbooks.pub/. 
  19. "QUT eBooks – Queensland University of Technology's Open Textbook Platform" (in en-US). https://qut.pressbooks.pub/.